Compressibility equation: Difference between revisions
Carl McBride (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
| Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
#[http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0034-4885/28/1/306 J. S. Rowlinson "The equation of state of dense systems", Reports on Progress in Physics '''28''' pp. 169-199 (1965)] | #[http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0034-4885/28/1/306 J. S. Rowlinson "The equation of state of dense systems", Reports on Progress in Physics '''28''' pp. 169-199 (1965)] | ||
[[category: statistical mechanics]] | |||
Revision as of 17:33, 25 May 2007
The compressibility equation (Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle \chi} ) can be derived from the density fluctuations of the grand canonical ensemble (Eq. 3.16 in Ref. 1). For a homogeneous system:
where Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle {\rm g}^{(2)}(r)} is the pair distribution function. For a spherical potential
- Failed to parse (SVG (MathML can be enabled via browser plugin): Invalid response ("Math extension cannot connect to Restbase.") from server "https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/":): {\displaystyle \frac{1}{kT} \left.\frac{\partial P}{\partial \rho}\right\vert_{T} = 1 - \rho \int_0^{\infty} c(r) ~4 \pi r^2 ~{\rm d}r \equiv 1- \rho \hat{c}(0) \equiv \frac{1}{1+\rho \hat{h}(0)} \equiv \frac{1}{ 1 + \rho \int_0^{\infty} h(r) ~4 \pi r^2 ~{\rm d}r}}
Note that the compressibility equation, unlike the energy and pressure equations, is valid even when the inter-particle forces are not pairwise additive.