I am reading Introduction to Solid State Physics (by Kittel).
When studying the heat capacity of a metal, conformed by $N$ atoms (each providing one valence electron, which is mobile and capable of electrical conduction), it says that classical statistical mechanics predict that the heat capacity should be $ \frac{3}{2}N k_B$. However, it says that experimental results give around 1% of this value.
Then he says that this can by explained as follows:
"When we heat the specimen from absolute zero, not every electron gains an energy $~k_BT$ as expected classically, but only those electrons in orbitals within an energy range $k_BT$ of the Fermi level are excited thermally"
My question is: why only these electrons are excited?