I read on Wikipedia that the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution is given by:
$$f(v) = \sqrt{\left(\frac{m}{2 \pi kT}\right)^3}\, 4\pi v^2 e^{- \frac{mv^2}{2kT}}....(1)$$
In Wikipedia's words: "This probability density function gives the probability, per unit speed, of finding the particle with a speed near $v$". Now later on, they define the "distribution for velocity vector" as:
$$f_\mathbf{v} (v_x, v_y, v_z) = \left(\frac{m}{2 \pi kT} \right)^{3/2}\exp \left[-\frac{m(v_x^2 + v_y^2 +v_z^2)}{2kT}\right]....(2)$$ and this gives "The probability of finding a particle with velocity in the infinitesimal element $[dv_x, dv_y, dv_z]$ about velocity $v = [v_x, v_y, v_z]$." which, for one dimension reduces to: $$f_v (v) =\sqrt{\frac{m}{2 \pi kT}}\exp \left[\frac{-mv^2}{2kT}\right].$$ but since the speed just equal to the absolute value of the velocity in one dimension, after making the appropriate change of variables $u=|v|$ in $(1)$, we get: $$f_u (u) =\sqrt{\frac{2m}{ \pi kT}}\exp \left[\frac{-mu^2}{2kT}\right]....(3) $$
where $u$ ranges from $0$ to $\infty$.
- But shouldn't $(3)$ correspond to $(1)$ since the interpretaions, as mentioned (by Wikipedia, at least) are the same? why are the equations different?
- Also how can the probability of finding a particle in the velocity neighborhood about $v=0$ be the highest but probability of finding a particle in the speed neighborhood of $u=0$ be $0$ ? i.e , physically, why does $(2)$ peak at $0$ when $(1)$ is $0$ at $0$?