Just like in the case of the standing-wave system the machine "spontaneously" produces sound if the temperature T is high enough.
The temperature T arises from the fact that the system is in thermal equilibrium with its environment.
Heating the gas up to the initial temperature T increases the entropy by:
The same principle can be applied to a refrigerator working between a low temperature T and ambient temperature.
The reservoir has a constant temperature T, and a chemical potential μ.
At the moment it enters the tube it has the temperature T .
The heat bath remains in thermal equilibrium at temperature T no matter what the system does.
As one varies the temperature T, the probability distribution varies.
Chemical species can have various excitation levels depending on the absolute temperature T, which is a measure of the thermal agitation.
If the temperature T does not vary too much, a linear approximation is typically used: