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I am trying to understand the derivation of the Planck distribution and black body radiation. In the Wikipedia derivation of the Planck distribution, the photons confined within a cubic box, are emitting from and absorbed by, and are in equilibrium with the wall of the cube. I understand the calculation presented. However, I am uncertain about the following points.

  1. Is the temperature here that of the photons alone, of the matter of the wall alone or the ensemble of the photon and the matter? Most likely it is the last case. How is the temperature defined and the Boltzmann distribution derived with the photons under consideration? It is not mentioned at all in the Wikipedia derivation.

  2. I suppose Equation (1) in the aforementioned derivation for photon gas in a box, i.e. $$E_{n_1,n_2,n_3}\left(r\right)=\left(r+\frac{1}{2}\right)\frac{hc}{2L}\sqrt{n_1^2 + n_2^2 + n_3^2} \tag1$$ comes from solving a wave equation with zero boundary condition. I suppose this wave equation comes from the quantum field theory, describing the photons. Is this correct? In classic electrodynamics, Maxwell's equation has a zero boundary condition if the wall is a perfect conductor with zero electric or magnetic field in the interior of the wall so as to perfectly reflect the electromagnetic wave. Are we to impose the same condition here with the purpose to confine the energy of the photo inside of the box?

Edit: The box indeed has perfectly conducting wall whereby the parallel component of the electric field at the boundary indeed vanishes.

  1. Apparently the size and geometry of the box affect the final distribution. I suppose if we construct an object with many small walled cavities with fractal-like geometry, we will get a different power distribution. Is this correct?

Edit: It turns out point 3. is a complicated question. The leading term of the eigenvalue distribution is proportional to volume, with some caveat on the geometric roughness of the boundary, according to Weyl's law. The proof concerning the geometric roughness of the boundary is complicated.

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  • $\begingroup$ I think the most surprising part here is 1. Indeed we treat the electromagnetic field as if it was a gas of particles interacting with a bath at temperature $T$ (this is the usual canonical situation). It’s actually not clear how this equilibrium should be reached from first principles but it works! $\endgroup$
    – lcv
    Commented Dec 21, 2018 at 8:01
  • $\begingroup$ To add to part 1. Whenever we say that a system is at temperature $T$ we mean that it is at equilibrium with a large bath of temperature $T$. Then you can of course say that the system itself is at temperature $T$,I.e., the photons in this case. $\endgroup$
    – lcv
    Commented Dec 21, 2018 at 8:04
  • $\begingroup$ @lcv I would say it's not so surprising. While the electromagnetic field is linear (at low energies) and therefore non-interacting, it interacts with plenty of other nonlinear things such as atoms. $\endgroup$
    – DanielSank
    Commented Mar 21 at 19:28
  • $\begingroup$ Hans, the post mentions "Equation (1)" but there's no Equation (1) in your post nor in the Wikipedia article. Please clarify this. $\endgroup$
    – DanielSank
    Commented Mar 21 at 19:29
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    $\begingroup$ @Hans, We don't support questions on this site that make references to outside sources. Copy your equation (1) into the question text as a basic courtesy to readers and would-be answer authors. $\endgroup$
    – DanielSank
    Commented Mar 24 at 3:11

2 Answers 2

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  1. In order to obtain the probability distribution, statistical mechanics considers that the system has reached thermal equilibrium (see statistical ensemble). Hence the photons inside the box (subsystem) and the walls (reservoir) must have the same temperature. Photons do not behave as a Boltzmann distribution, they behave as a Bose-Einstein distribution with zero chemical potential.

  2. I don't know QFT, but eq. (1) of Wikipedia can be obtained from QM's problem of a particle in a cubic box with homogeneous boundary conditions.

  3. The particle distribution function is independent of the box size. The spectral energy density also is independent of the box characteristics.

