Calculating Mean Thermal Wavelength for Relativistic Particles | Tutorial"

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shahrzad64
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hi
i want to calculate "mean thermal wavelength for relativistic particles"for example for photon .
i don't khow how can i do it.
please help me.
thankyou.
 
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There are different (final) equations for massless particles than for massive particles. For massless particles, you use,
[tex]\lambda = \frac{hc}{\pi^{1/3} 2kT}[/tex]
and for massive particles, you use the thermal de Broglie wavelength. In general, you can extract a thermal wavelength out of the dispersion relation for the particle.
 
Gokul43201 said:
There are different (final) equations for massless particles than for massive particles. For massless particles, you use,
[tex]\lambda = \frac{hc}{\pi^{1/3} 2kT}[/tex]
and for massive particles, you use the thermal de Broglie wavelength. In general, you can extract a thermal wavelength out of the dispersion relation for the particle.

thankyou for your answer
i know this relation for phonon,but can you send for me relations ,that give this equetion .
in fact ,i don't khow how can i obtain this equation
thankyou
 
One answer is that it is simply defined this way, and needs no derivation, but that would not be an accurate statement. In fact, there is a paper that proposes a generalized equation for the thermal wavelength for all particles (living in n-dimensional space) with a power law dispersion relation.

Z. Yan, "General thermal wavelength and its applications", Eur. J. Phys. 21 (2000) 625