In this post we will analyze four variants of a counting problem and introduce it's relation with statistical physics.
The problem
The variants
Case 1: Maxwell-Boltzmann statistics
Ordered sample with replacement
(1, 1) | (1, 2) | (1, 3) | (1, 4) |
(2, 1) | (2, 2) | (2, 3) | (2, 4) |
(3, 1) | (3, 2) | (3, 3) | (3, 4) |
(4, 1) | (4, 2) | (4, 3) | (4, 4) |
Table 1: The 16 possibilities for N = 4, M = 2
For a generic value of N and M, the number of possibilities is:
NM
This case is equivalent to arrange M distinguishable particles inside N cells where the cells can contain multiple particles. For example classical particles, witch we assume that are distinguishable.
Case 2
Ordered sample without replacement
(1, 2) | (1, 3) | (1, 4) | |
(2, 1) | (2, 3) | (2, 4) | |
(3, 1) | (3, 2) | (3, 4) | |
(4, 1) | (4, 2) | (4, 3) |
Table 2: The 12 possibilities for N = 4, M = 2
For a generic value of N and M, the number of possibilities is:
N! / (N - M)!
This case is equivalent to arrange M distinguishable particles inside N cells where each cell can contain only one particle.
Case 3: Bose-Einstein statistics
Unordered sample with replacement
(1, 1) | (1, 2) | (1, 3) | (1, 4) |
(2, 2) | (2, 3) | (2, 4) | |
(3, 3) | (3, 4) | ||
(4, 4) |
Table 3: The 10 possibilities for N = 4, M = 2
For a generic value of N and M, the number of possibilities is:
(N + M - 1)! / M! (N - 1)!
This case is equivalent to arrange M indistinguishable particles inside N cells where the cells can contain multiple particles. For example bosons (proton) are the indistinguishable particle witch do not obey Pauli exclusion principle. This is the so called Bose-Einstein statistics.
Case 4: Fermi-Dirac statistics
Unordered sample without replacement
(1, 2) | (1, 3) | (1, 4) | |
(2, 3) | (2, 4) | ||
(3, 4) | |||
Table 4: The 6 possibilities for N = 4, M = 2
For a generic value of N and M, the number of possibilities is:
This case is equivalent to arrange M indistinguishable particles inside N cells where each cell can contain only one particle. For example fermions (electron) are the indistinguishable particle witch obey Pauli exclusion principle. This is the so called Fermi-Dirac statistics.
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