Tim Thompson
Muse
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2008
- Messages
- 969
Nonscalar Temperature
I could have been more clear about that. In this case I am reverting to the notion of temperature as particle kinetic energy. I disagree with the idea that it is wrong to think of temperature as kinetic energy because, after all, that is what thermometers actually measure. There is more than one way to define temperature, so it's just a matter of being sure that the physics & definition are all mutually consistent. In any discussion of infinite temperatures, we do need to be clear about which temperature we are using.
Now, if we go back to the Boltzmann distribution or Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution, when we speak of temperature as an average over some such distribution of particle velocities, we assume that the velocity distribution is isotropic, and in the usual cases, such as air temperature, it is. However, in some cases, such as a stellar corona, it is not. The kinetic temperature measured in the radial direction is in the millions of Kelvins, while the kinetic temperature measured in a direction orthogonal to that is zero, or close to it. Of course this is an average, ignoring flow in a loop for instance, and ignoring the radiative temperature.
For me, it comes from the habit of converting energies to temperatures making use of the units (i.e., E = kBT) which I learned when I started out in radio astronomy, when papers annoyingly tended to publish antenna temperatures instead of fluxes. But it strikes me as a valid though unusual and probably non-standard concept. I have seen the temperature of the solar corona referred to in this manner, though I cannot produce a specific example at the moment.
Since both S and U are scalar quantities, you'd need something other than the standard thermodynamic definition to get a nonscalar temperature. I've never seen such a thing, and I don't know why it would be of any use. Perhaps you can tell us a little more about what you have in mind here.
I could have been more clear about that. In this case I am reverting to the notion of temperature as particle kinetic energy. I disagree with the idea that it is wrong to think of temperature as kinetic energy because, after all, that is what thermometers actually measure. There is more than one way to define temperature, so it's just a matter of being sure that the physics & definition are all mutually consistent. In any discussion of infinite temperatures, we do need to be clear about which temperature we are using.
Now, if we go back to the Boltzmann distribution or Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution, when we speak of temperature as an average over some such distribution of particle velocities, we assume that the velocity distribution is isotropic, and in the usual cases, such as air temperature, it is. However, in some cases, such as a stellar corona, it is not. The kinetic temperature measured in the radial direction is in the millions of Kelvins, while the kinetic temperature measured in a direction orthogonal to that is zero, or close to it. Of course this is an average, ignoring flow in a loop for instance, and ignoring the radiative temperature.
For me, it comes from the habit of converting energies to temperatures making use of the units (i.e., E = kBT) which I learned when I started out in radio astronomy, when papers annoyingly tended to publish antenna temperatures instead of fluxes. But it strikes me as a valid though unusual and probably non-standard concept. I have seen the temperature of the solar corona referred to in this manner, though I cannot produce a specific example at the moment.