Can a single atom have a temperature?

In summary, the concept of temperature is poorly defined for a single atom and is only meaningful in the context of a statistical ensemble of particles. Temperature is proportional to the average kinetic energy of a population of molecules, so a single atom with velocity can have a non-zero absolute temperature. However, the interpretation and use of this theoretical temperature is not straightforward and can be affected by factors such as the inertial frame of reference and the environment. Overall, discussing the temperature of a single atom can lead to complex and abstract concepts that may not have practical applications.
  • #1
Nathew
I know temperature is the measure of how much atoms are moving, so can a single atom even have a temperature?
The quarks inside the protons and neutrons are moving around, so?
 
Science news on Phys.org
  • #2
Temperature is a property of a statistical ensemble of particles. It is poorly defined for a single atom.
 
  • #3
Temperature is proportional to the average kinetic energy of a population of molecules. If a single atom has velocity then it has a particular kinetic energy and therefore a non-zero absolute temperature. As a member of a population of one atom, if you know it's mass and instantaneous velocity you can calculate a theoretical temperature.

If you know why you calculated that instantaneous theoretical temperature then maybe you will know how to interpret and use the result.
 
  • #4
Yes but I think it's important to notice tat atoms themselves don't have temperature , it's not like you can "overheat" an atom it's just that they have velocities which translates into kinetic energy and as vanadium said kinetic energy is only useful for temperature if you have some material in which those atoms are many and upon their interactions you get a average temperature.

Just like people are categorized in groups , races , social groups because they are more than one if you would have one single guy in the whole world and no one else it would be hard to say something about him as there is nothing to compare to.
 
  • #5
Well.. the definition of temperature is:

[itex](\frac{\partial S}{\partial E})^{-1}=T[/itex]

Which means, the partial derivative of the entropy to the Energy, of which you should take the inverse, and that IS the temperature - per definition.
So.. Since the molecule has a certain energy because it is moving, you only need to think about what the entropy of this one molecule is.
Then you will be able to calculate the temperature, I assume.
 
Last edited:
  • #6
Electric Red said:
Well.. the definition of temperature is:

[itex](\frac{\partial S}{\partial E})^{-1}=T[/itex]

Which means, the partial derivative of the entropy to the Energy, of which you should take the inverse, and that IS the temperature - per definition.
So.. Since the molecule has a certain energy because it is moving, you only need to think about what the entropy of this one molecule is.
Then you will be able to calculate the temperature, I assume.

I don't think this is correct. Accelerating a baseball to 0.99c doesn't increase its temperature. The kinetic energy of the object is not something temperature takes into account.
 
  • #7
Baluncore said:
Temperature is proportional to the average kinetic energy of a population of molecules. If a single atom has velocity then it has a particular kinetic energy and therefore a non-zero absolute temperature. As a member of a population of one atom, if you know it's mass and instantaneous velocity you can calculate a theoretical temperature.

If you know why you calculated that instantaneous theoretical temperature then maybe you will know how to interpret and use the result.
In an inertial frame of reference which is co-moving with the atom, the atom has velocity zero (for example the atom is in a box and the box follows its motion). So the atom's temperature would depend on the inertial frame I choose? The temperature of a gas in a box doesn't depend on the inertial frame I choose...

--
lightarrow
 
  • #8
Nathew said:
I know temperature is the measure of how much atoms are moving, so can a single atom even have a temperature?
No.

--
lightarrow
 
  • #9
Laser cooling of individual ions has been in the news. There has even been talk of negative absolute temperatures. That suggests a single atom can have a theoretical temperature. The problem then becomes one of interpreting what that concept of temperature actually means.
 
  • #10
The OP. has not explained to what extent he/she understands the concept of temperature. So let's wait until there is a response to such inquiry before we delve into exotic aspect of this phenomenon.

Zz.
 
  • #11
the problem then also becomes measuring that single atoms temperature without distorting the result and now were into quantum mechanics , oh dear.

the only way to say it's temperature I assume would be to get to know it's kinetic energy at the moment and then translate that into a possible temperature via maths.
 
  • #12
Drakkith said:
I don't think this is correct. Accelerating a baseball to 0.99c doesn't increase its temperature. The kinetic energy of the object is not something temperature takes into account.

But.. if the entropy is a function of the energy, you actually can calculate the temperature with that formula. Imagine the baseball you were talking about, if you'd give that an enormous velocity, ofcourse the temperature of the environment will change.
 
  • #13
Electric Red said:
But.. if the entropy is a function of the energy, you actually can calculate the temperature with that formula. Imagine the baseball you were talking about, if you'd give that an enormous velocity, ofcourse the temperature of the environment will change.

But not of the baseball...

A subtlety here is the distinction between the atom/object ITSELF, and the atom/object itself + the environment.
 
