Fr. 234.00

Is There A Temperature? - Conceptual challenges at high energy, acceleration and complexity

English · Hardback

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Description

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Temperature and heat, entropy and order or disorder are key classical concepts of physics. These are challenged by searching matter under extreme conditions, such as high (relativistic) energy, strong acceleration or gravitation, or unusual complexity due to long range correlations. In our quest for quark matter all these conditions might occur simultaneously. This book, strongly motivated by the authors' everyday research experiences in the field of high-energy heavy-ion collisions, aims to bundle these challenges to modern physics.
The main topic is at the heart of thermodynamics -- the very concept of temperature, its use and extensions. New developments on this issue are both applications and foundations of non-extensive statistics, as well as concepts borrowed from gravity and string theory to describe the surprisingly statistical behavior of elementary matter at the highest accelerator energies of the world.

The reader will benefit from bringing these new developments in one book together, by having the view of classical and modern concepts at the heart of physics across the problems related to high-energy, high acceleration and high complexity.
After reviewing the classical approaches, the author discusses the dual-gravity and non-extensive statistical aspects of heavy-ion collisions, describing these experimental findings with the use of the concept of temperature.

List of contents

Introduction.- How to measure the temperature.- How to interpret the temperature.- Fluctuating temperature.- Complications with the temperature.- The temperature of moving bodies.- The temperature of no return.- The temperature in quantum field theory.- Afterword.- Solutions.- References.

Summary

Temperature and heat, entropy and order or disorder are key classical concepts of physics. These are challenged by searching matter under extreme conditions, such as high (relativistic) energy, strong acceleration or gravitation, or unusual complexity due to long range correlations. In our quest for quark matter all these conditions might occur simultaneously. This book, strongly motivated by the authors' everyday research experiences in the field of high-energy heavy-ion collisions, aims to bundle these challenges to modern physics.
The main topic is at the heart of thermodynamics -- the very concept of temperature, its use and extensions. New developments on this issue are both applications and foundations of non-extensive statistics, as well as concepts borrowed from gravity and string theory to describe the surprisingly statistical behavior of elementary matter at the highest accelerator energies of the world.
The reader will benefit from bringing these new developments in one book together, by having the view of classical and modern concepts at the heart of physics across the problems related to high-energy, high acceleration and high complexity.
After reviewing the classical approaches, the author discusses the dual-gravity and non-extensive statistical aspects of heavy-ion collisions, describing these experimental findings with the use of the concept of temperature.

Product details

Authors Tamas Sandor Biro, Tamás Sándor Biró, Tamás Sándor Bíró
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 19.10.2010
 
EAN 9781441980403
ISBN 978-1-4419-8040-3
No. of pages 310
Dimensions 167 mm x 21 mm x 241 mm
Weight 663 g
Illustrations XIV, 310 p.
Series Fundamental Theories of Physics
Fundamental Theories of Physic
Fundamental Theories of Physics
Fundamental Theories of Physic
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Physics, astronomy > Thermodynamics

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