A micro-rant:
From the point of view of mathematical probability modeling, the language of statistical physics is a gosh-awful mess. Instead of clearly stated probability models ( e.g. clearly stated probability spaces) we have microstates, this-and-that kinds of ensembles, distinguishable identical particles, and identical particles that cannot be distinguished. We have "statistics" that do not satisfy the definition of "statistic" used in mathematical statistics and "Entropy" that seeks to be a property of matter instead of a property of a probability distribution.
A micro-reply to the micro-rant:
The origins of statistical physics preceded the modern development of probability theory and preceded the modern formulation of mathematical statistics. So it isn't surprising that presentations of statistical physics follow different traditions.
Philip Koeck said:
You can find my version of the mentioned derivations here:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/322640913_A_microcanonical_derivation_gives_the_Boltzmann_for_distinguishable_and_the_Bose-Einstein_distribution_for_indistinguishable_particles
You say:
I will derive the most probable distribution of N particles among k energy levels from combinatorics and some classical thermodynamics.
We can survive the use of "distribution" to mean something different than a probability distribution. There is a probability distribution involved, but a particular "distribution of N particles among k energy levels" is an
outcome of the probability distribution involved. For a probability distribution that assigns a probability for each possible "distribution" of N particles among k energy levels, you derive the most probable outcome of this probability distribution.
However, what
physically is the interpretation of a particular outcome? After all, in a gas things are changing. So do we define an outcome with a reference to time? If we ignore time, do we think of realizing an outcome as picking a container of gas at random from a population of containers of gas sitting on a shelf , each in a static condition as far as the "distribution" of particles in energy levels goes?
I've read (somewhere, I can't remember) that Boltzman's original thinking did involve time - i.e that he thought of a point describing a specific container of gas moving around in phase space. In equilibrium, the probability of the gas have a given property was what fraction of the time the gas had that property within the confined set in phase space where its point moved around. So realizing an outcome physically amounted to picking a random time to observe the gas.
I also read that this concept of an outcome eventually caused problems - meaning problems within Boltzman's lifetime and before the advent of QM.
For a probability distribution whose outcomes give numbers of particles per energy level, what is the final (classical) verdict on the physical definition of such an outcome?
NFuller said:
A microstate is a unique distribution of particles in phase space. Swapping the position and momentum of two identical particles will give the same configuration in phase space and the same microstate. If we didn't get the same microstate, that would imply that some microstates with many possible permutations are much more likely than others. The problem is that such a system cannot be at equilibrium. At equilibrium, the system must be in a maximum entropy configuration which occurs when each microstate comprising the equilibrium macrostate is equally likely.
The above quote alludes to a probability distribution whose outcome is a microstate - or some property of a microstate. So the question again arises: what physically is meant by realizing such an outcome? Observe the physical system at a random time? Pick a physical system at random from a set of physical systems where the property is not changing in time?
The passage deals with
1) The way a microstate is defined
2) The assertion that at equilbrium, the probability distribution whose outcomes are microstates is a maximum entropy distribution.
The definition of microstate can be justified by "the voice of authority" or tradition. I assume it can also be justified by arguments about practicality along the lines of "It wouldn't make physical sense to define a microstate so it depended on which particular particles are in an energy level because ..." It isn't clear (to me) which type of justification is being used for item 1)
It also isn't clear what justification is implied for item 2). It could be justified soley by empirical tests- or It might be justified by a Bayesian form of reasoning. If we take the Bayesian approach we face the usual criticism: You defined a particlar type of outcome (i.e. microstate) and as assumed a maximum entropy distribution for it, but why didn't you define a different type of outcome and assume a maximum entropy distribution for that type of outcome?