[Physics] Partition function for quantum harmonic oscillator

harmonic-oscillatorhomework-and-exercisesquantum mechanicsstatistical mechanics

Hi guys I'm currently trying to solve a mock exam for an exam in a few days and am a bit confused by the solutions they gave us for this exercise:

Exercise:

A solid is composed of N atoms which are each localized at points in a lattice. Excursions about the equilibrium position of each results in each atom behaving as a 1-dimensional harmonic oscillator. Write down the partition function for an individual atomic harmonic oscillator, and for the collection, assuming that they have arrived in thermal equilibrium with each other at temperature T.

$ Z_{SP} = \sum\nolimits_{n=1}^\infty e^{(-E_n \beta)}$ where $\beta$ is $1/(k_B T)$ and the Energy levels of the quantum harmonic oscillators are $E_n = \hbar \omega (n + 1/2)$. I now tried to use geometric series to evaluate the sum:

$ Z_{SP} = e^{(-\beta \hbar \omega / 2)}\sum\nolimits_{n=1}^\infty e^{(-\beta \hbar \omega)n} = e^{(-\beta \hbar \omega / 2)} \frac{1}{(1 – e^{(-\beta \hbar \omega)})}$
With the substitution $\theta = \hbar \omega \beta $ it says the solution for $Z_{SP}$ should be $e^{(-\theta /2)} \frac{1}{e^{\theta} – 1)}$ which isn't quite the expression I got.

Can anybody tell me where I went wrong or is the solution just false?

Best Answer

  1. The quantum number $n$ of the harmonical oscillator runs from $0$ to $\infty$. (Your sum starts at 1.)
  2. $\sum_{n=0}^{\infty} e^{-\theta(n+1/2)} = \frac{e^{-\theta/2}}{1-e^{-\theta}} = \frac{e^{\theta/2}}{e^\theta - 1} = \frac{1}{e^{\theta/2}-e^{-\theta/2}}$. I guess there just is an error in your exercise. (TAs make mistakes, too.)
  3. The FAQ says no homework questions. Let's hope they don't tar and feather us. ;-)
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