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=Ideal Gas Equation of State=
=Ideal Gas Equation of State=


Much of the following overview of ideal gas relations is drawn from Chapter II of Chandrasekhar's classic text on ''Stellar Structure'' [[User:Tohline/Appendix/References#C67|[<b><font color="red">C67</font></b>]]], which was originally published in 1939.  A guide to parallel ''print media'' discussions of this topic is provided alongside the ideal gas equation of state in the [[User:Tohline/Appendix/Equation_templates#Equations_of_State|key equations appendix]] of this H_Book.
Much of the following overview of ideal gas relations is drawn from Chapter II of Chandrasekhar's classic text on ''Stellar Structure'' [[Appendix/References#C67|[<b><font color="red">C67</font></b>]]], which was originally published in 1939.  A guide to parallel ''print media'' discussions of this topic is provided alongside the ideal gas equation of state in the [[Appendix/EquationTemplates#Equations_of_State|key equations appendix]] of this H_Book.





Revision as of 17:15, 11 July 2021

Ideal Gas Equation of State

Much of the following overview of ideal gas relations is drawn from Chapter II of Chandrasekhar's classic text on Stellar Structure [C67], which was originally published in 1939. A guide to parallel print media discussions of this topic is provided alongside the ideal gas equation of state in the key equations appendix of this H_Book.


Fundamental Properties of an Ideal Gas

Property #1

An ideal gas containing User:Tohline/Math/VAR NumberDensity01 free particles per unit volume will exert on its surroundings an isotropic pressure (i.e., a force per unit area) User:Tohline/Math/VAR Pressure01 given by the following

Standard Form
of the Ideal Gas Equation of State,

User:Tohline/Math/EQ EOSideal00

[C67], Chapter VII.3, Eq. (18)
D. D. Clayton (1968), Eq. (2-7)
[H87], §1.1, p. 5

if the gas is in thermal equilibrium at a temperature User:Tohline/Math/VAR Temperature01.

Property #2

The internal energy per unit mass User:Tohline/Math/VAR SpecificInternalEnergy01 of an ideal gas is a function only of the gas temperature User:Tohline/Math/VAR Temperature01, that is,

ϵ=ϵ(T).

[C67], Chapter II, Eq. (1)

Specific Heats

Drawing from Chapter II, §1 of [C67]:  "Let α be a function of the physical variables. Then the specific heat, cα, at constant α is defined by the expression,"

cα

(dQdT)α=constant

The specific heat at constant pressure cP and the specific heat at constant (specific) volume cV prove to be particularly interesting parameters because they identify experimentally measurable properties of a gas.

From the Fundamental Law of Thermodynamics, namely,

dQ

=

dϵ+PdV,

it is clear that when the state of a gas undergoes a change at constant (specific) volume (dV=0),

(dQdT)V=constant

=

dϵdT

cV

=

dϵdT.

Assuming cV is independent of User:Tohline/Math/VAR Temperature01 — a consequence of the kinetic theory of gasses; see, for example, Chapter X of [C67] — and knowing that the specific internal energy is only a function of the gas temperature — see Property #2 above — we deduce that,

ϵ

=

cVT.

[C67], Chapter II, Eq. (10)
[LL75], Chapter IX, §80, Eq. (80.10)
[H87], §1.2, p. 9
[HK94], §3.7.1, immediately following Eq. (3.80)

Also, from Form A of the Ideal Gas Equation of State (see below) and the recognition that ρ=1/V, we can write,

PgasV

=

(μ¯)T

PdV+VdP

=

(μ¯)dT.

As a result, the Fundamental Law of Thermodynamics can be rewritten as,

dQ

=

cVdT+(μ¯)dTVdP.

This means that the specific heat at constant pressure is given by the relation,

cP(dQdT)P=constant

=

cV+μ¯.

That is,

cPcV

=

μ¯.

[C67], Chapter II, §1, Eq. (9)
D. D. Clayton (1968), Eq. (2-108)
[LL75], Chapter IX, §80, immediately following Eq. (80.11)
[H87], §1.2, p. 9
[KW94], §4.1, immediately following Eq. (4.15)

Consequential Ideal Gas Relations

Throughout most of this H_Book, we will define the relative degree of compression of a gas in terms of its mass density User:Tohline/Math/VAR Density01 rather than in terms of its number density User:Tohline/Math/VAR NumberDensity01. Following D. D. Clayton (1968) — see his p. 82 discussion of The Perfect Monatomic Nondegenerate Gas — we will "let the mean molecular weight of the perfect gas be designated by User:Tohline/Math/MP MeanMolecularWeight. Then the density is

ρ=ngμ¯mu,

where User:Tohline/Math/C AtomicMassUnit is the mass of 1 amu" (atomic mass unit). "The number of particles per unit volume can then be expressed in terms of the density and the mean molecular weight as

ng=ρμ¯mu=ρNAμ¯,

where User:Tohline/Math/C AvogadroConstant = 1/User:Tohline/Math/C AtomicMassUnit is Avogadro's number …" Substitution into the above-defined Standard Form of the Ideal Gas Equation of State gives, what we will refer to as,

Form A
of the Ideal Gas Equation of State,

User:Tohline/Math/EQ EOSideal0A

[LL75], Chapter IX, §80, Eq. (80.8)
[KW94], §2.2, Eq. (2.7) and §13, Eq. (13.1)

where User:Tohline/Math/C GasConstantUser:Tohline/Math/C BoltzmannConstantUser:Tohline/Math/C AvogadroConstant is generally referred to in the astrophysics literature as the gas constant. The definition of the gas constant can be found in the Variables Appendix of this H_Book; its numerical value can be obtained by simply scrolling the computer mouse over its symbol in the text of this paragraph. See §VII.3 (p. 254) of [C67] or §13.1 (p. 102) of [KW94] for particularly clear explanations of how to calculate User:Tohline/Math/MP MeanMolecularWeight.

Employing a couple of the expressions from the above discussion of specific heats, the right-hand side of Form A of the Ideal Gas Equation of State can be rewritten as,

μ¯ρT

=

(cPcV)ρ(ϵcV)=(γg1)ρϵ,

where we have — as have many before us — introduced a key physical parameter,

γg

cPcV,

[C67], Chapter II, immediately following Eq. (9)
[LL75], Chapter IX, §80, immediately following Eq. (80.9)
[T78], §3.4, immediately following Eq. (72)
[HK94], §3.7.1, Eq. (3.86)

to quantify the ratio of specific heats. This leads to what we will refer to as,

Form B
of the Ideal Gas Equation of State

P=(γg1)ϵρ

[C67], Chapter II, Eq. (5)
[HK94], §1.3.1, Eq. (1.22)
[BLRY07], §6.1.1, Eq. (6.4)

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