Listen "Lecture23: Brownian Motion and Diffusion"
Episode Synopsis
Brownian motion was discovered by a botanist named Brown, when he looked at water under a microscope, and observed pollen grains "jiggling" about in it. Einstein eventually explained it as due to the random collisions the pollen grain experienced from the water molecules. We compare the pollen grain to a drunk person walking home, and calculate how far the pollen grain can get by this type of diffusion. We also introduce the fluctuation-dissipation theorem, a far-reaching principle in advanced statistical mechanics that says that the microscopic thermal fluctuations in a system are the same microscopic processes that are responsible for things like drag, viscosity, and electrical resistance. (Why is that so cool? Because it means you can predict nonequilibrium properties -- those in the presence of an applied field like voltage -- to equilibrium properties like thermal fluctuations.) We also derive Fick's law of diffusion -- particles diffuse away from high concentrations. Go figure! Shown in class:Nice movies on the web about colloid particles in milk executing Brownian motion.There's a great applet on Brownian motion to play with here.Lecture Audio
More episodes of the podcast Thermal and Statistical Physics
Lecture 1: Accessible States
21/08/2006
New Course: Solid State Physics
10/01/2006
Final Review 2
12/12/2005
Final Review 1
05/12/2005
Lecture 24: Fluctuation-Dissipation Theorem
01/12/2005
Lecture 18: Van Der Waals and Geckos
02/11/2005
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.