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Thermodynamics and statistical mechanics. {}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list Translated by J. Kestin (1956) New York: Academic Press. Ehrenfest, Paul and Tatiana (1912). The conceptual foundations of the statistical approach in mechanics .
"High school physics textbooks" (PDF). Reports on high school physics. American Institute of Physics; Zitzewitz, Paul W. (2005). Physics: principles and problems. New York: Glencoe/McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0078458132
Thermodynamics is principally based on a set of four laws which are universally valid when applied to systems that fall within the constraints implied by each. In the various theoretical descriptions of thermodynamics these laws may be expressed in seemingly differing forms, but the most prominent formulations are the following.
Thermal physics, generally speaking, is the study of the statistical nature of physical systems from an energetic perspective. Starting with the basics of heat and temperature, thermal physics analyzes the first law of thermodynamics and second law of thermodynamics from the statistical perspective, in terms of the number of microstates corresponding to a given macrostate.
The first part of the book starts by presenting the problem thermodynamics is trying to solve, and provides the postulates on which thermodynamics is founded. It then develops upon this foundation to discuss reversible processes, heat engines, thermodynamics potentials, Maxwell's relations, stability of thermodynamics systems, and first-order phase transitions.
While it draws from fields as diverse as continuum mechanics and thermodynamics, it places a heavy emphasis on the commonalities between the topics covered. Mass, momentum, and heat transport all share a very similar mathematical framework, and the parallels between them are exploited in the study of transport phenomena to draw deep ...
Thermodynamics An Engineering Approach. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-352932-5. Callen, H.B. (1960/1985). Thermodynamics and an Introduction to Thermostatistics, (1st edition 1960) 2nd edition 1985, Wiley, New York, ISBN 0-471-86256-8. Carathéodory, C. (1909). "Untersuchungen über die Grundlagen der Thermodynamik" (PDF ...
Given an open subset U of R n and a subinterval I of R, one says that a function u : U × I → R is a solution of the heat equation if = + +, where (x 1, ..., x n, t) denotes a general point of the domain.