Temperature

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Readings

  • Notes, Chapter 12: Temperature (PDF)

Assignments

  • Problem Set 11 (PDF)
  • Problem Set 11 Solutions (PDF)

Resources

Technical

Seminal papers on the Principle of Maximum Entropy by Edwin T. Jaynes (July 5, 1922 - April 30, 1998):

  • Jaynes, E. T. "Information Theory and Statistical Mechanics." Physical Review 106 (May 15, 1957): 620-630. (PDF - 2.1 MB)# (PS - 2.5 MB)
    This paper started the use of the Principle of Maximum Entropy in physics.
  • ———. "Information Theory and Statistical Mechanics II." Physical Review 108 (October 15, 1957): 171-190. (PDF - 3.8 MB)# (PS - 4.5 MB)
    Continuation of the previous reference.

Historical

  • Sadi Carnot biography
  • William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) biography
  • Gabriel Fahrenheit biography
  • Anders Celsius biography
  • William Rankine biography
  • J. Willard Gibbs biography
  • Biography of Ludwig Boltzmann, Austrian physicist, 1844-1906, who was a pioneer in thermodynamics and entropy, is Amazon logo Cercignani, Carlo. Ludwig Boltzmann, The Man Who Trusted Atoms. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN: 9780198570646.
  • On Boltzmann's tombstone (closeup) is the formula for entropy "S = k log W"
  • Ludwig Boltzmann biography
  • Another Ludwig Boltzmann biography
  • History of the twisted and convoluted development of the difficult concept of entropy, Amazon logo Truesdell, C. The Tragicomical History of Thermodynamics, 1822 - 1854. Berlin, Germany: Springer-Verlag, 1980. ISBN: 9780387904030.
    Professor Truesdell died January 14, 2000 at the age of 80. He retired from the faculty at Johns Hopkins University in 1989.
  • Edwin T. Jaynes biography, photograph, bibliography

Books

There are many textbooks on thermodynamics and energy conversion.

  • Amazon logo Silbey, R., R. Alberty, and M. Bawendi. Physical Chemistry. New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons, 2004. ISBN: 9780471215042.
    These authors are from MIT. Alberty was formerly Dean of Science, and Silbey was until recently Dean of Science. It's amazing that anyone can be a Dean and still keep up with science.
  • Typical excellent book in a traditional style, Zemansky, Mark W. Heat and Thermodynamics. 3rd ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 1951, or earlier editions starting in 1937. This book does not mention information, and starts with assumed knowledge about temperature, pressure, and volume. Suitable for advanced undergraduates.
  • Introductory book, used for sophomores, covering classical thermodynamics (no information), Van Ness, H. C. Understanding Thermodynamics. New York, NY: Dover Publications, 1969. Succinct and carefully crafted treatment.
  • Book covering both equilibrium and irreversible thermodynamics, Callen, Herbert B. Thermodynamics. New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons, 1962.
  • Careful treatment of classical thermodynamics (no mention of information) with emphasis on the mathematical formalism, Truesdell, C. Rational Thermodynamics. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 1969. Suitable for graduate courses, for those with some prior exposure to thermodynamics.
  • Textbook developed at MIT in energy conversion (no thermodynamics), White, David C., and Herbert H. Woodson. Electromechanical Energy Conversion. New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons, 1959.
  • An early textbook to use the Principle of Maximum Entropy as an approach to thermodynamics is Tribus, M. Thermostatics and Thermodynamics. Princeton, NJ: D. Van Nostrand Co, Inc., 1961.


UNITS: Bits and Codes | Compression | Noise and Errors | Probability | Communications | Processes | Inference | Maximum Entropy | Physical Systems | Energy | Temperature | Quantum Information