  • #14
if the environment is in the same reference frame as the baseball than there is no temperature difference.
 
  • #15
My point exactly, but... let's not go to much into detail about the fraction of the speed of light. A lot of other concepts come in place, and those are not relevant to his question.

I have to say, that my last formula isn't valid, because we are not talking about a equilibrium. And I'm getting more and more convinced about the fact that it is almost impossible to talk about the temperature of a single atom.. but think about this:

the theory of the big bang states that in the beginning of the universe, the universe was made of vibrating quarks, and they were vibrating at such speed, it wasn't possible to create nucleons, because it was too hot.

So, what now?
 
  • #16
If this thread is going to be derailed into the physics of the Big Bang and nucleosynthesis, it will be locked.

Zz.
 
  • #17
The answer to the OP cannot be an unconditional definitive “NO” because there are peer reviewed Physicists reporting the theoretical temperature of individual atoms.

But then if the answer is “YES” there must be more precise definitions of the particular concept of temperature that is being considered in each case.

If we restrict our definition of the term “temperature” to a subset of those used by others, then our answer could be “NO”, “MAYBE” or “YES”. It is all a question of definition.
 
  • #18
Baluncore said:
The answer to the OP cannot be an unconditional definitive “NO” because there are peer reviewed Physicists reporting the theoretical temperature of individual atoms.

Please provide a reference for this.
 
  • #19
If the entropy of a single atom is well defined (and it is),
and the energy of a single atom is well defined (and it is),
then its temperature is well defined.

The entropy of an atom is just a measure of the number of possible states it could have for constant energy. A single particle in a 3D box can have many different states for a given total energy, and this number goes down as the energy goes down until you reach the unique ground state, a state of minimum energy and zero entropy.

The energy of an atom is well defined to the extent that it can be calculated and measured. There are limits imposed by the uncertainty principle, but this doesn't affect what the energy levels themselves are.

Knowing this, it is perfectly legitimate to speak of the temperature of a single atom as a measure of how quickly the energy changes in response to a change in entropy.

Hope this helps:)
 
  • #20
jfizzix said:
Knowing this, it is perfectly legitimate to speak of the temperature of a single atom as a measure of how quickly the energy changes in response to a change in entropy.

Can you elaborate on this?
 
  • #21
I think there are a few ways to define temperature, and they are equivalent in the thermodynamic limit of a large number of particles. When we ask about the temperature of a single atom, we run into trouble. For example, the thermodynamic definition of entropy 1/T=∂S/∂E is problematic since it begs the question of how we define entropy.

One way of looking at temperature that is a little more loose but, in my opinion, gives a really good intuitive way of thinking about temperature is in terms of Boltzmann statistics. This way can be used to develop an idea for strange concepts like the temperature of an individual atom or negative temperature. So here is my non-rigorous but intuitively helpful definition of temperature.

Suppose we have a system with energy levels En and a probability distribution describing the occupation of each of these levels. Experiments on such systems show that in most cases, the observed probability distributions for the occupation of the energy levels all follow the form P(En) ~ e-βEn
where different experimental conditions yield different values for β. We define the system's temperature T to be 1/(kβ) where k is Boltzmann's constant. I like to call this distribution the "Boltzmann distribution." So the temperature basically is defined as the reciprocal of the exponential decay constant appearing in the Boltzmann distribution describing the system.

To be more explicit, I used the ~ symbol to write the Boltzmann distribution above to indicate proportionality rather than equality. The more correct equation would be
P(En) = e-βEn/Z
where Z is the partition function: Z=Ʃn e-βEn

Now we can use this definition to play some gedanken games with a single atom. For simplicity let us say that we have an atom with only two energy levels, E1=0 and E2=ε.

If the atom is in its ground state, we would describe it by saying P(E=E1=0) = 1 and P(E=E2=ε)=0. This is obvious because if we know the atom is in its ground state, we will surely measure it to be there and not in the excited state--we know a priori what the probability distribution is [we didn't use any "temperature" so far, just common sense.] But now if we try and compute what β factor would reproduce this distribution, we find β=∞ ⇔ T=0. [This is because e-βEn is equal to 1 for n=0 and e-βEn is equal to 0 only if β=∞.] So an atom in its ground state has zero temperature according to this statistical definition.

What if it were in the state with equal probability of being measured in its excited state and in its ground state? P(E=E1=0)=1/2 and P(E=E2=ε)=1/2? Doing the arithmetic like last time [If E1≠E2, then e-βE1=e-βE2 if and only if β=0⇔T=∞], then we find the temperature must be infinite.

This should all make sense so far. The Boltzmann distribution starts out at T=0 ensuring everything is in its ground state, and it becomes a more and more uniform distribution [entropy increases] as T→+∞. You can try different probability distributions and see that this actually happens--temperature increases as the probability distribution goes from 100% E1 to a 50%-50% split.

