Review of statistics and probability I consider first a discrete distribution of possible outcomes of some measurement: each measurement has one value.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Normal Distribution
Advertisements

Kirchoff’s Loop Theorem
Blackbody Radiation & Planck’s Hypothesis
CHAPTER 14 THE CLASSICAL STATISTICAL TREATMENT OF AN IDEAL GAS.
Lecture 28 — The Planck Distribution Chapter 8, Monday March 24 th Before Planck: Wien and Rayleigh-Jeans The ultraviolet catastrophe The Planck distribution.
What are the 3 ways heat can be transferred? Radiation: transfer by electromagnetic waves. Conduction: transfer by molecular collisions. Convection: transfer.
Introduction to Quantum Physics
What is the nature of Part I. The invention of radio? Hertz proves that light is really an electromagnetic wave. Waves could be generated in one circuit,
Statistical Background
Continuous Random Variables and Probability Distributions
Statistical Analysis Pedro Flores. Conditional Probability The conditional probability of an event B is the probability that the event will occur given.
Central Tendency and Variability
12.3 – Measures of Dispersion
Continuous Probability Distributions A continuous random variable can assume any value in an interval on the real line or in a collection of intervals.
Physics 361 Principles of Modern Physics Lecture 3.
Econ 482 Lecture 1 I. Administration: Introduction Syllabus Thursday, Jan 16 th, “Lab” class is from 5-6pm in Savery 117 II. Material: Start of Statistical.
Lattice Vibrations Part II
Laws of Radiation Heat Transfer P M V Subbarao Associate Professor Mechanical Engineering Department IIT Delhi Macro Description of highly complex Wave.
Chapter 7: Random Variables
L7.1b Continuous Random Variables CONTINUOUS RANDOM VARIABLES NORMAL DISTRIBUTIONS AD PROBABILITY DISTRIBUTIONS.
@ 2012 Wadsworth, Cengage Learning Chapter 5 Description of Behavior Through Numerical 2012 Wadsworth, Cengage Learning.
Chapter 1 Thermal radiation and Planck’s postulate
Ch 9 pages Lecture 18 – Quantization of energy.
Standard Statistical Distributions Most elementary statistical books provide a survey of commonly used statistical distributions. The reason we study these.
Physics 361 Principles of Modern Physics Lecture 8.
PROBABILITY & STATISTICAL INFERENCE LECTURE 3 MSc in Computing (Data Analytics)
Topics Covered Discrete probability distributions –The Uniform Distribution –The Binomial Distribution –The Poisson Distribution Each is appropriately.
Statistical Experiment A statistical experiment or observation is any process by which an measurements are obtained.
QBM117 Business Statistics Probability and Probability Distributions Continuous Probability Distributions 1.
Measures of Dispersion CUMULATIVE FREQUENCIES INTER-QUARTILE RANGE RANGE MEAN DEVIATION VARIANCE and STANDARD DEVIATION STATISTICS: DESCRIBING VARIABILITY.
Random Variables Numerical Quantities whose values are determine by the outcome of a random experiment.
Average Lifetime Atoms stay in an excited level only for a short time (about 10-8 [sec]), and then they return to a lower energy level by spontaneous emission.
Metal e-e- e-e- e-e- e-e- e-e- e+e+. Consider a nearly enclosed container at uniform temperature: Light gets produced in hot interior Bounces around randomly.
1 Chapter 16 Random Variables. 2 Expected Value: Center A random variable assumes a value based on the outcome of a random event.  We use a capital letter,
Mean and Standard Deviation of Discrete Random Variables.
Photon Statistics Blackbody Radiation 1.The energy loss of a hot body is attributable to the emission of electromagnetic waves from the body. 2.The.
Continuous Probability Distributions Statistics for Management and Economics Chapter 8.
Chapter 2 Statistical Background. 2.3 Random Variables and Probability Distributions A variable X is said to be a random variable (rv) if for every real.
PROBABILITY AND STATISTICS FOR ENGINEERING Hossein Sameti Department of Computer Engineering Sharif University of Technology Mean, Variance, Moments and.
Random Variable The outcome of an experiment need not be a number, for example, the outcome when a coin is tossed can be 'heads' or 'tails'. However, we.
Statistics What is statistics? Where are statistics used?
CY1B2 Statistics1 (ii) Poisson distribution The Poisson distribution resembles the binomial distribution if the probability of an accident is very small.
Lecture 27 — The Planck Distribution Chapter 8, Friday March 21 st Quick review of exam 2 Black-body radiation Before Planck: Wien and Rayleigh-Jeans The.
BASIC STATISTICAL CONCEPTS Chapter Three. CHAPTER OBJECTIVES Scales of Measurement Measures of central tendency (mean, median, mode) Frequency distribution.
STA 2023 Module 5 Discrete Random Variables. Rev.F082 Learning Objectives Upon completing this module, you should be able to: 1.Determine the probability.
Dualisme Cahaya Sebagai Gelombang dan Partikel
Light is a Particle Physics 12.
1 Lecture 6 Outline 1. Two kinds of random variables a. Discrete random variables b. Continuous random variables 2. Symmetric distributions 3. Normal distributions.
CHAPTER – 1 UNCERTAINTIES IN MEASUREMENTS. 1.3 PARENT AND SAMPLE DISTRIBUTIONS  If we make a measurement x i in of a quantity x, we expect our observation.
Lecture 8: Measurement Errors 1. Objectives List some sources of measurement errors. Classify measurement errors into systematic and random errors. Study.
IB Physics 12 Mr. Jean February 5 th, The plan: Video clip of the day. Quantum Theory Energy Levels.
CHAPTER- 3.1 ERROR ANALYSIS.  Now we shall further consider  how to estimate uncertainties in our measurements,  the sources of the uncertainties,
Data Analysis. Statistics - a powerful tool for analyzing data 1. Descriptive Statistics - provide an overview of the attributes of a data set. These.
Blackbody. Kirchhoff’s Radiation  Radiated electromagnetic energy is the source of radiated thermal energy. Depends on wavelengthDepends on wavelength.
S D.. In probability and statistics, the standard deviation is the most common measure of statistical dispersion. Simply put, standard deviation measures.
THE NORMAL DISTRIBUTION
©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008McGraw-Hill/Irwin Probability Distributions Chapter 6.
STATISTICAL MECHANICS PD Dr. Christian Holm PART 5-6 Some special topics, Thermal Radiation, and Plank distribution.
The temperature of a lava flow can be estimated by observing its color
The units of g(): (energy)-1
The Planck Distribution