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  • $\begingroup$ 1) You are right. Thank you. 2) You are wrong. The link you provided is for a positive mass particle. A photon is massless, thus does not obey the Schrodinger equation. 3) You are wrong. Look at Equation (1). It has explicitly $L$ the length of the box in it, and the form of the square root of the sum is implicitly obtained by the boundary being rectangular. The equation above Equation (3) is an approximation when $n$ is large and when $n$ assumes the square root sum form which is constrained by the geometry. $\endgroup$
    – Hans
    Commented Jul 1, 2017 at 21:29
  • $\begingroup$ 2) Ok the problem is not exactly the same, but can be done in a similar way remembering that the momentum of a photon is $p=h\nu/c$. 3) What you usually mean by distribution is "particle number distribution", which is explicitly independent of $L$... but it is true it may depend of it via the energy per particle $\epsilon$. Of course the energy function will have a different form if you consider a different geometry of the system, e.g. photons in cylinder, sphere, but the thermodynamic limit, $N\rightarrow\infty$, $L\rightarrow\infty$ will always get rid of any dependency on the geometry $\endgroup$
    – rsaavedra
    Commented Jul 1, 2017 at 21:35
  • $\begingroup$ 2) What is the "similar way"? Please do not give me a hand waving argument, which I can manufacture myself easily. What is the equation, as it is not Schrodinger? It must be QFT then? 3) I understand it is for $N\rightarrow\infty$. The $L$ is divided away in the unit energy form. However, it is under the assumption that the cube is not changing as $N\rightarrow\infty$ and it depends on the square root of sum form of $n$ in the article. A different geometry may not give the same result. Will you be able to prove the same thing for, say, a fractal geometry? $\endgroup$
    – Hans
    Commented Jul 1, 2017 at 21:58
  • $\begingroup$ 2) I think you are right, the rigorous way to do it is QFT 3) If you calculate the number of particles $N$ you would see that the energy has dependency $N/L$ which is constant in the thermodynamic limit. I don't know what is a fractal geometry, but the point is that you have photons inside some cavity with an arbitrary shape, and such shape doesn't really accounts when summing states in the thermodynamic limit. I recommend reading the notes of D. Tong about quantum gases damtp.cam.ac.uk/user/tong/statphys/three.pdf $\endgroup$
    – rsaavedra
    Commented Jul 1, 2017 at 22:21
  • $\begingroup$ 3) The note you link to has the exact same expression for $n$ and is premised on it being a cube --- even a rectangular box will make the expression different, not to mention a sphere which requires spherical harmonics or a cylinder which requires Bessel functions. By what do you conclude "photons inside some cavity with an arbitrary shape, and such shape doesn't really accounts when summing states in the thermodynamic limit"? That is a pretty big statement. Again, I have no use for hand waving arguments which come a dime a dozen, well actually come for free. Please derive it rigorously. $\endgroup$
    – Hans
    Commented Jul 1, 2017 at 22:41
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In my answer to the physics stack question Discrete Cavity Radiation I answer your questions 2 and 3. The summary is:

  1. In classical EM a cavity with infinite conductivity walls only supports modes of certain frequencies because $E_{Transverse}=0$ and $B_{Perpendicular}=0$ at infinite conductivity walls. Real walls have some resistivity and thus can be penetrated by standing waves that don't exactly fit in the box. These non-resonant modes have very low Q because their energy is quickly dissipated by the resistivity of the walls. Thus any non-resonant frequency wave train emitted into the box (say by black body oscillators in the walls) will exist as a standing wave for a few oscillations (low Q).

  2. The Planck spectrum in a box of all one temperature is universal. There is no modification of it due to wall emissivity. There are no peaks in the spectrum due to the resonant modes of the box. The universality of this spectrum was argued by Kirchoff in ~1860 using the second law of thermodynamics, though the exact form of the Planck function was not discovered till 50 years later. Yes, this seems weird since the density of resonant states in the cavity was used in the derivation of the Planck distribution!

If you doubt this, consider the Johnson noise from a resistor. The noise from the resistor can be considered as the resistor being an antenna picking up the Planck radiaion from whatever box it is in. Now imagine making the box very small about the resistor (eg: a standard 50 ohm terminator). For frequencies below the lowest resonant frequency of this box, we would have eliminated the low frequency Johnson noise if the Planck radiation was only in the box's resonant peaks. Experimentally, Johnson noise is white (flat with frequency in the Rayleigh-Jeans region of the Planck spectrum).

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  • $\begingroup$ Intriguing explanation. Let me go over this more carefully. Maybe the bouncing back-and-forth argument of your point 3. is related to the derivation of Weyl's Law en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weyl_law as cited in my question. $\endgroup$
    – Hans
    Commented Jan 19, 2022 at 19:40

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