Final answer:
The grand canonical ensemble takes care of the fact that the total number of gas particles is finite by using the chemical potential to control the average number of particles, despite variability in individual occupation numbers.
Step-by-step explanation:
The question is asking how the grand canonical ensemble, which is a statistical approach in thermodynamics and statistical mechanics, ensures that the number of particles in a boson gas remains finite. The canonical ensemble uses a constrained sum where the total particle number N is fixed, which would ensure a finite number of particles. When switching to the grand canonical ensemble, the introduction of the chemical potential (μ) allows the partition function to be written in terms of the occupation numbers of particles, np, for different states p without explicitly constraining the total number of particles.
The key to understanding how the number of particles remains finite in the grand canonical ensemble is recognizing that the chemical potential controls the average number of particles in the system. Even though there is no explicit constraint, the value of the chemical potential is related to the average number of particles. When we calculate physical quantities such as the average number of particles, the effects of the chemical potential essentially act as a constraint, ensuring that the average number remains finite. Fluctuations around this average are possible, but the probability of finding an extremely large number of particles in the system decreases rapidly due to the exponential factors in the partition function.