Dimensions of temperature and charge in terms of M, L and T

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the dimensional analysis of temperature and electric charge in terms of mass (M), length (L), and time (T). Many physicists do not consider temperature and charge as fundamental dimensions, arguing that temperature can be expressed in terms of energy, which has the dimension M L² T⁻². The conversation highlights the complexity of defining temperature and charge dimensionally, with references to both the SI and cgs systems of units. It is noted that while temperature may be treated as equivalent to energy in certain contexts, this is not universally accepted, and the dimensions of temperature and charge may vary depending on the system being analyzed. Ultimately, the conclusion suggests that temperature and charge cannot be definitively expressed in terms of M, L, and T without specific contextual definitions.
HotMintea
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"Most physicists do not recognize temperature, Θ, as a fundamental dimension of physical quantity since it essentially expresses the energy per particle per degree of freedom, which can be expressed in terms of energy (or mass, length, and time). Still others do not recognize electric charge, Q, as a separate fundamental dimension of physical quantity, since it has been expressed in terms of mass, length, and time in unit systems such as the cgs system." (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimensional_analysis#Definition)

Since the number of particles and the degree of freedom are dimensionless, it seems to imply that temperature has the same dimension as energy, namely, M\ L^2\ T^{-2}. However, I could not find any source for how temperature and charge can be expressed in terms of M, L and T. What are the correct expressions and how are they derived?
 
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they may not but anyone manufacturing high precision parts know about thermal expansion and have to deal with it every day.
 
Hello HotMintea.I don't believe the claim made in the first sentence you quoted from the Wiki article you referred to.Did you notice that Wiki had added the comment "citation needed"?In the same article the author refers to the c.g.s system of units and if you click on that you may find the answers you need.
Personally I have forgotten cgs units and use SI only.In fact I believe that the majority of scientists and engineers use SI so perhaps you will be well advised to familiarise yourself with these units.In the SI system temperature is taken as a dimension and current rather than charge is taken as a dimension.
 
Ranger Mike said:
they may not but anyone manufacturing high precision parts know about thermal expansion and have to deal with it every day.

Hello Ranger Mike. I cannot make out how thermal expansion may be relevant to the question. Could you elaborate further?

Dadface said:
Hello HotMintea.I don't believe the claim made in the first sentence you quoted from the Wiki article you referred to.Did you notice that Wiki had added the comment "citation needed"?

Hello Dadface. Yes, I noticed the "citation needed."

Dadface said:
In the same article the author refers to the c.g.s system of units and if you click on that you may find the answers you need.

In the cgs article, there is a section titled "Alternate derivations of CGS units in electromagnetism." However, I cannot find the 'standard' derivation. Moreover, I do not understand how to actually do the "alternate" derivations. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cgs#Alternate_derivations_of_CGS_units_in_electromagnetism)

Dadface said:
Personally I have forgotten cgs units and use SI only.In fact I believe that the majority of scientists and engineers use SI so perhaps you will be well advised to familiarise yourself with these units.In the SI system temperature is taken as a dimension and current rather than charge is taken as a dimension.

In the discussion page of the CGS article, I found a section called "Is this system still in use?". It seems that it is still used by "people which works [sic] with magnetic fields," and "astronomers." (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:C...ystem_of_units#Is_this_system_still_in_use.3F)

"From the point of view of fundamental physics where one does not distinguish between certain (or any) dimensions, argument based on dimensional analysis seem to be nonsense."(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:D...any_dimensions_to_consider.3F_and.2C_Rigor.3F)

Is it true?
 
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HotMintea said:
Since the number of particles and the degree of freedom are dimensionless, it seems to imply that temperature has the same dimension as energy, namely, M\ L^2\ T^{-2}. However, I could not find any source for how temperature and charge can be expressed in terms of M, L and T. What are the correct expressions and how are they derived?

Arguing that temperature and energy are dimensionally equivalent implies that entropy is dimensionless. To that point, you may be interested in Leff's http://www.csupomona.edu/~hsleff/EntropyDimensionless.pdf"

Note that dimensions are not the same as units. Saying that the constant c is represented dimensionally by L T-1 doesn't confine you to using m s-1 or inch week-1.
 
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Mapes said:
Arguing that temperature and energy are dimensionally equivalent implies that entropy is dimensionless. To that point, you may be interested in Leff's http://www.csupomona.edu/~hsleff/EntropyDimensionless.pdf"

The article says, "The Kelvin temperature T is defined to be proportional to \tau and to have the value T_3\ = \ 273.16 K at the triple point of H2O. " This definition is not specific enough for me to find an expression for temperature in terms of M, L and T.
 
