Deathnote777 said:
I dun understand why the time "2L/Vx" is taken, the time should be time of impact instead of this one. The time of impact should be much smaller
Go back to the single particle moving with speed V in the plus/minus x direction as it bounces between the two walls. The particle starts moving left, hits the left-hand wall a time 0, and rebounds to the right.
When does the particle hit the right-hand wall? At time zero it had just started moving right from the left wall, at speed V, and it has to travel the width of the box to get to the right-hand wall. So it will hit the right-hand wall at time L/V, and then rebound to the left at speed V.
When will it get back to the left-hand wall? It has to travel the width of the box, back again from the right-hand wall, and it's moving at speed V, so again the travel time will be L/V. And it started at the right-hand wall at time L/V, so will be back at the left-hand wall at time 2L/V.
Thus the particle hits the left-hand wall at times 0, 2L/V, 4L/V, ...; and hits the right-hand wall at times L/V, 3L/V, 5L/V, ... For both, it's one momentum change of magnitude 2mV every 2L/V seconds.
And because force is defined as the change in momentum per unit time, getting a kick of magnitude 2mV every 2L/V seconds means that the force is
\frac{2mV}{2L/V} = \frac{2mV^2}{L}