PX449-10 Kinetic Theory
Introductory description
Kinetic Theory is the theory of how distributions change. It is based on Boltzmann's equation (the same Boltzmann who sorted out the equilibrium statistical mechanics you met in Thermal Physics II) and other PDEs. These study the evolution in time of a distribution function, which gives the density of particles in the system's phase space. (Phase space is the space of states which specify particles' position and momenta.) The module establishes relations between conductivity, diffusion constants and viscosity in gases. It looks at applications to financial modelling (many of the concepts are also the basis for models of the 'motion' of stock and option prices in financial markets).
An additional motivation of this module is to illustrate how some of the mathematics you learnt in second year applied mathematics modules is used in theoretical physics.
Module aims
To introduce Maths/Physics students to non-equilibrium statistical physics and to give them an appreciation of mathematical physics as separate sub-discipline
Outline syllabus
This is an indicative module outline only to give an indication of the sort of topics that may be covered. Actual sessions held may differ.
Time dependent distribution functions: Notation, phase space coordinates and volumes. Liouville’s theorem. Boltzmann equation and the assumption of molecular chaos.
Collisions: Connection between microscopic particle mechanics and the distribution function. Detailed balance, scattering cross section for a rigid ball and classical binary collision integral. Mean free path.
Equilibrium: Derivation of equilibrium statistical mechanics via phase space distributions. Hamilton’s equations as a symplectic transformation.
Transport in gases: Linear transport theory and the Einstein relation between conductivity and diffusion coefficient. Thermal transport, viscosity in gases.
Diffusion: Derivation of the diffusion equation from the Boltzmann equation. Validity of the diffusion approximation. Example boundary problems for the diffusion equation. Mention of Fokker-Plank equation and connection to Langevin dynamics. Applications in molecular simulation and financial modelling.
Some of:
Derivation of Euler equations from kinetics and discussion of viscosity in Navier-Stokes, Fokker-Planck equation
Non Hamiltonian dynamics: Outline treatment of connection to phase space distributions. Extended ‘thermostat’ systems obeying the canonical distribution within the particle subspace. Pathogenic failure in the absence of molecular chaos.
Learning outcomes
By the end of the module, students should be able to:
- Derive and solve the Boltzmann equation
- Set up and solve boundary value problems describing the time-development of distributions in phase space
- Apply the theory to model systems
Indicative reading list
Physical Kinetics, EM Lifshitz and LP Pitaevskii : Chapters 1-3
Statistical Mechanics: Theory and molecular simulation, ME Tuckerman : Chapters 4, 13 and 15.
View reading list on Talis Aspire
Subject specific skills
Knowledge of mathematics and physics. Skills in modelling, reasoning, thinking.
Transferable skills
Analytical, communication, problem-solving, self-study
Study time
Type | Required |
---|---|
Lectures | 20 sessions of 1 hour (20%) |
Private study | 80 hours (80%) |
Total | 100 hours |
Private study description
Working through lecture notes, solving problems, wider reading, discussing with others taking the module, revising for exam, practising on past exam papers
Costs
No further costs have been identified for this module.
You must pass all assessment components to pass the module.
Assessment group B1
Weighting | Study time | Eligible for self-certification | |
---|---|---|---|
In-person Examination | 100% | No | |
Answer 2 questions
|
Feedback on assessment
Personal tutor, group feedback
Courses
This module is Core for:
- Year 3 of UPXA-FG31 Undergraduate Mathematics and Physics (MMathPhys)
This module is Option list A for:
- Year 3 of UPXA-F303 Undergraduate Physics (MPhys)
This module is Option list B for:
- Year 1 of TPXA-F345 Postgraduate Taught Modelling of Heterogeneous Systems (PGDip)
- Year 3 of UPXA-GF13 Undergraduate Mathematics and Physics (BSc)
- Year 3 of UPXA-FG31 Undergraduate Mathematics and Physics (MMathPhys)