Chemical potential equilibrium cosmology

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the concept of chemical potential in the context of equilibrium and non-equilibrium number densities in cosmology, as introduced in Dodelson's "Introduction to Modern Cosmology." Participants explore the reasons behind the vanishing of chemical potential in equilibrium states and its implications in thermodynamics.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant notes that in equilibrium, the chemical potential vanishes because there is no preferred direction of the reaction.
  • Another participant questions the assertion that the chemical potential must vanish in equilibrium, suggesting that while chemical potentials of subsystems in equilibrium must equal, they do not necessarily have to be zero.
  • A third participant defines chemical potential in terms of the change in free energy with respect to the number of particles, asserting that in equilibrium, the free energy should be at a minimum to prevent work from being produced in a preferred direction.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on whether the chemical potential must vanish in equilibrium, indicating that the discussion remains unresolved with competing interpretations of the concept.

Contextual Notes

Participants reference thermodynamic principles and definitions, but the discussion does not resolve the underlying assumptions or implications of these definitions regarding chemical potential in equilibrium.

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In Dodelson's "Introduction to Modern Cosmology" at p. 61 he introduces a non- equilibrium number density
$$n_i = g_i e^{\mu_i/T} \int \frac{d^3p}{(2\pi)^3} e^{-E_i/T}$$
and an equilibrium number density
$$n_i^{(0)} = g_i \int \frac{d^3p}{(2\pi)^3} e^{-E_i/T},$$
from which it follows that the equilibrium number density, has the same form as number density of non-equilibrium just with a chemical potential of zero.

Question: Why does the chemical potential vanish for the equilibrium case?
 
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ask yourself: What is the chemical potential? (that's a thermodynamics question).

As a fast answer: that's because in equllibrium there is not preferred direction of the reaction. So by its definition the chemical potential will vanish.
 
Last edited:
ChrisVer said:
ask yourself: What is the chemical potential? (that's a thermodynamics question).

As a fast answer: that's because in equllibrium there is not preferred direction of the reaction. So by its definition the chemical potential will vanish.

The chemical potential arises in the first law of thermodynamics as
$$dE = TdS -pdV + \mu dN$$
and hence it represents the energy added to the system when one changes the particles in the system at constant entropy and volume. I don't see why the chemical potential has to vanish in equilibrium: if two subsystems of a larger system is in equilibrium, their chemical potentials must equal, but not vanish.
 
The chemical potential is gives you the change of the free energy as you change the number of particles:
\mu := \frac{\partial E}{\partial N}\Big|_{S,V}
Now in equlibrium, the free energy should be minimum (otherwise work can be produced along a reaction's direction- so you get a preferable arrow).
 

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