Syllabus for Statistical Mechanics (I) – PHYS521000¶
Basic information¶
Time: Thursday 13:20-16:20
Classroom: Physics building, Room 124
Instructor: Yi-Ping Huang
Office hours: After the course or by appointment (Online or at Room 517)
Teaching assistant: Santiago Figueroa, Yu-Tzu Chang, and Jerry Chen
TA Office hours: 19:00 Monday:Santiago Figueroa, Tuesday:Yu-Tzu Chang, Wednesday:Jerry Chen at Room 501( Starting from Feb. 24th )
Midterm exam date: 2022, April, 21st
Final exam date: 2022, June, 16th
The course will be offered in English.
We encourage everyone to interact in English. If some conceptual questions are difficult to be described in English, one can ask the question in Mandarin, and I will translate that into English. If I forgot to do that, please remind me to do so.
Teaching method: Lectures with live video streaming.
Please join the google classroom.
Course code: please contact the instructor.
Course-related information(e.g., homework) will be posted in the google classroom.
Access to the live video streaming will be provided in the google classroom.
Evaluation:¶
Homework (50%), Midterm (20%), Final (30%).
Due to the COVID, we update the score weighting as
Homework (50%), Midterm (20%), Take home project (10%), Final (20%).
Homework policies¶
It is encouraged to discuss homework or the content of the lectures with your classmates. However, the point of discussion is to form one’s own opinion instead of following someone’s idea. Don’t copy the homework.
Copied homework will get no points. That is, we will use a very one-sided rule. If two homework looks very similar, both of them get zero points.
Copied homework from the internet is also disallowed. If the homework looks similar to any online resources: solution manual or anything, the homework will also get zero points.
I will put the pdf file of the homework on google classroom. The pdf file will specify the due date of the homework. One-day delay is allowed (By Friday 5 pm). If you need more time to finish the homework, please send an email to me and explain why you need an extension and when you expect to turn in your homework. Late homework(within a week) without reasoning gets 70% of the scores. Late homework without reasoning for more than a week will get 0 points.
The purpose of homework is to help you learn the subject. Please give yourself some time to think independently first, then discuss with your classmates or TA. TA has no responsibility to do the homework for you. Please start doing the homework early.
How to do the homework¶
Bring your pen, blank paper, and the assignment. Find a place where you can think. Start working on the assignment. Think about the meaning of the problem. If you don’t know what to do, that’s fine. Propose possible ways to yourself first. Develop the logic to solve the problem first, ignore the details of the calculation. Focus on the strategy of your approach.
Then, start to carry out your strategy. If you get stuck, found you are confused about some concept. Check the note and see if you can figure out what’s going on.
If you still cannot figure it out, try to describe your confusion to yourself. Try to narrow down the concept that you don’t feel you understand. Construct specific examples to show why it is confusing to you. Then you can bring your confusion to discuss with your classmates or TAs.
Example (A possible workflow of doing homework)
Assignment: Calculate the specific heat of model X:
What is the physical meaning of specific heat? Did we learn how to calculate specific heat during the course? Thermodynamic quantities are usually related to thermodynamic potential. Can we calculate the free energy of the system and get specific heat from there?
What is model X? What is the energy spectrum of model X? How knowing the energy spectrum helps me to construct the expression of thermodynamic potential?
If I find a way to derive the thermodynamic potential and if I understand how to calculate specific heat from thermodynamic potential. Then I should be able to solve this problem. So I should understand how to construct thermodynamic potential from scratch and how the thermodynamic potential is related to the specific heat.
Carry out the detail of the calculation.
Textbook¶
Statistical Mechanics in a Nutshell, Luca Peliti [Pel11]– Formal approach, might be a little bit boring.
(2nd Edition)Statistical Mechanics: Entropy, Order Parameters, and Complexity: Second Edition (Oxford Master Series in Physics), James P. Sethna [Set21]– More applications of statistical mechanics. When you have the question: why should we study statistical mechanics? You can find various interesting assignments at the end of each chapter.
Course Description¶
This course will introduce students to one of the pillars of theoretical physics: Statistical Mechanics. Statistical mechanics provides a framework to understand and describe all macroscopic systems, from a cooling cup of coffee, boiling water to electrons in metals, semiconductors, superconductors, magnets, black holes, … just to name a few. Statistical mechanics is a body of knowledge that establishes the relation between microscopic properties and macroscopic properties of the system, which is essential from both fundamental and application points of view. The course will cover the basic theoretical framework and applications(starting from non-interacting systems, classical gas, and quantum gases(fermions and bosons) ). After the study of non-interacting systems, we will discuss the techniques related to interacting systems.
