How Do You Calculate the Number of Microstates in Money Distribution?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the number of microstates in a scenario where a total of E dollars is distributed among N people, with the condition that each person can receive a maximum of 1 dollar and E is less than N. The context is rooted in statistical physics, particularly in understanding microstates and distributions.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Conceptual clarification

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the idea of selecting a subset of people to receive dollars, questioning how the distribution can be interpreted given the constraints. There is also discussion about the units of currency involved, with some suggesting that the distribution might be better understood in cents rather than dollars.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants raising different interpretations of the problem and questioning the assumptions about currency units. Some guidance has been offered regarding the selection of subsets, but no consensus has been reached on the correct approach or interpretation.

Contextual Notes

There is a noted ambiguity regarding the interpretation of the distribution units (dollars vs. cents) and how this affects the understanding of the problem. The constraints of E being less than N are also emphasized, which may influence the possible distributions.

toreil
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I am studying for a statistical physics exam and have been struggling with the statistic parts, especially calculating the number of microstates. I am starting to understand most questions but have no clue how to handle this one.

Homework Statement



We distribute a total of E dollars among a population of N people. The rules are that each person can get a max of 1 dollar and that E < N, find the number of ways this can be done.

Homework Equations



?

The Attempt at a Solution



W = \frac{\left(E\times100\right)!}{100!\left(\left(E-1\right)\times100\right)!}\times p_{e} where p_{e} = \frac{E}{N} the average value received by each person
 
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OK, so each person either does or does not get a dollar, and there are E dollars total.

Hmmm... so isn't this exactly the same as selecting a subset of size E from the N people?
 
As far as I'm aware because the question states that each person gets a maximum of 1 dollar the actual amount of money each person receives is counted in cents rather than dollars.
 
To me, "We distribute a total of E dollars" sounds like the unit of distribution is a dollar. But other interpretations are certainly possible.
 
toreil said:
As far as I'm aware because the question states that each person gets a maximum of 1 dollar the actual amount of money each person receives is counted in cents rather than dollars.

This would correspond to an unphysical situation in which Money is neither Bose-Einstein (person can have any number of dollars) or Fermi-Dirac (person can have either 1 dollar or none). Of course, money IS unphysical, so maybe the 100 cents interpretation is OK.

RGV
 

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