Problem 7.7 and its solution from A Quantum Approach to Condensed Matter

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Homework Statement
Problem 7.7 asks for:
How does the electronic specific heat of a superconductor vary with temperature ##T## as ##T\to 0##?
Relevant Equations
See the attachment below.
Well, I don't understand the integral part of ##1/(VD) = \int_0^{\hbar \omega_D}\frac{\tanh(\beta E/2}{E}dE## and ##\tanh(\beta E/2) \approx 1-2\exp(-\beta E)##, then he writes the following (which I don't understand how did he get it):
$$\frac{1}{VD} = \sinh^{-1} (\hbar \omega/\Delta(0)) = \sinh^{-1}(\hbar \omega/ \Delta(T)) - 2\int_0^{\hbar \omega_D}\exp(-\beta E)/E dE$$

If I plug the approximation of ##\tanh## I get the following:
$$1/(VD)=\log(\hbar \omega_D)-\log 0 -2\int \exp(-\beta E)/E dE$$

Doesn't seem to converge.
I don't understand this solution...
Any help?

Thanks!
 

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The given approximation is good for large ##\beta E## (which is generally what you want), but the integral needs the tanh at small ##\beta E##.
##\tanh(\beta E/2) \approx 1-2\exp(-\beta E)## makes the integral diverge as this approximation doesn't go to zero for ##E\to 0##.

I don't have the book, could there be a mistake with the integral borders?
 
I noticed in the integral, it's with respect to ##d\hat \varepsilon## rather than ##dE##. How is ##\hat \varepsilon## defined?
 
vela said:
I noticed in the integral, it's with respect to ##d\hat \varepsilon## rather than ##dE##. How is ##\hat \varepsilon## defined?
Yes, I think you are correct.
On page 249 in Eq. (7.5.7) we have the following identity:
$$E_{\vec{k}}=[\hat{\epsilon}_{\vec{k}}^2+\Delta^2_k(T)]^{1/2}$$

I think I can see how the calculation is done, and I believe it should be ##\frac{1}{VD} = \sinh^{-1} (\hbar \omega/\Delta(0)) - \sinh^{-1}(\hbar \omega/ \Delta(T)) - 2\int_0^{\hbar \omega_D}\exp(-\beta E)/E d\hat{\epsilon}##, I'll do the calculation and I'll let you know if I need more help.

Thanks!
 
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