In the natural sciences, an intensive quantity (also intensive variable) is a physical quantity whose value does not depend on the amount of the substance for which it is measured. It is the counterpart of an extensive quantity.
If a set of parameters, , are intensive quantities and another set, , are extensive quantities, then the function is an intensive quantity if for all ,
It follows, for example, that the ratio of two extensive quantities is an intensive quantity - density (intensive) is equal to mass (extensive) divided by volume (extensive).
Let there be a system or piece of substance a of amount ma and another piece of substance b of amount mb. Let V be an intensive variable. The value of variable V corresponding to the first substance is Va, and the value of V corresponding to the second substance is Vb. If the two pieces a and b are put together, forming a piece of substance "a+b" of amount ma+b = ma+mb, then the value of their intensive variable V is:
which is a weighted mean. Further, if Va = Vb then Va + b = Va = Vb, i.e. the intensive variable is independent of the amount. Note that this property holds only as long as other variables on which the intensive variable depends stay constant.
In a thermodynamic system composed of two monatomic ideal gases, a and b, if the two gases are mixed, the final temperature T is
where is the number of particles in gas i, and is the corresponding temperature.
intensive Größe | Intensieve grootheid | Zmienna intensywna | Intenzivna količina
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It uses material from the
"Intensive quantity".
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