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Boltzmann distribution

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In chemistry, physics, and mathematics, the Boltzmann distribution (also called the Gibbs Distribution[1]) is a certain distribution function or probability measure for the distribution of the states of a system. The distribution was discovered in the context of classical statistical mechanics by J.W. Gibbs in 1901. It underpins the concept of the canonical ensemble, providing the underlying distribution. A special case of the Boltzmann distribution, used for describing the velocities of particles of a gas, is the MaxwellBoltzmann distribution. In more general mathematical settings, the Boltzmann distribution is also known as the Gibbs measure. In statistics and machine learning it is called a log-linear model.

Contents
1 Definition 2 Derivation 3 Inverted Boltzmann distribution 4 See also 5 References 6 External links

Definition
The Boltzmann distribution for the fractional number of particles Ni / N occupying a set of states i possessing energy Ei is:

where is the Boltzmann constant, T is temperature (assumed to be a well-defined quantity), is the degeneracy (meaning, the number of levels having energy ; sometimes, the more general 'states' are used instead of levels, to avoid using degeneracy in the equation), N is the total number of particles and Z(T) is the partition function.

Alternatively, for a single system at a well-defined temperature, it gives the probability that the system is in the specified state. The Boltzmann distribution applies only to particles at a high enough temperature and low enough density that quantum effects can be ignored, and the particles are obeying MaxwellBoltzmann statistics. (See that article for a derivation of the Boltzmann distribution.) The Boltzmann distribution is often expressed in terms of = 1/kT where is referred to as thermodynamic beta. The term or , which gives the (unnormalised) relative probability of a state, is called the

Boltzmann factor and appears often in the study of physics and chemistry. When the energy is simply the kinetic energy of the particle

then the distribution correctly gives the MaxwellBoltzmann distribution of gas molecule speeds, previously predicted by Maxwell in 1859. The Boltzmann distribution is, however, much more general. For example, it also predicts the variation of the particle density in a gravitational field with height, if . In fact the distribution applies whenever quantum considerations can be ignored. In some cases, a continuum approximation can be used. If there are g(E) dE states with energy E to E + dE, then the Boltzmann distribution predicts a probability distribution for the energy:

Then g(E) is called the density of states if the energy spectrum is continuous. Classical particles with this energy distribution are said to obey MaxwellBoltzmann statistics. In the classical limit, i.e. at large values of or at small density of states when wave functions of particles practically do not overlap both the BoseEinstein or FermiDirac distribution become the Boltzmann distribution.

Derivation
See MaxwellBoltzmann statistics.

Inverted Boltzmann distribution


In January 2013, German scientists reported having achieved an "inverted Boltzmann distribution" with the ultracooling of atomic gas, creating negative absolute temperature. The experiments may shed light on the nature of dark energy, and indicate that a 100 percent energy-efficient internal combustion engine, which had previously been considered impossible, might in fact be achievable.[2]

See also
Boltzmann factor Gibbs measure Partition function (mathematics) Log-linear model

References
1. ^ Landau, Lev Davidovich; and Lifshitz, Evgeny Mikhailovich (1980) [1976]. Statistical Physics. 5 (3 ed.). Oxford: Pergamon Press. ISBN 0-7506-3372-7. Translated by J.B. Sykes and M.J. Kearsley. See section 28 2. ^ Braun, S.; Ronzheimer, J. P.; Schreiber, M.; Hodgman, S. S.; Rom, T.; Bloch, I.; Schneider, U. (2013). "Negative Absolute Temperature for Motional Degrees of Freedom". Science 339 (6115): 5255.

doi:10.1126/science.1227831 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1126%2Fscience.1227831) . PMID 23288533 (//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23288533) .

External links
Derivation of the distribution for microstates of a system (http://theory.ph.man.ac.uk/~judith/stat_therm/node67.html) Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Boltzmann_distribution&oldid=531783906" Categories: Particle distributions Statistical mechanics This page was last modified on 7 January 2013 at 13:49. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. See Terms of Use for details. Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.

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