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In classical physics you have to have a thermodynamic quantity in addition to M, L & T.
A lot of effort went into choosing M, L & T in the first place (the choice is not unique) and further effort went into choosingtemperature and its standard symbol, theta, since T was already taken.

The whole point of introducing T is to get away from the need for using a defined substance, which they have not done in your reference. Your system then becomes MLT plus 'water' - just as the standard kg and metre have left Paris!

There is a similar situation with charge/current. You cannot avoid introducing something.

go well
 
HotMintea said:
This definition is not specific enough for me to find an expression for temperature in terms of M, L and T.

The equation of state is different for different systems. For example, consider n moles of an ideal gas in a cylinder with cross-sectional area L^2 and height L, pressurized by the weight of a piston with mass M. The temperature is T=PV/nR=MgL/nR, where g is the acceleration of gravity and R is the gas constant, both of which are relatable in terms of M, L and T. Therefore, the energy per molecule is proportional to ML.
 
Studiot said:
In classical physics you have to have a thermodynamic quantity in addition to M, L & T. There is a similar situation with charge/current. You cannot avoid introducing something.

Do you imply the part of the Wikipedia article is incorrect?

Mapes said:
The equation of state is different for different systems.

Does it mean there is no definite dimension of temperature in terms of M, L and T, because it depends on the situation? How about charge?
 
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HotMintea said:
Does it mean there is no definite dimension of temperature in terms of M, L and T, because it depends on the situation? How about charge?

In the sense that (1) temperature is defined by T=(\partial U/\partial S)_{V,N,q\dots}, and (2) that you might take entropy to be dimensionless (see the Leff article I linked to above; I don't know the current consensus in this area), then temperature could be related in a definite way to dimensionality M L^2 T^{-2}. But this doesn't imply that the equation of state is known at this time for every possible system.
 
  • #11
Mapes said:
In the sense that (1) temperature is defined by T=(\partial U/\partial S)_{V,N,q\dots}, and (2) that you might take entropy to be dimensionless (see the Leff article I linked to above; I don't know the current consensus in this area), then temperature could be related in a definite way to dimensionality M L^2 T^{-2}. But this doesn't imply that the equation of state is known at this time for every possible system.

In (1), the definition uses U and S. Can they be defined without temperature? Moreover, can they be expressed in terms of M, L and T?

In the case of (2), the article calls it tempergy. Hence, at least in the article temperature seems to have the different dimension from energy. Thus, when temperature is defined to have the different dimension from energy, did I understand you correctly that its dimension varies in terms of M, L and T?
 
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  • #12
I've only seen energy have units of ML^2T^{-2} and generally have seen temperature have units of temperature (e.g., K, °C, °F), except in specific, well-defined systems where it has units of ML^2T^{-2} (see my example above).
 
  • #13
Mapes said:
I've only seen energy have units of ML^2T^{-2} and generally have seen temperature have units of temperature (e.g., K, °C, °F), except in specific, well-defined systems where it has units of ML^2T^{-2} (see my example above).

It seems we have the conclusion that temperature and charge CANNOT be expressed in terms of M, L and T, except when temperature is defined to have the same dimension as energy.
 
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HotMintea said:
It seems we have the conclusion that temperature and charge CANNOT be expressed in terms of M, L and T, except when temperature is defined to have the same dimension as energy.

I'd buy that for the temperature argument (haven't looked into charge).
 
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  • #16
except when temperature is defined to have the same dimension as energy.

So why do schoolmasters spend so much time and effort hammering into kids that heat (=energy) and temperature are very different things?

And which has more energy according to this novel theory, the ocean at 10 deg C or my body at 37 deg C and which way does the energy (heat) flow?
 
  • #17
Studiot said:
So why do schoolmasters spend so much time and effort hammering into kids that heat (=energy) and temperature are very different things?

"An examination of thermal physics books shows that although some authors define entropy as a dimensionless quantity and some define temperature as an energy, ..." This is in the first page of the document Mapes referred to.(http://www.csupomona.edu/~hsleff/EntropyDimensionless.pdf )

Studiot said:
And which has more energy according to this novel theory, the ocean at 10 deg C or my body at 37 deg C and which way does the energy (heat) flow?

I would not like to speculate, since I hardly understand the document. I wonder why no one has answered my question with clear yes, no, or multiple possible answers.
 
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