Andy_Taiwanese said:
I don't know what this sentence means. Could anyone please guide me?
This will be a long winded explanation... Maybe it will be worth something.
Suppose that you are drunk. You walk out the front door of the bar (located at a corner), randomly pick a direction and start walking. Every time you get to another corner, you randomly pick a new direction (left, right, forward or back) and keep walking some more. This is a "drunkard's walk" in two dimensions.
If you stagger at an speed of 1 meter per second then after walking your first block your average velocity will be 1 meter per second. After walking 2 blocks, your average
velocity will be somewhat less. That's because you might have spent the second block walking in a different direction. [Recall that your average velocity is your
total displacement (0 blocks, ##\sqrt{2}## blocks or 2 blocks) divided by the
elapsed time (2 blocks worth)].
After walking a third block, your average velocity will be even less. It turns out that for a large variety of random walks, the average distance of the final point from the initial point increases as the square root of the number of steps.
That means that the average quotient: ##\frac{displacement}{time}## scales as with the number of moves n as ##\frac{\sqrt{n}}{n} = \frac{1}{\sqrt{n}}##
That is to say that a drunk's average velocity tends to zero as the number of blocks he covers becomes larger and larger.
If we cast an electron in the role of a drunk, the displacement from one bounce to the next as the moves on his walk and the total number of moves as how long you wait before taking the average then... the average velocity of a thermally bouncing electron tends to zero over the long term.
If you add an electric field, this is no longer true. The electron's "drunk walk" is still random. But it is biased in a particular direction. If you average over the long term, you no longer get a result of zero. You get a result that reflects that bias.
Edit: If you work that square root thing backwards and apply to a single electron, "long term" needs to be on the order of the time for one bounce times ##(\frac{thermal\ velocity}{drift\ velocity})^2##