2006-12-13
10:15 at HCI J 574Starting with Kepler, Newton and the celestial mechanics, the concept of “interacting pair of particles” (such as earth-moon, nucleus-electron, electron-electron) has been the actual building block of our thinking in physics -- both classically and quantum mechanically. Only thermodynamics, born out of the earthy need to make steam engines more efficient, is free from it. In the talk, thermodynamics is given a similarly basic role, in the attempt to arrive at a complimentary, macroscopic view of physics. Two examples, the connection of which to entropy is either ignored or contended, will be considered: jammed granular media and the Maxwell theory. The thermodynamic approach to sand and the macroscopic Maxwell theory
Mario Liu
Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, University of Tübingen
© Jan 2025 mk 719 entries