Physicslad78
- 46
- 0
I have a question that is puzzling me as always...The Fermi-Dirac distribution function is (at T=0):
f\epsilon=\frac{1}{e^{\beta(\epsilon-\epsilon_{F})}+1} and we know that we can subsitute f\epsilon by 1 for \epsilon< \epsilon_{F} and 0 otherwise. However what is f(-\epsilon)? The answer is easy when \epsilon_{F}=0 but what if \epsilon_{F} is not zero. what would be ff(-\epsilon)? for \epsilon< \epsilon_{F}?
Thanks
f\epsilon=\frac{1}{e^{\beta(\epsilon-\epsilon_{F})}+1} and we know that we can subsitute f\epsilon by 1 for \epsilon< \epsilon_{F} and 0 otherwise. However what is f(-\epsilon)? The answer is easy when \epsilon_{F}=0 but what if \epsilon_{F} is not zero. what would be ff(-\epsilon)? for \epsilon< \epsilon_{F}?
Thanks