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 III - THE LAW OF DISTRIBUTION OF VELOCITIES: THE METHOD OF STATISTICAL MECHANICS
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
35. In the last chapter it was twice found convenient to represent the three velocity coordinates u, v, w of a molecule, by a point in space of which the coordinates referred to three rectangular axes were u, v, w. The principle involved is a useful one, capable of almost indefinite extension, and will be largely used both in the present chapter and elsewhere in the book.
The space of nature possesses three dimensions, but just as it is open for us to represent any two coordinates in an imaginary space of only two dimensions, so in the same way we may represent any four coordinates in an imaginary space of four dimensions. Similarly if a dynamical system is specified by any number n of coordinates, we can represent these coordinates in a space of n dimensions, and the various points in this space will correspond to the various configurations of the dynamical system.
In the present chapter, we attempt to find the law of distribution of velocities by a method which consists essentially in regarding the whole gas as a single dynamical system, and in representing its coordinates in a single imaginary space of the appropriate number of dimensions.
Let us suppose that the gas consists of a great number N of exactly similar molecules, enclosed in a vessel of volume Ω.
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- The Dynamical Theory of Gases , pp. 39 - 57Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1904