From last year's lecturer, Prof.
Robin Marjoribanks:
Thermal Physics. 2nd Ed.; Charles Kittel/Herbert Kroemer
(W.H. Freeman and Company, New York, 1980).
A standard text used broadly in physics departments across North
America and parts of Europe and elsewhere. And for good reason, in my
opinion. The text starts from fundamental principles of large systems,
and the counting and combinatorics of arranging them, and builds from
there to introduce the consequences for thermal physics / statistical
mechanics. A reasonable book to learn from, it is also a good book to
hold onto as a reference to come back to in the future, presuming that
you don't make thermal physics itself your main research focus. So,
it strikes some reasonable balance between introducing you to the
material, in a tutorial style with details, and providing fairly dense
ideas and descriptions the way a good reference does. This may make
you happier about the amount of money you spend for a book you might
otherwise only use for a few months.
Thermal Physics; Daniel V. Schroeder
(Addison-Wesley, San Francisco, 2000)
A brand-new book, which starts from heat and work and develops
thermodynamics from energetic principles familiar from first year,
rather than concepts of counting (which are central to the deeper
physical approach in my opinion). It does slide then into counting
principles to begin describing the second law or thermodynamics. It is
a book that looks more like the way an experimentalist might approach
understanding the subject, because it is quite empirical rather than
conceptual. I think it is a very useful reference for those in the
course who find it practically impossible to understand Kittel and
Kroemer, and otherwise it's a good book to browse through after
getting a good statistical start.
Statistical Physics, 2nd Ed., F. Mandi
(John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1988)
A book with a more historical introduction - beginning with
thermodynamics, by which I mean a set of laboratory laws and
phenomenology. The book goes on to describe the 'microscopic' physics
by which thermodynamics begins to make physical sense. If you prefer
to approach the subject by seeing first what people were able to
figure out empirically, and then to get a sense of the evolution of
the whole body of theory behind it, you might like this book best. For
me, I preferred the 'fresh-start' approach of Kittel & Kroemer, and
then to see what the natural consequences are for the statistics of
large thermal systems. Available in paperback.