MIT8 333F13 Pset4
MIT8 333F13 Pset4
MIT8 333F13 Pset4
Problem Set # 4
Due: 11/13/13
Non-interacting particles
1. Rotating gas:
trap in three dimensions, i.e. the particles are subject to the Hamiltonian
N 2
pi
K 2
H=
+ ri .
2m
2
i=1
i
(a) Show
that
pi is a conserved quantity,
{
} the angular momentum of each particle Li = iri i
i i , H = 0. (Note that once interactions between particles are included, individi.e. L
i = LN L
i
ual angular momenta are no longer conserved, while their sum L
i=1 i remains a
conserved quantity.)
1
i
Z(, )
(
)
i
i
exp H() L() .
i =
Compute the classical partition function for this gas of identical particles, assuming
J
(d) Write down the probability density of nding a particle at location (x, y, z), and hence
( ) ( )
( )
obtain the expectation values x2 , y 2 , and z 2 .
********
2. Molecular adsorption:
symmetry. Each molecule can either lie at on the surface in which case it must be aligned
to one of two directions, x and y, or it can stand up along the z direction. There is an
energy cost of > 0 associated with a molecule standing up, and zero energy for molecules
lying at along x or y directions.
(a) How many microstates have the smallest value of energy? What is the largest microstate
energy?
(b) For microcanonical macrostates of energy E, calculate the number of states (E, N ),
and the entropy S(E, N ).
1
(e) What is the largest possible value of the internal energy at any positive temperature?
********
3. Curie susceptibility: Consider N non-interacting quantized spins in a magnetic eld
i = Bz, and at a temperature T . The work done by the eld is given by BMz , with a
B
LN
magnetization Mz = i=1 mi . For each spin, mi takes only the 2s + 1 values s, s +
1, , s 1, s.
(a) Calculate the Gibbs partition function Z(T, B). (Note that the ensemble corresponding
(b) Calculate the Gibbs free energy G(T, B), and show that for small B,
N 2 s(s + 1)B 2
G(B) = G(0)
+ O(B 4 ).
6kB T
(c) Calculate the zero eld susceptibility = Mz /B|B=0 , and show that is satises
Curies law
= c/T.
catalyst.
(a) Show that the chemical potential of the gas particles is related to their temperature
[ (
)
J
and pressure via = kB T ln P/T 5/2 + A0 , where A0 is a constant.
(b) If there are N distinct adsorption sites on the surface, and each adsorbed particle gains
an energy upon adsorption, calculate the grand partition function for the two dimensional
gas with a chemical potential .
(c) In equilibrium, the gas and surface particles are at the same temperature and chemical
potential. Show that the fraction of occupied surface sites is then given by f (T, P ) =
(
)
P/ P + P0 (T ) . Find P0 (T ).
2
(d) In the grand canonical ensemble, the particle number N is a random variable. Calculate
its characteristic function (exp(ikN )) in terms of Q(), and hence show that
m
m
m1 G
(N )c = (kB T )
,
m T
where G is the grand potential.
( 2)
(N )
.
N c = kB T
T
(f) Show that uctuations in the number of adsorbed particles satisfy
( 2)
N c
1f
.
2 =
Nf
(N )c
********
i , of unity, i.e. S z is quantized to -1, 0, or
5. Molecular oxygen has a net magnetic spin, S
i I z is
+1. The Hamiltonian for an ideal gas of N such molecules in a magnetic eld B
H=
N
X
pii
i=1
2m
BSiz
where {pii } are the center of mass momenta of the molecules. The corresponding coordi
nates {iqi } are conned to a volume V . (Ignore all other degrees of freedom.)
(a) Treating {pii , iqi } classically, but the spin degrees of freedom as quantized, calculate the
Gibbs partition function, Z(T, N, V, B).
(b) What are the probabilities for Siz of a specic molecule to take on values of -1, 0, +1
at a temperature T ?
(c) Find the average magnetic dipole moment, (M ) /V , where M =
(d) Calculate the zero eld susceptibility = (M )/B|B=0 .
LN
i=1
Siz .
********
6. One dimensional polymer:
molecules into a one dimensional chain. Each molecule can align either along its long axis
(of length 2a) or short axis (length a). The energy of the monomer aligned along its shorter
axis is higher by , i.e. the total energy is H = U , where U is the number of monomers
standing up.
(a) Calculate the partition function, Z(T, N ), of the polymer.
(b) Find the relative probabilities for a monomer to be aligned along its short or long
axis.
(c) Calculate the average length, (L(T, N )), of the polymer.
(
)
(d) Obtain the variance, L(T, N )2 c .
(e) What does the central limit theorem say about the probability distribution for the
length L(T, N )?
********
7. Polar rods:
1
2I
p2 +
p2
sin2
E cos
where E is an external electric eld. ( [0, 2], [0, ] are the azimuthal and polar
angles, and p , p are their conjugate momenta.)
(a) Calculate the contribution of the rotational degrees of freedom of each dipole to the
classical partition function.
(b) Obtain the mean polarization P = ( cos ), of each dipole.
(c) Find the zeroeld polarizability
P
T =
E E=0
(d) Calculate the rotational energy per particle (at nite E), and comment on its high and
low temperature limits.
(e) Sketch the rotational heat capacity per dipole.
********
8. (Optional) Disordered glass: The heat capacity of many disordered materials vanishes
linearly at low temperatures. A commonly used model such glassy materials materials is
4
f
Xi
H
= f
Xi
where = 1/(kB T ).
(b) Find the forms of the virial theorem obtained by substituting f = qi and f = pi in the
general expression.
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