A4.18
(a) Consider an ideal gas of Fermi particles obeying the Pauli exclusion principle with a set of one-particle energy eigenstates . Given the probability at temperature that there are particles in the eigenstate :
determine the appropriate normalization factor . Use this to find the average number of Fermi particles in the eigenstate .
Explain briefly why in generalizing these discrete eigenstates to a continuum in momentum space (in the range to ) we must multiply by the density of states
where is the degeneracy of the eigenstates and is the volume.
(b) With the energy expressed as a momentum integral
consider the effect of changing the volume so slowly that the occupation numbers do not change (i.e. particle number and entropy remain fixed). Show that the momentum varies as and so deduce from the first law expression
that the pressure is given by
Show that in the non-relativistic limit where is the internal energy, while for ultrarelativistic particles .
(c) Now consider a Fermi gas in the limit with all momentum eigenstates filled up to the Fermi momentum . Explain why the number density can be written as
From similar expressions for the energy, deduce in both the non-relativistic and ultrarelativistic limits that the pressure may be written as
where should be specified in each case.
(d) Examine the stability of an object of radius consisting of such a Fermi degenerate gas by comparing the gravitational binding energy with the total kinetic energy. Briefly point out the relevance of these results to white dwarfs and neutron stars.