Translational_motion.gif (300 × 263 pixels, file size: 398 KB, MIME type: image/gif, looped, 370 frames, 19 s)

atmosfera

Summary

Description
English: Motion of gas molecules.

The randomized thermal vibrations of fundamental particles such as atoms and molecules—gives a substance its “kinetic temperature.” Here, the size of helium atoms relative to their spacing is shown to scale under 1950 atmospheres of pressure. These room-temperature atoms have a certain, average speed (slowed down here two trillion fold). At any given instant however, a particular helium atom may be moving much faster than average while another may be nearly motionless. The rebound kinetics of elastic collisions are accurately modeled here. If the velocities over time are plotted on a histogram, a Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution curve will be generated. Five atoms are colored red to facilitate following their motions.

Note that whereas the relative size, spacing, and scaled velocity of the atoms shown here accurately represent room-temperature helium atoms at a pressure of 1950 atmospheres, this is a two-dimensional scientific model; the atoms of gases in the real world aren’t constrained to moving in two dimensions in windows precisely one atom thick. If reality worked like this animation, there would be zero pressure on the two faces of the box bounding the Z-axis. The value of 1950 atmospheres is that which would be achieved if room-temperature helium atoms had the same inter-atomic separation in 3-D as they have in this 2-D animation.
Español: Animación mostrando la agitación térmica de un gas. Cinco partículas han sido coloreadas de rojo para facilitar el seguimiento de sus movimientos.
Русский: Хаотическое тепловое движение на плоскости частиц газа таких как атомы и молекулы
Français : Animation montrant l'agitation thermique affectant les molécules d'un gaz. Cinq d'entre elles sont colorées à seule fin de suivre plus facilement leur mouvement individuel.
Date
Source Own work
Author A. Greg (Greg L at English Wikipedia)
Other versions

Single frame (for thumbnail purposes) Derivative works of this file:

OGV derived from GIF using ffmpeg2theora version 0.24

OGV derived from GIF using ffmpeg2theora 0.25

Wikipedia

 This is a featured picture on the English language Wikipedia (Featured pictures) and is considered one of the finest images. See its nomination here.

If you think this file should be featured on Wikimedia Commons as well, feel free to nominate it.
If you have an image of similar quality that can be published under a suitable copyright license, be sure to upload it, tag it, and nominate it.

Licensing

Public domain This image of simple geometry is ineligible for copyright and therefore in the public domain, because it consists entirely of information that is common property and contains no original authorship.
Heptagon
Heptagon

Captions

Random Motion of Particles

Items portrayed in this file

depicts

14 August 1995

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current03:31, 28 March 2008Thumbnail for version as of 03:31, 28 March 2008300 × 263 (398 KB)Greg A L
18:44, 30 October 2006Thumbnail for version as of 18:44, 30 October 2006300 × 263 (398 KB)EdC{{Information |Description=thermal motion of gas molecules |Source=English wikipedia |Date=August 25th 2006 |Author=A.Greg, en:user:User:Greg L |Permission= |other_versions= }}

Global file usage

The following other wikis use this file:

View more global usage of this file.

Metadata