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Consider a system consisting of a single hydrogen atom/ion, which has two possible states: unoccupied (i.e., no electron present) and occupied (i.e., one electron present, in the ground state). Calculate the ratio of the probabilities of these two states, to obtain the Saha equation, already derived in Section 5.6 Treat the electrons as a monotonic ideal gas, for the purpose of determining μ. Neglect the fact that an electron has two independent spin states.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The ratio of probabilities of unoccupied state to occupied state is kTPeνQe-1kT.

Step by step solution

01

Step 1. Formula Gibb's Factor

Formula for Gibb's Factor is given as:

G(s)=e-(ε-μ)kT

G(s)=e-(ε-μ)kT

where, μis chemical potential, εis energy occupied, kis Boltzmann's constant, Tis temperature.

02

Step 2. Ratio of Probabilities

Substitute ε=0andμ=0for unoccupied state.

G(s)=e-(0-0)kT=e0=1

Substitute ε=-1for occupied state.

role="math" localid="1647153963926" G~(s)=e-(-1-μ)kT=e(1+μ)kT

The ratio of probability of unoccupied state to occupied state is:

role="math" localid="1647154152958" G(s)G~(s)=1e(1+μ)kT

03

Step 3. Substitution in chemical potential formula

Formula for chemical potential is given as:

μ=-kT×lnVZinNνQ

Substitute VN=kTPewhere Peis partial pressure of electron gas.

role="math" localid="1647154444368" μ=-kT×lnkTZinPeνQ

For mono atomic gas, substitute Zin=1

-μkT=lnkTPeνQe-μkT=kTPeνQ
04

Step 4. Final calculation

Ratio of probability can be written as,

G(s)G~(s)=1e(1+μ)kT=e-1kT×e-μkT

Substitute e-μkT=kTPeνQin above equation,

role="math" localid="1647155185719" G(s)G~(s)=e-1kT×kTPeνQ=kTPeνQe-1kT

Hence, the ratio of probabilities of unoccupied state to occupied state is kTPeνQe-1kT .

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Change variables in equation 7.83 to λ=hc/ϵ and thus derive a formula for the photon spectrum as a function of wavelength. Plot this spectrum, and find a numerical formula for the wavelength where the spectrum peaks, in terms of hc/kT. Explain why the peak does not occur at hc/(2.82kT).

Consider two single-particle states, A and B, in a system of fermions, where ϵA=μ-xand ϵB=μ+x; that is, level A lies below μ by the same amount that level B lies above μ. Prove that the probability of level B being occupied is the same as the probability of level A being unoccupied. In other words, the Fermi-Dirac distribution is "symmetrical" about the point where ϵ=μ.

For a system of fermions at room temperature, compute the probability of a single-particle state being occupied if its energy is

(a) 1eVless than μ

(b) 0.01eVless than μ

(c) equal to μ

(d) 0.01eVgreater than μ

(e) 1eVgreater thanμ

Sometimes it is useful to know the free energy of a photon gas.

(a) Calculate the (Helmholtz) free energy directly from the definition

(Express the answer in terms of T' and V.)

(b) Check the formula S=-(F/T)Vfor this system.

(c) Differentiate F with respect to V to obtain the pressure of a photon gas. Check that your result agrees with that of the previous problem.

(d) A more interesting way to calculate F is to apply the formula F=-kTlnZ separately to each mode (that is, each effective oscillator), then sum over all modes. Carry out this calculation, to obtain

F=8πV(kT)4(hc)30x2ln1-e-xdx

Integrate by parts, and check that your answer agrees with part (a).

The tungsten filament of an incandescent light bulb has a temperature of approximately 3000K. The emissivity of tungsten is approximately 13, and you may assume that it is independent of wavelength.

(a) If the bulb gives off a total of 100watts, what is the surface area of its filament in square millimetres?

(b) At what value of the photon energy does the peak in the bulb's spectrum occur? What is the wavelength corresponding to this photon energy?

(c) Sketch (or use a computer to plot) the spectrum of light given off by the filament. Indicate the region on the graph that corresponds to visible wavelengths, between400and700nm.

(d) Calculate the fraction of the bulb's energy that comes out as visible light. (Do the integral numerically on a calculator or computer.) Check your result qualitatively from the graph of part (c).

( e) To increase the efficiency of an incandescent bulb, would you want to raise or lower the temperature? (Some incandescent bulbs do attain slightly higher efficiency by using a different temperature.)

(f) Estimate the maximum possible efficiency (i.e., fraction of energy in the visible spectrum) of an incandescent bulb, and the corresponding filament temperature. Neglect the fact that tungsten melts at 3695K.

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