送交者: 短江学者 于 2017-06-12, 16:48:44:
Imagine that one has a thermal system that consists of many, independent moving points—n,
say. Such is the constitution, for example, of an ideal gas. If one has a volume V0 with one point
in it, the probability that the point will be found in a subvolume V is just V/V0. Since the points
move independently, it now follows that the probability that all n are to be found in the
subvolume is just
W = (V/V0)n (2)
This formula gives the probability that the volume of the thermal system will spontaneously
fluctuate to the smaller volume V. For a system of molecules comprising an ideal gas, n will be
of the order of 1024 for macroscopic samples of gas. So the probability of any significant volume
fluctuation is unimaginably small. Whether small or not, the probability of the transition is
related to the entropy of the initial and final states by what Einstein called “Boltzmann’s
Principle”:
S - S0 = k ln W (3)
Applying Boltzmann’s Principle (3) to (2) for an ideal gas of n molecules immediately returns
the expression S - S0 = kn ln (V/V0) for entropy of the gas, from which, as Einstein shows in a
footnote, the ideal gas law follows.
Proceeding now to the case of heat radiation, Einstein combined the expressions (1) and
(3) to conclude that the probability that a volume of radiation V0 will spontaneously fluctuate to
the subvolume V is
W = (V/V0)E/hν (4)
Einstein thought the import of this last formula obvious. He wrote without any intervening text:
From this we further conclude:
Monochromatic radiation of low density (in the region of validity of Wien’s
formula) behaves thermodynamically as if it consisted of energy quanta of size
hν that are independent of one another.
The thought is clear. The similarity of expressions (2) and (4) led Einstein to infer that the
radiation consists of n = E/hν independent points; that is the energy E is divided into n
independent quanta of size hν. The only hesitation in Einstein’s inference is the “behaves … as
if” qualification. That qualification is dispensed with elsewhere, such as in the introductory
section, with mention of the full array of evidence of the paper.
While Einstein’s inference to light quanta above seems irresistible, we should recall that
its conclusion directly contradicted the great achievement of nineteenth century optics and
electrodynamics, the wave theory of light.