Now what if we know the atom is in its excited state? P(E=E1)=0 and P(E=E2)=1. The only way this is possible is if β is negative, corresponding to negative temperature! So an atom in its excited state actually has negative temperature.

This is a general fact: negative temperatures indicate "population inversions" or situations where the occupation of a state exceeds that of a lower energy state. But these systems are NOT in thermodynamic equilibrium and you would NEVER see them in any thermodynamic ensemble. However population inversions can be created in different situations, such as in a ferromagnet or in a laser. Applying thermodynamic definitions to non-thermodynamic probability distributions is what leads you to semi-sense like "negative temperature," but strictly speaking this isn't real thermodynamics since these systems are not in thermodynamic equilibrium.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes 2 people
  • #22
Thanks, Jolb! Great explanation!
 
  • #23
Jolb said:
[...]
What if it were in the state with equal probability of being measured in its excited state and in its ground state? P(E=E1=0)=1/2 and P(E=E2=ε)=1/2?
[...]
All this is very interesting and original (I have saved it in my pc :smile:); however it doesn't seem to take in account the atom's kinetic energy, which was the OP question.

--
lightarrow
 
  • #24
I mean, that we can define mathematically the temperature [itex]T[/itex] as the partial derivative of the internal energy with respect to change of entropy at constant volume and particle number.

[itex]T\equiv (\frac{\partial U}{\partial S})_{V,N}[/itex]

That the temperature happens to be proportional to the kinetic energy of particularly well-behaved (ideal) gases is a convenient coincidence, but the relationship between energy and temperature can be greatly different for other systems (i.e. the energy of bodies emitting thermal (blackbody) radiation).

Where [itex]U[/itex] is the internal energy, [itex]P[/itex] is pressure, [itex]V[/itex] is volume, [itex]N[/itex] is the number of particles, and [itex]\mu[/itex] is the chemical potential, the first law of thermodynamics (conservation of energy) can be written as:

[itex]dU= -PdV +TdS +\mu dN[/itex]

the temperature in this picture is defined as

[itex]T\equiv (\frac{\partial U}{\partial S})_{V,N}[/itex]

This isn't the only way to express the temperature, because instead of talking about our system in terms of the internal energy [itex]U(S,V,N)[/itex], we could express our system in terms of the Helmholtz free energy [itex]F(T,V,N)[/itex], the enthalpy [itex]H(S,P,N)[/itex], or the Gibbs free energy [itex]G(T,P,N)[/itex], and each of these pictures can be remarkably convenient in certain situations.
 
  • #25
... so if [itex]U[/itex],[itex]S[/itex],[itex]V[/itex], and [itex]N[/itex] are well-defined, as they can be for a single atom, then [itex]U(S,V,N)[/itex] and all its derivatives ([itex]T[/itex],[itex]P[/itex], and [itex]\mu[/itex] are well-defined.

This is a very mathematical argument, but it's really how I make sense of the concept of the temperature of a single particle. Things get especially complicated when we consider more realistic atoms with complicated internal dynamics, but you can be sure that to the extent that [itex]U[/itex], [itex]S[/itex], [itex]V[/itex], and [itex]N[/itex] are well defined, then so is [itex]T[/itex].
 
  • #26
jfizzix said:
Knowing this, it is perfectly legitimate to speak of the temperature of a single atom as a measure of how quickly the energy changes in response to a change in entropy.

With one caution: the temperature that we're talking doesn't have much to do with the popular notion of temperature. I'm inclined to agree with ZapperZ's #10.
 
  • #27
Also, for the record, Boltzmann/Gibbs statistics are totally awesome:)
For me, understanding how to derive them from a object/reservoir system from conditional probabilities and maximum entropy of the whole was the most mind-blowing thing I learned in classical physics that didn't involve a Lagrangian.
 
  • #28
lightarrow said:
All this is very interesting and original (I have saved it in my pc :smile:); however it doesn't seem to take in account the atom's kinetic energy, which was the OP question.

--
lightarrow

Well as far as I understand it, the same problem would apply to any system--take an ideal gas for example. We derive nice expressions for the internal energy of a box of noninteracting atoms, but what if the entire box of atoms is moving? [The answer is not that the energy does not change, as lightarrow seemed to say. You obviously need to do some work to change the motion of the box.] I do not think kinetic energy of the entire system qualifies as "internal" energy U.

It seems like this is a cheap way out, but I think the Ergodic 'theorem' (on which Thermodynamics relies crucially) actually justifies it by laying out assumptions that ensure thermodynamic systems should always be viewed "at rest". In the thermodynamic limit, systems have a "Poincare recurrence time", such that they start retracing their path through a phase space of canonical variables. How can a system come back to its original point in phase space if there is a constant linear motion? I think somewhere in the details of taking the thermodynamic limit and assuming ergodicity, you automatically enter the "mutually comoving" frame. This paragraph is more educated guess on my part, and I do think this is a good question that maybe someone else can answer better.


