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Thermal Physics

Front Cover
6 Reviews
Macmillan, Jan 15, 1980 - Science - 473 pages
CONGRATULATIONS TO HERBERT KROEMER, 2000 NOBEL LAUREATE FOR PHYSICS
 
For upper-division courses in thermodynamics or statistical mechanics, Kittel and Kroemer offers a modern approach to thermal physics that is based on the idea that all physical systems can be described in terms of their discrete quantum states, rather than drawing on 19th-century classical mechanics concepts.
  

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Review: Thermal Physics

User Review  - Scwoolf - Goodreads

Statistical mechanics is probably the most elegant (and useful) physical theory I have encountered: you basically derive all of thermodynamics from scratch (or with the least objectionable set of ... Read full review

Review: Thermal Physics

User Review  - William - Goodreads

Thermodynamics is ridiculous. It isn't 1870 anymore. Use statistical mechanics. This book starts with statistical mechanics immediately. Use it. Then derive thermodynamics from first principles. Read full review

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Contents

Entropy and Temperature
28
TEMPERATURE
41
Integrated Deviation
54
Boltzmann Distribution and Helmholtz Free Energy
55
Thermal Radiation and Planck Distribution
88
Chemical Potential and Gibbs Distribution
118
Ideal Gas
152
Fermi and Bose Gases 181
198
Phase Transformations
276
Binary Mixtures
310
Cryogenics
334
Semiconductor Statistics
354
Kinetic Theory
390
Propagation
424
Appendix A Some Integrals Containing Exponentials
439
Appendix B Temperature Scales
445

Heat and Work
226
Gibbs Free Energy and Chemical Reactions
262
Poisson Distribution
453
Copyright

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About the author (1980)

Charles Kittel did his undergraduate work in physics at M.I.T and at the Cavendish Laboratory of Cambridge University. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin. He worked in the solid state group at Bell Laboratories, along with Bardeen and Shockley, leaving to start the theoretical solid state physics group at Berkeley in 1951. His research has been largely in magnetism and in semiconductors. In magnetism he developed the theories of ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic resonance and the theory of single ferromagnetic domains, and extended the Bloch theory of magnons. In semiconductor physics he participated in the first cyclotron and plasma resonance experiments and extended the results to the theory of impurity states and to electron-hole drops.

He has been awarded three Guggenheim fellowships, the Oliver Buckley Prize for Solid State Physics, and, for contributions to teaching, the Oersted Medal of the American Association of Physics Teachers, He is a member of the National Academy of Science and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

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