Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION
- Contents
- CHAP I INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER
- MATHEMATICAL THEORY OF A GAS IN A STEADY STATE
- CHAP II THE LAW OF DISTRIBUTION OF VELOCITIES: THE METHOD OF COLLISIONS
- CHAP III THE LAW OF DISTRIBUTION OF VELOCITIES: THE METHOD OF STATISTICAL MECHANICS
- CHAP IV THE LAW OF DISTRIBUTION OF VELOCITIES: COMPARISON BETWEEN THE METHODS OF THE TWO PRECEDING CHAPTERS
- CHAP V THE LAW OF DISTRIBUTION OF VELOCITIES: GENERAL STATISTICAL MECHANICS AND THERMODYNAMICS
- PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF A GAS IN A STEADY STATE
- MATHEMATICAL THEORY OF A GAS NOT IN A STEADY STATE
- PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF A GAS NOT IN A STEADY STATE
- RADIATION AND THE QUANTUM THEORY
- APPENDICES
CHAP V - THE LAW OF DISTRIBUTION OF VELOCITIES: GENERAL STATISTICAL MECHANICS AND THERMODYNAMICS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION
- Contents
- CHAP I INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER
- MATHEMATICAL THEORY OF A GAS IN A STEADY STATE
- CHAP II THE LAW OF DISTRIBUTION OF VELOCITIES: THE METHOD OF COLLISIONS
- CHAP III THE LAW OF DISTRIBUTION OF VELOCITIES: THE METHOD OF STATISTICAL MECHANICS
- CHAP IV THE LAW OF DISTRIBUTION OF VELOCITIES: COMPARISON BETWEEN THE METHODS OF THE TWO PRECEDING CHAPTERS
- CHAP V THE LAW OF DISTRIBUTION OF VELOCITIES: GENERAL STATISTICAL MECHANICS AND THERMODYNAMICS
- PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF A GAS IN A STEADY STATE
- MATHEMATICAL THEORY OF A GAS NOT IN A STEADY STATE
- PHYSICAL PHENOMENA OF A GAS NOT IN A STEADY STATE
- RADIATION AND THE QUANTUM THEORY
- APPENDICES
Summary
74. Two methods of obtaining the Law of Distribution of molecular velocities have now been given and also a comparison between them. These two methods have been limited to the consideration of molecules which may be treated as elastic spheres, exerting no forces on one another except when in actual collision. There is a more general way of treating the question, which permits of the molecules being dynamical systems of the most general type, capable of any kind of internal motion and exerting upon one another any forces we please. This method will be explained in the present chapter.
With a view to obtaining results which will be required later in the development of the subject, we shall not limit the discussion of the present chapter to the problem referred to above; we shall consider the “Statistical Mechanics” of a perfectly general dynamical system, not in the least limited to consisting of a gas. The special applications of the present chapter will be to a gas, while in later chapters we shall have occasion to apply the results to more general systems.
Degrees of Freedom.
75. The total number of independent quantities which need to be known before the configuration and position of any dynamical or other system can be fully known, is called the number of degrees of freedom of the system.
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- The Dynamical Theory of Gases , pp. 66 - 110Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1904