References¶
Statistical Mechanics: Volume 5, Landau and Lifshitz – The classic theoretical physics collection. It’s unfortunate that we cannot discuss with Landau anymore, but his way of thinking is left in the classic textbook series forever. It’s the textbook we used when I was a graduate student at CU Boulder.
Thermodynamics and an introduction to thermostatistics, H. B. Callen – An excellent textbook that discusses the fundamental principles of thermodynamics.
Statistical physics of particles/fields, M. Kardar – A pair of modern textbooks about statistical physics with detailed discussion.
Statistical mechanics, Shang-Keng Ma – An idiosyncratic textbook that introduces statistical mechanics in the 70’s on this campus. (Originally written in Mandarin.) The textbook discusses the fundamentals and applications of statistical mechanics and exposes some of the thorny questions in the study of statistical mechanics that are not discussed in standard textbooks.
Statistical mechanics, R. K. Pathria and P. D. Beale – A relatively formal but solid textbook.
Statistical mechanics, K. Huang NTU open course
A good reference is the one that you are willing to read.
Outline of the course¶
Motivation and basic mathematical tools for statistical mechanics.
Random walks and universality classes
Thermodynamics as a phenomenological theory and the fundamental postulates of thermodynamics.
The fundamental postulates of statistical mechanics and connection with thermodynamics.
Applications of statistical mechanics on non-interacting systems
two-level system
ideal gas model
non-interacting boson/fermion
Interacting systems and mean-field theory
Course plan (2022-spring)¶
Date |
Contents |
---|---|
02.17 |
Course overview – Basic information, course description, and survey of the background. |
02.24 |
Introduction – Thermodynamics, statistical mechanics and the concept of emergence. |
03.03 |
Introduction – (Continue) Thermodynamics, statistical mechanics and the concept of emergence. |
03.10 |
Introduction – (Continue) Thermodynamics, statistical mechanics and the concept of emergence. |
03.17 |
Statistical postulates and review of thermodynamics. |
03.24 |
Statistical postulates and review of thermodynamics. |
03.31 |
The fundamental postulates of statistical mechanics |
04.07 |
The fundamental postulates of statistical mechanics |
04.14 |
The fundamental postulates of statistical mechanics |
04.21 |
The midterm exam (HW3 due) |
04.28 |
The interacting free systems |
05.05 |
The interacting free systems |
05.12 |
The interacting free systems |
05.19 |
The interacting free systems |
05.26 |
Phases and phase transitions |
06.02 |
Phases and phase transitions |
06.09 |
Phases and phase transitions |
06.16 |
Final exam(online) |
06.17 |
Take-home project due |
How to benefit from the course?¶
The correct mindset: to pass the course is not difficult; to learn something requires hard work!
For students who want to work in theoretical physics: The bar for theoretical physics is high. It would help if you tried to learn statistical mechanics by self-studying the subject. Try to self-studying the two textbooks and discuss with classmates, TAs, and me during office hours for those important conceptual questions.
The bar is also high for students who want to work in experimental physics: Try to connect statistical mechanics with experimental phenomena that you have learned. I will mention some examples. However, those examples are far from enough to build the physics intuition for an outstanding experimentalist.
For students who do not belong to above-mentioned categories: The bar is even higher. Try to find out the possible use of statistical mechanics for the subjects that you are interested in. During the lectures, you might have a feeling why statistical mechanics could have a broad range of applications. If you are interested in X, you can try to google “statistical mechanics and X.” I believe you can find something interesting.
The bottom line is: DO NOT LEARN SUBJECTS BY ATTENDING LECTURES ONLY. You can become better and better by thinking independently, but not by attending more and more lectures.
How to use this note?¶
I will have a short summary of the key concepts that I hope you learn in each section. After the lecture or reading the section, a simple question is: do I know the meaning of the statement in summary?
Summary
It is important to understand the summary after your finish reading the section or attending the lecture.
There will be some interesting simple questions that are worth thinking about. It will be a good question to discuss with the TAs during the office hours.
What?
Why is the sky blue?
There will be problems that are not part of the homework. However, it will be a good exercise to work through it.
Exercise
Proof \(a^2+b^2=c^2\) for a right triangle using dimensional analysis.
Some of the material will be in the jupyter notebook format. That means you can download the jupyter notebook and run your own simulation.