5.10 ENVELOPES
We now have the general form for the distribution of particles amongst energy levels, but
in order to determine the two constantsμ,Cwe recall that
∑R
k=1
CexpμEk=N
and
∑R
k=1
CEkexpμEk=E.
This is known as the Boltzmann distribution and is a well-known result from statistical
mechanics.
5.10 Envelopes
As noted at the start of this chapter, many of the functions with which physicists,
chemists and engineers have to deal contain, in addition to constants and one
or more variables, quantities that are normally considered as parameters of the
system under study. Such parameters may, for example, represent the capacitance
of a capacitor, the length of a rod, or the mass of a particle – quantities that
are normally taken as fixed for any particular physical set-up. The corresponding
variables may well be time, currents, charges, positions and velocities. However,
the parameterscouldbe varied and in this section we study the effects of doing so;
in particular we study how the form of dependence of one variable on another,
typicallyy=y(x), is affected when the value of a parameter is changed in a
smooth and continuous way. In effect, we are making the parameter into an
additional variable.
As a particular parameter, which we denote byα, is varied over its permitted
range, the shape of the plot ofyagainstxwill change, usually, but not always,
in a smooth and continuous way. For example, if the muzzle speedvof a shell
fired from a gun is increased through a range of values then its height–distance
trajectories will be a series of curves with a common starting point that are
essentially just magnified copies of the original; furthermore the curves do not
cross each other. However, if the muzzle speed is kept constant butθ, the angle
of elevation of the gun, is increased through a series of values, the corresponding
trajectories do not vary in a monotonic way. Whenθhas been increased beyond
45 ◦the trajectories then do cross some of the trajectories corresponding toθ< 45 ◦.
The trajectories forθ> 45 ◦all lie within a curve that touches each individual
trajectory at one point. Such a curve is called theenvelopeto the set of trajectory
solutions; it is to the study of such envelopes that this section is devoted.
For our general discussion of envelopes we will consider an equation of the
formf=f(x, y, α) = 0. A function of three Cartesian variables,f=f(x, y, α),
is defined at all points inxy α-space, whereasf=f(x, y, α)=0isasurfacein
this space. A plane of constantα, which is parallel to thexy-plane, cuts such