Blackbody Radiation All bodies at a temperature T emit and absorb thermal electromagnetic radiation Blackbody radiation In thermal equilibrium, the power.
Virtual University of Pakistan
Blackbody Radiation All bodies at a temperature T emit and absorb thermal electromagnetic radiation Blackbody radiation In thermal equilibrium, the power.
Normal modes in three dimensions
AP Statistics Chapter 16 Notes.
CHAPTER – 1.2 UNCERTAINTIES IN MEASUREMENTS.
Chapter 5: Discrete Probability Distributions
CHAPTER – 1.2 UNCERTAINTIES IN MEASUREMENTS.
Presentation transcript:

Review of statistics and probability I consider first a discrete distribution of possible outcomes of some measurement: each measurement has one value h i and can be placed in one bin, bins labeled by the index i the total number of possible different bins is H the number of measurements that fall into bin i is n i Example: measurements of human height, to nearest cm the set of n i values is the discrete distribution the total number of measurements is N: rescale n i by 1/N to get probability p i of h i : p i distribution is said to be normalized: will shortly convert this discrete stuff to a continuous distribution by replacing summations (over heights) by integrations

Review of statistics and probability II it tells us NOTHING about the “spread” of the distribution the deviation i of a measurement h i from the average := h i – what is the average deviation? What does it tell us? and this is a paradigm for calculating ANY average! if we lined up all the people end to end we would obtain the total length L: the average height of a person is : How narrow or broad is the distribution?

Review of statistics and probability III consider the squared deviation i := (h i - ) 2 this is always ≥ 0 now consider the average of this quantity: the variance the square root of this quantity is the standard deviation, with the same units as the quantity in question it will turn out to be the uncertainty in a measurable

Now convert to a continuous distribution now the bin index is a continuous variable: i  x now the sums from i =1 to i = H become integrals over the domain of x (say, –∞ ≤ x ≤ ∞) define the probability density  (x) as follows: the probability that a measurement of x occurs between x and x + dx is  (x) dx the dimensions of  (x) are the dimensions of 1/x probability that measurement x is between a and b:  (x) distribution is said to be normalized: average value of x in that interval a < x < b: average value of f(x) in that interval a < x < b:

Application of these ideas to the black body radiator we assume that a cavity with a small hole acts as a perfect black body, since any radiation (light) that strikes the hole is ‘absorbed’… so whatever light comes out of the hole is characteristic of black body radiation if one ‘counts standing wave modes’ in a cavity of volume V, it may be shown that the number of modes in frequency range df is expressed as a probability-like distribution When this is normalized, it is easy to show A = 1/kT for a system to possess an energy E when in an environment at temperature T, the probability that its energy is within dE is expressed by the Boltzmann factor: average energy is therefore

The wrong black body theory and its repair this ‘energy-per-frequency’ function  (f), unfortunately, diverges to infinity as f  ∞, and so does its integral over all frequencies, which would be the total energy in the cavity! both problems are collectively termed the ultraviolet catastrophe! to fix the problem, Planck proposed that the mode energy E is restricted to only be an integer times a constant times the frequency: E = nhf, and the value of h will be determined by the data thus, the mode energy is quantized so now are statistics are those of a discrete distribution: we say that each mode contains an integer # of photons appropriate to its frequency Now we make an incorrect but reasonable assumption: assume that each mode can have any energy E at all, as long as the average in the mode is that average energy kT (thus, consistent with the Boltzmann probability), so that the amount of energy in frequency range df is  (f) kT df:

Implications of quantizing a mode’s energy again we invoke Boltzmann, and say that the probability for a mode to have energy E is now we can find the average energy of a mode as usual: of course, we must normalize this discrete probability distribution: so the probability to have energy E is

The UV catastrophe has vanished! drops to zero for small f like f 3 assembling all the pieces we arrive at the Planck distribution drops to zero for large f like