Microcanonical thermodynamics : phase transitions in "small" systems /
Boltzmann's formula S = In[W (E)] defines the microcanonical ensemble. The usual textbooks on statistical mechanics start with the microensemble but rather quickly switch to the canonical ensemble introduced by Gibbs. This has the main advantage of easier analytical calculations, but there is a...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Singapore ; New Jersey :
World Scientific,
©2001.
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Colección: | World Scientific lecture notes in physics ;
v. 66. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Preface. 0.1. Who is addressed, and why. 0.2. A necessary clarification. 0.3. Acknowledgment
- ch. 1. Introduction. 1.1. Phase transitions and thermodynamics in "small" systems. 1.2. Boltzmann gives the key. 1.3. Micro-canonical thermodynamics describes non-extensive systems. 1.4. Some realistic systems: nuclei and atomic clusters. 1.5. Plan of this book
- ch. 2. The mechanical basis of thermodynamics. 2.1. Basic definitions. 2.2. The thermodynamic limit, the global concavity of s(e, n). 2.3. Phase transitions micro-canonically. 2.4. Second Law of Thermodynamics and Boltzmann's entropy
- ch. 3. Micro-canonical thermodynamics of phase transitions studied in the Potts model. 3.1. Introduction. 3.2. The surface tension in the Potts model. [GEZ50]. 3.3. The topology of the entropy surface S(E, N) for Potts lattice gases [GV99]. 3.4. On the origin of isolated critical points and critical lines
- ch. 4. Liquid-gas transition and surface tension under constant pressure. 4.1. Andersen's constant pressure ensemble. 4.2. Micro-canonical ensemble with given pressure; The enthalpy. 4.3. Liquid-gas transition in realistic metal systems. 4.4. The relation to the method of the Gibbs-ensemble. 4.5. Alternative microscopic methods to calculate the surface tension. 4.6. Criticism and necessary improvements of the computational method. 4.7. Conclusion
- ch. 5. Statistical fragmentation under repulsive forces of long range. 5.1. Introduction. 5.2. Three dimensional stress of long range: the Coulomb force. 5.3. Two dimensional stress of long range: rapidly rotating hot nuclei[BG95b]. 5.4. Conclusion
- ch. 6. The collapse transition in self-gravitating systems. First model-studies. 6.1. 1
- and 2
- dim. Hamiltonian Mean Field Model, a caricature of phase transitions under self-gravitation. 6.2. Collapse of non-extensive (gravitating) systems under conserved angular momentum.