Chapter 11: Statistical Physics & Relativity (Set-2)

In Maxwell–Boltzmann statistics, particles are treated as

A Indistinguishable
B Fermions only
C Bosons only
D Distinguishable classical particles

In MB statistics, occupation numbers of energy states are

A Large and allowed to be negative
B Unrestricted and small compared to 1
C Restricted to 0 or 1
D Restricted to even numbers only

Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution is most accurate when

A nλ3≪1n \lambda^3 \ll 1nλ3≪1
B nλ3≫1n \lambda^3 \gg 1nλ3≫1
C Very low temperatures
D Particles are bosons

Fermi–Dirac distribution reduces to MB distribution when

A T → 0
B e^{(E−μ)/kT} ≫ 1
C e^{(E−μ)/kT} ≪ 1
D μ → 0

Fermi energy of metal depends on

A Temperature
B Density of electrons
C External field
D Pressure only

At T = 0 K, the occupation probability of a state with E < EF is

A 0
B 0.5
C 1
D Undefined

Bose–Einstein condensation occurs when

A High temperature
B Low temperature and high density
C Very high pressure
D Very high velocity

In Bose–Einstein condensation, a significant fraction of bosons occupy

A Highest energy state
B Random states
C Single lowest energy state
D Forbidden region

Blackbody radiation follows

A MB statistics
B BE statistics
C FD statistics
D Poisson statistics

The Sackur–Tetrode entropy applies to

A Quantum ideal gas only
B Classical monatomic ideal gas
C Fermi gas
D Photon gas

In thermodynamic equilibrium, entropy is

A Minimum
B Maximum
C Constant at all temperatures
D Zero always

Irreversibility occurs due to

A Limited energy
B Spontaneous evolution to macrostates with higher probability
C Mathematical errors
D Microscopic irreversibility

The Helmholtz free energy decreases for

A Constant T and V (spontaneous process)
B Constant P and T
C Constant S and V
D Constant μ and T

The Gibbs free energy decreases for

A Constant T and P
B Constant V only
C Constant S only
D Constant μ only

Enthalpy is defined as

A H = TS + PV
B H = U + PV
C H = T/U
D H = U – TS

Maxwell relation from Gibbs free energy G(T,P) includes

A (∂S∂P)T=−(∂V∂T)P\left(\frac{\partial S}{\partial P}\right)_T = -\left(\frac{\partial V}{\partial T}\right)_P(∂P∂S​)T​=−(∂T∂V​)P​
B (∂U∂S)V=T\left(\frac{\partial U}{\partial S}\right)_V = T(∂S∂U​)V​=T
C (∂H∂T)P=CP\left(\frac{\partial H}{\partial T}\right)_P = C_P(∂T∂H​)P​=CP​
D P=−(∂F∂V)TP = -\left(\frac{\partial F}{\partial V}\right)_TP=−(∂V∂F​)T​

Chemical potential μ is defined as

A μ=(∂U∂N)S,V\mu = \left( \frac{\partial U}{\partial N} \right)_{S,V}μ=(∂N∂U​)S,V​
B Depends only on temperature
C Always constant
D Zero in ideal gas

Canonical ensemble keeps which quantity fixed?

A N, V, T
B N, P, T
C μ, V, T
D E, V, N

Microcanonical ensemble keeps which quantities fixed?

A T, V, μ
B E, V, N
C T, P, N
D E, P, T

Relativistic time dilation tells that a moving clock

A Runs faster
B Runs slower
C Stops
D Accumulates negative time

If an astronaut ages 1 year during a high-speed trip and people on Earth age 5 years, the astronaut experienced

A Time contraction
B Time dilation (proper time smaller)
C Length dilation
D No relativistic effect

Lorentz factor γ depends on

A Acceleration only
B Velocity relative to light speed
C Mass only
D Temperature

A rod moving at speed v parallel to its length appears

A Longer
B Shorter
C Same length
D Bent

Proper length is

A Length measured in moving frame
B Shortest measurable length
C Length measured in object’s rest frame
D Variable due to heat

If mass m moves with relativistic speed, its momentum is

A mv
B γmv\gamma mvγmv
C mv2m v^2mv2
D mc2m c^2mc2

As v → c, relativistic momentum

A Decreases
B Remains constant
C Increases without bound
D Changes sign

Relativistic kinetic energy is

A K=mc2K = mc^2K=mc2
B K=(γ−1)mc2K = (\gamma – 1)mc^2K=(γ−1)mc2
C K=12mv2K = \frac{1}{2}mv^2K=21​mv2
D K=γmc2K = \gamma mc^2K=γmc2

Einstein’s mass–energy equivalence means

A Energy is independent of mass
B Mass and energy are interchangeable
C Energy cannot be converted
D Mass is always constant

Photon momentum arises because

A Photons have rest mass
B Electromagnetic waves carry momentum p=h/λp = h/\lambdap=h/λ
C Photons are negative energy carriers
D Light slows down in vacuum

Lorentz transformations preserve which physical quantity?

A Energy only
B Momentum only
C Spacetime interval
D Temperature

The speed of light is invariant because

A Photons accelerate
B It is postulated and experimentally verified
C Air blocks deviation
D Mirrors reflect perfectly

Michelson–Morley experiment used

A Two perpendicular light paths (interferometer)
B Gamma rays
C Mechanical clocks
D Electrons

A null result in Michelson–Morley means

A Earth is stationary
B No difference in light speed in different directions
C Light does not exist
D Newtonian mechanics is wrong

In SR, simultaneity depends on

A Position only
B Reference frame
C Temperature
D Mass of observer

If two events have spacelike separation, they cannot

A Influence each other causally
B Occur
C Be observed
D Occur simultaneously

For timelike intervals, all observers agree on

A Time ordering of events
B Spatial ordering
C That events are simultaneous
D Reversal of events

Proper time between two events is

A Maximal for light
B Zero for photons
C Non-zero for massive particles
D Variable depending on temperature

In relativistic Doppler effect, receding source shows

A Blueshift
B Redshift
C No shift
D Stopped oscillation

A muon traveling near light speed appears to live longer because

A Its mass decreases
B Time dilation increases lifetime in lab frame
C Its decay stops
D It stores energy

In relativistic energy–momentum relation E2=p2c2+m2c4E^2 = p^2c^2 + m^2c^4E2=p2c2+m2c4, for large p the energy behaves as

A Linear in p
B Quadratic in p
C Zero
D Constant

Momentum of a photon with wavelength λ is

A λ/h
B h/λ
C hc/λ
D 1/λ²

Relativistic mass concept (m = γm₀) is

A Fundamental
B Replaced in modern physics by invariant rest mass m₀
C Increasingly used
D Equivalent to charge

A particle with zero rest mass must

A Travel slower than light
B Travel at speed of light
C Be accelerated to rest
D Not exist

For a traveling observer, the distance to Earth appears

A Longer
B Contracted
C Same
D Infinite

Total energy of particle includes

A Only kinetic
B Only potential
C Rest + kinetic
D Only thermal

Relativistic kinetic energy for small speeds reduces to

A 12mv2\frac{1}{2}mv^221​mv2
B mc2mc^2mc2
C mv2mv^2mv2
D Zero

Lorentz transformation mixes

A x and y
B t and x
C mass and temperature
D μ and N

Speed of light constancy leads to

A Time contraction
B Time dilation and length contraction
C Mass negation
D Faster-than-light motion

Energy of a photon emitted by a moving source depends on

A Doppler shift
B Pressure
C Gravity only
D Temperature only

Inertia of a body increases with speed because

A Mass increases
B Relativistic momentum increases
C Friction increases
D Potential energy increases