physicsdreams said:
We've just learned about kinetic theory and gases and my teacher showed us the rms speed. He himself doesn't know why its called the rms speed, or how it originated and I was curious to find out myself. Why go through all the trouble when you could just say the average speed?
If anyone could explain the story behind the rms speed and the thinking behind it, that would be awesome!
rms = "root mean square"
Now, let's parse that phrase to see what it means.. We have a bunch of particles all with different speeds v
i (where the subscript 'i' denotes the speed for the "i
th" particle i.e. the index i ranges from 1 to N where N is the total number of particles). The squares of the speeds would just be given by v
i2. Now let's say you took the average (the
mean) of all of these squared velocities, by adding them all up and dividing by the total number of them: (1/N)Ʃ
i (v
i)
2. The result of the average is called the "mean square" velocity (it is the mean of all the squared velocities). But this number is now in the wrong units (velocity squared), so to get it into the right units, you take the square root of this result, which is the
root mean square velocity.
Why would you do this instead of just adding up all of the velocities and dividing that sum by the total number? Because velocity is a vector, and if you have a very large number of particles, then the distribution of velocities will be more or less isotropic (which is just a fancy way of saying, "distributed evenly in all directions"). So, on average, velocities in opposing directions will cancel each other out, and you'll be left with 0 mean velocity. This is not that useful if you're trying to get a sense of the typical particle speed in the gas, which is precisely what the rms value tells you.