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Bolztmann's H-theorem Component1 #104605 In his 'H-theorem' Boltzmann tried to formally prove that inter-molecular collisions drive gases toward equilibrium, confirming the Second Law (for gases at least). In this approach, he aimed show that it is not just overwhelmingly probable but an exceptionless law like conservation of energy. | The H-theorem was the first of two approaches to demonstrating the Second Law associated with Boltzmann. The second approach utilized a probabilistic argument and has proven much more durable (it is cross-linked to this map element). |
+Citations (2) - CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[1] From Eternity to Here (book excerpt)
Author: Sean M. Carroll - Theoretical physicist, California Institute of Technology Cited by: Peter Baldwin 1:20 AM 20 April 2011 GMT Citerank: (4) 100641The Arrow of Time?A map exploring some issues concerning the nature of time that lie at the boundary of physics and philosophy. The map follows up a talk to the Blackheath Philosophy Forum on 2 April 2011 by Huw Price, Professor of Philosophy and director of the Center for Time at Sydney University.7F1CEB7, 106945Cyclical universeIf we assume that the universe alternates between expanding and collapsing phases, with the entropy gradient reversing during the collapse phase, the need for a time-asymmetric boundary condition is avoided since the evolution of the universe is time-symmetric overall. 959C6EF, 106948No reason for entropy reversalThere is no good reason to suppose that the entropy gradient will reverse and entropy decrease during the collapsing phase of the cycle. It would be extremely improbable for this to happen for just the reasons Boltzmann outlined in his statistical explanation of the Second Law.13EF597B, 107347Multiverse is a predictionThe multiverse is a prediction arising from inflationary cosmology, which can be tested.13EF597B URL: | Excerpt / Summary "It's hard to put ourselves in the shoes of a late-nineteenth-century thermodynamicist. Those folks felt that the inability of entropy to decrease in a closed system was not just a good idea; it was a Law. The idea that entropy would "probably" increase wasn't any more palatable than a suggestion that energy would "probably" be conserved would have been. In reality, the numbers are just so overwhelming that the probabilistic reasoning of statistical mechanics might as well be absolute, for all intents and purposes. But Boltzmann wanted to prove something more definite than that.... In 18702, Boltzmann (twenty-eight years old at the time) published a paper in which he purported to show that entropy would always increase or remain constant - a result called the "H-Theorem", which has been the subject of countless debates ever since." |
Link[2] Time's Arrow and Archimedes' Point ( Excerpt from Chapter 2)
Author: Huw Price - Director, Center for Time, University of Sydney Cited by: Peter Baldwin 3:12 AM 29 April 2011 GMT URL: | Excerpt / Summary "The next step belongs to Boltzmann, in whose work the connection between statistical mechanics and the second law of thermodynamics first becomes absolutely explicit. Like Maxwell, Boltzmann considered the effects of collisions on the distribution of velocities of the molecules of a gas. In effect, his approach was to partition the available velocities into a series of tiny intervals, and to consider the effect of collisions on the number of molecules whose velocities fell in each of these intervals. He was able to argue that no matter what the initial distribution of velocities - that is, no matter how the particles were initially assigned to the available velocity intervals - the effect of collisions was to make the distribution of velocities approach the distribution which Maxwell had characterized a few years earlier.
Boltmann's approach was to define a quantity, originally denoted E, with respect to which he was able to argue (1) that E takes its minimum possible value when the gas has the Maxwell distribution, and (2) that when the gas does not already have the Maxwell distribution, the effect of collisions is to ensure that E always decreases with time. Together these results seemed to imply not only that a gas will not depart from the Maxwell distribution, but also that any sample of gas will tend to that distribution, if not already there. These are the defining characteristics of the notion of equilibrium, however, and Boltzmann's result therefore provides powerful confirmation that the Maxwell distribution does indeed characterize the condition of a gas in thermal equilibrium, as Maxwell himself had suggested. (E later came to be called H, and the result is now known as Boltzmann's H-theorem.)" pp 25-26 |
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