A. Monte said:
Thanks antonima and kmarinas86!
I had thought about this in terms of energy being transferred from smaller to larger spatial scales (from eddy to mean flow or constructive interference) but am still not very clear why there is a net transfer from smaller to larger scales. Would it be because translational movement has more degrees of freedom than vibrational movement?
When we say the "atomic scale", "human scale", "planetary scale", or "galactic scale", we are really talking about systems whose motions are defined in terms of their boundary or extent of motion in the sense of:
[1] The distance between collisions, or
[2] The "radius" of curvature traced by the path of the matter.
The net transfer of energy from smaller to larger scales is therefore all about increasing the distance mass can travel before interacting with other matter, and, less often in our world, increasing the radius about which some mass moves around some other mass.
We inadvertently do this by means of releasing chemical, nuclear, and other energies that are derived from the substance of matter. We also do this by doing expansion work in thermodynamic engines.
I say "inadvertently" because we normally do not think of moving energy from smaller to larger scales when we do so. Instead we tend to think of substances as "energy sources", without reference to any particular scales at which energy may interact. Nonetheless, energy transfer from small scales to large scales is a very real thing indeed.
A. Monte said:
kmarinas86: I think I understand your argument about the distinction between translation and vibration being arbitrary, still, in terms of temperature as a measured quantity, is translation (or continuous displacements above a certain spatial scale) not the relevant parameter?
It would be helpful to keep in mind that heat transfer by conduction is limited in scale. It occurs as a result of random collisions between the electric fields of particles. This occurs only at the atomic and molecular scales.
However, other forms of heat transfer, such as that from radiation, are not limited to atomic and molecular scales.
So continuous displacements above a certain spatial scale may be important, but which spatial scale matters here may depend on the degree of thermal contact that is suitable to conductive heat transfer, relative to the the amount of heat that is produced as a result of "black body" or "gray body" radiative emissions.
If, from the center of mass frame of a two-body system, you have two "black bodies" of consideration:
[1] A lighter, fast-moving cold body.
[2] A heavier, slow-moving hot body (of the same shape).
Let's say the motions of the two share the same line. So we have motion only along, say, the x-axis.
In the center of mass frame, the momenta of the two bodies must be equal and opposite, and the velocity ratio of the objects must be inverse to the mass ratio of the objects.
For calculation of kinetic energy, the velocity squares, but the mass does not.
From there, you can easily see that the lighter, fast-moving cold body has more "gross" kinetic energy than the heavier, slow-moving hot body.
You will easily see that if the cold body and hot body are not in contact in such a way as to transfer energy by an inelastic collision with each other, more energy will flow from the hot body to the cold body (in the form of radiative heat).
However, using simple logical reasoning, you can see that in an inelastic collision between the two, the lighter, fast-moving body will transfer energy to the heavier, slow-moving hot body. While both objects get "hotter to the touch", the energy gained by the heavier, slow-moving hot body mass exceeds what it gives off to the lighter, fast moving cold body. Here, the cold body does
work on the hot body in excess of the converse.
If the cold body and the hot body are both the size of say, grapefruits, then we would assume that it was
not heat which was transferred from the former to the latter, but simply
mechanical work.
However, if the cold body and the hot body are both microscopic, what we conclude is that the faster moving body is actually hotter than the slower moving body and that the collision of the former with the latter involves a conduction of heat from the former to the latter.
In other words, if you have objects labeled A and B, what object is "hotter" than the other will depend on the "gross kinetic energy" it has when evaluated on a particular scale.
In a simple situations, a hotter particle (with the same number of degrees of freedom) has more gross kinetic energy at
all scales (think
wavelengths). The blackbody radiation intensity diagram for different temperatures shows intensity, which correlates with energy possessed at different wavelengths or "scales of matter", per degree of freedom, clearly depicting a case where hotter objects are deemed to have more intensity at all scales than colder ones.
However, when such is not the case, the result may be energetic oscillations between different scales of matter.
A. Monte said:
This distinction seems, for example, to be important in explaining the difference in specific heat between gases, where gases with more complex molecular structure (and hence more vibrational modes) have higher specific heat because a larger fraction of the gained/lost energy is stored/removed from vibrations?
Right.