- #1
eric2921
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Homework Statement
Determine the number of microstates where two particles have have energy 2eV, three have 3eV, three have energy 4eV, and two have 5eV.
10 indistinguishable Particles
1 particle allowed per state.
ε1 = 1eV ε2 = 2eV ε3 = 3eV ε4 = 4eV ε5 = 5eV ε6 = 6eV
g1 = 1 g2 = 5 g3 = 10 g4 = 10 g5 = 5 g6 = 1
Homework Equations
[itex]\textit{}[/itex]possibly [itex]\overline{n}[/itex]i=[itex]\frac{1}{\textbf{e}^{(ε_{i}-μ)/kT}+1}[/itex]
The Attempt at a Solution
Since the particles are indistinguishable I thought that there would only be one microstate, but I don't think that this is right... can someone point me in the right direction on how to start this problem?