ian2012
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How can an electron's momentum be less than the Fermi momentum? Since the Fermi momentum (energy) is measured at absolute zero.
At absolute zero the fermi momentum is the highest momentum an electron can have in the system. Most electrons sit below this energy. As you increase the temperature you are able to thermally excite electrons close to the fermi surface to energies above Pf and Ef. The probablity of this exciatation is given by the fermi-dirac distribution.ian2012 said:How can an electron's momentum be less than the Fermi momentum? Since the Fermi momentum (energy) is measured at absolute zero.
Who said they didn't move? A bound state does not mean that you glued the electron to the side of an ion. The point is that most electrons sit deep within the fermi sea and therefore it is nearly impossible for them to be excited to even the lowest unoccupied state. Thus they do not contribute to heat capacity, etc.ian2012 said:How would electrons have momentum (move) within occupied states? What would it look like intuitively?
Yes, the story goes something like this.ian2012 said:it is QM isn't it.