Also, what I said about negative temperature is mostly lifted from a textbook I used: Kardar's "Statistical Physics of Particles" which is actually mostly available online. Attached is the passage from Kardar that I am stealing from.

PS: A little wiki-ing yields some info about my conjecture with regards to the Ergodic *hypothesis*. It seems that once we assume Liouville's theorem holds, we are already forced to view things in the comoving frame. From wiki:
Liouville's Theorem shows that, for conserved classical systems, the local density of microstates following a particle path through phase space is constant as viewed by an observer moving with the ensemble (i.e., the total or convective time derivative is zero). Thus, if the microstates are uniformly distributed in phase space initially, they will remain so at all times. Liouville's theorem ensures that the notion of time average makes sense, but ergodicity does not follow from Liouville's theorem.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ergodic_hypothesis

Let me know if that seems to answer the question.
 

Attachments

  • kardar1.png
    kardar1.png
    64.2 KB · Views: 496
  • kardar2.jpg
    kardar2.jpg
    40.3 KB · Views: 461
Last edited:
  • #29
After rereading the thread I realize I am probably getting a little caught up worrying about the subtleties of the foundations of thermodynamics when there's actually a much simpler answer to the OP's question.

I know temperature is the measure of how much atoms are moving, so can a single atom even have a temperature?
I got caught up in answering the question "can a single atom even have a temperature?" and I didn't think about the first part of what the OP said.
The quarks inside the protons and neutrons are moving around, so?
Protons and neutrons, and more importantly electrons are all actually described by quantum mechanics rather than classical mechanics. To say that they're "moving around" like ideal gas molecules is not a good description. It is often much more useful to describe them in terms of discrete energy states, like in the example I gave.

The example I gave stresses the statistical definition rather than the "average kinetic energy"/"how much atoms are moving" because it really is better. Entropy is really defined statistically so the definition 1/T=∂S/∂U is statistical.

Kardar even mentions how classical mechanics and its crucial thermodynamic theorems like Liouville's theorem rely on Hamiltonian evolution through a continuous phase space, and how discrete systems (like an atom) do not fall under that umbrella--so why should our thermodynamical laws apply? He hints at the idea that QM fills the gap and allows thermodynamics to apply to discrete systems. So applying thermodynamics to discrete systems is what I did to try and explain the "temperature" of a single atom.

As to the question of how an atom's linear motion affects its temperature--as I explained before this is only an issue if you fail to realize the states are all quantized in reality. But if you are trying to think about it clasically--like the example of how linear motion of a box of ideal gas affects its temperature--then you need to worry about Liouville's theorem and ergodicity.

PS: To illustrate the fact that thermodynamics runs deeper than the classical mechanics/quantum mechanics divide, allow me to (re)post one of my favorite Einstein quotes:
It is the only physical theory of universal content which I am convinced will never be overthrown, within the framework of applicability of its basic concepts.
 
Last edited:
  • #30
ZapperZ said:
The OP. has not explained to what extent he/she understands the concept of temperature. So let's wait until there is a response to such inquiry before we delve into exotic aspect of this phenomenon.

It's a pity this was ignored. Really a pity. The OP is in high school, for heaven's sake, and most of the posts are at a much higher level, and frankly, don't address the issue.

Thread closed.
 

1. Can a single atom have a temperature?

Yes, a single atom can have a temperature. Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of particles, and even a single atom has kinetic energy due to its constant motion.

2. How can a single atom have a temperature?

Temperature is a statistical concept that describes the average kinetic energy of a large number of particles. Even though a single atom may not have a measurable temperature, it still has kinetic energy and contributes to the overall temperature of a system.

3. Is the temperature of a single atom the same as its kinetic energy?

No, the temperature of a single atom is not the same as its kinetic energy. Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of a large number of particles, while kinetic energy refers to the energy of a single particle.

4. Can the temperature of a single atom be measured?

Technically, the temperature of a single atom cannot be measured directly. However, scientists can indirectly measure the temperature of a single atom by observing its interactions with other particles or by using specialized techniques such as laser cooling.

5. Why is it important to understand the temperature of a single atom?

Understanding the temperature of a single atom is crucial for understanding the behavior of matter at the atomic and subatomic level. It also has practical applications in fields such as quantum computing, atomic and molecular physics, and materials science.

Similar threads

  • Thermodynamics
Replies
1
Views
675
Replies
37
Views
3K
Replies
9
Views
720
Replies
6
Views
1K
Replies
16
Views
987
  • Thermodynamics
Replies
6
Views
1K
Replies
14
Views
1K
  • High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics
Replies
5
Views
2K
Back
Top