Re: Dr. Einstein's Unfortunate Legacy #2



Otohp wrote:
Dr. Einstein's Unfortunate Legacy #2




Miraculous Year (1905)

Ref: http://physicsweb.org/articles/world/18/1/2/1
Adapted from "Five papers that shook the world"
by Matthew Chalmers
January 2005

 In 1905 an anonymous patent clerk in Bern rewrote the laws of physics
 in his spare time.

 Most physicists would be happy to make one discovery that is important
 enough to be taught to future generations of physics students. Only a
 very small number manage this in their lifetime, and even fewer make
 two appearances in the textbooks.

 But Einstein was different. In little more than eight months in 1905
 he completed five papers that would change the world for ever.
 Spanning three quite distinct topics - relativity, the photoelectric
 effect and Brownian motion - Einstein overturned our view of space and
 time, showed that it is insufficient to describe light purely as a
 wave, and laid the foundations for the discovery of atoms.


Genius at work

 Perhaps even more remarkably, Einstein's 1905 papers were based
 neither on hard experimental evidence nor sophisticated mathematics.
 Instead, he presented elegant arguments and conclusions based on
 physical intuition.

 "Einstein's work stands out not because it was difficult but because
 nobody at that time had been thinking the way he did," says Gerard 't
 Hooft of the University of Utrecht, who shared the 1999 Nobel Prize
 for Physics for his work in quantum theory.

 "Dirac, Fermi, Feynman and others also made multiple contributions to
 physics, but Einstein made the world realize, for the first time, that
 pure thought can change our understanding of nature."

 And just in case the enormity of Einstein's achievement is in any
 doubt, we have to remember that he did all of this in his "spare
 time".

 Statistical revelations

 In 1905 Einstein was married with a one-year-old son and working as a
 patent examiner in Bern in Switzerland. His passion was physics, but
 he had been unable to find an academic position after graduating from
 the ETH in Zurich in 1900.

 Nevertheless, he had managed to publish five papers in the leading
 German journal Annalen der Physik between 1900 and 1904, and had also
 submitted an unsolicited thesis on molecular forces to the University
 of Zurich, which was rejected.

 Most of these early papers were concerned with the reality of atoms
 and molecules, something that was far from certain at the time. But on
 17 March in 1905 - three days after his 26th birthday - Einstein
 submitted a paper titled "A heuristic point of view concerning the
 production and transformation of light" to Annalen der Physik.

 Einstein suggested that, from a thermodynamic perspective, light can
 be described as if it consists of independent quanta of energy (Ann.
 Phys., Lpz 17 132-148).

 This hypothesis, which had been tentatively proposed by Max Planck a
 few years earlier, directly challenged the deeply ingrained wave
 picture of light. However, Einstein was able to use the idea to
 explain certain puzzles about the way that light or other
 electromagnetic radiation ejected electrons from a metal via the
 photoelectric effect.

 Maxwell's electrodynamics could not, for example, explain why the
 energy of the ejected photoelectrons depended only on the frequency of
 the incident light and not on the intensity. However, this phenomenon
 was easy to understand if light of a certain frequency actually
 consisted of discrete packets or photons all with the same energy.

 Einstein would go on to receive the 1921 Nobel Prize for Physics for
 this work, although the official citation stated that the prize was
 also awarded "for his services to theoretical physics".

 "The arguments Einstein used in the photoelectric and subsequent
 radiation theory are staggering in their boldness and beauty," says
 Frank Wilczek, a theorist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
 who shared the 2004 Nobel Prize for Physics.

 "He put forward revolutionary ideas that both inspired decisive
 experimental work and helped launch quantum theory." Although not
 fully appreciated at the time, Einstein's work on the quantum nature
 of light was the first step towards establishing the wave-particle
 duality of quantum particles.

 On 30 April, one month before his paper on the photoelectric effect
 appeared in print, Einstein completed his second 1905 paper, in which
 he showed how to calculate Avogadro's number and the size of molecules
 by studying their motion in a solution.

 This article was accepted as a doctoral thesis by the University of
 Zurich in July, and published in a slightly altered form in Annalen
 der Physik in January 1906.

 Despite often being obscured by the fame of his papers on special
 relativity and the photoelectric effect, Einstein's thesis on
 molecular dimensions became one of his most quoted works.  Indeed, it
 was his preoccupation with statistical mechanics that formed the basis
 of several of his breakthroughs, including the idea that light was
 quantized.

 After finishing a doctoral thesis, most physicists would be either
 celebrating or sleeping. But just 11 days later Einstein sent another
 paper to Annalen der Physik, this time on the subject of Brownian
 motion.

 In this paper, "On the movement of small particles suspended in
 stationary liquids required by the molecular-kinetic theory of heat",
 Einstein combined kinetic theory and classical hydrodynamics to derive
 an equation that showed that the displacement of Brownian particles
 varies as the square root of time (Ann. Phys., Lpz 17 549-560).

 This was confirmed experimentally by Jean Perrin three years later,
 proving once and for all that atoms do exist. In fact, Einstein
 extended his theory of Brownian motion in an additional paper that he
 sent to the journal on 19 December, although this was not published
 until February 1906.

 A special discovery

 Shortly after finishing his paper on Brownian motion Einstein had an
 idea about synchronizing clocks that were spatially separated.

 This led him to write a paper that landed on the desks of Annalen der
 Physik on 30 June, and would go on to completely overhaul our
 understanding of space and time. Some 30 pages long and containing no
 references, his fourth 1905 paper was titled "On the electrodynamics
 of moving bodies" (Ann. Phys., Lpz 17 891-921). In the 200 or so years
 before 1905, physics had been built on Newton's laws of motion, which
 were known to hold equally well in stationary reference frames and in
 frames moving at a constant velocity in a straight line. Provided the
 correct "Galilean" rules were applied, one could therefore transform
 the laws of physics so that they did not depend on the frame of
 reference.

 However, the theory of electrodynamics developed by Maxwell in the
 late 19th century posed a fundamental problem to this "principle of
 relativity" because it suggested that electromagnetic waves always
 travel at the same speed.

 Either electrodynamics was wrong or there had to be some kind of
 stationary "ether" through which the waves could propagate.

 Alternatively, Newton was wrong. True to style, Einstein swept away
 the concept of the ether (which, in any case, had not been detected
 experimentally) in one audacious step. He postulated that no matter
 how fast you are moving, light will always appear to travel at the
 same velocity: the speed of light is a fundamental constant of nature
 that cannot be exceeded.

 Combined with the requirement that the laws of physics are the
 identical in all "inertial" (i.e. non-accelerating) frames, Einstein
 built a completely new theory of motion that revealed Newtonian
 mechanics to be an approximation that only holds at low, everyday
 speeds.

 The theory later became known as the special theory of relativity -
 special because it applies only to non-accelerating frames - and led
 to the realization that space and time are intimately linked to one
 another.

 In order that the two postulates of special relativity are respected,
 strange things have to happen to space and time, which, unbeknown to
 Einstein, had been predicted by Lorentz and others the previous year.

 For instance, the length of an object becomes shorter when it travels
 at a constant velocity, and a moving clock runs slower than a
 stationary clock.

 Effects like these have been verified in countless experiments over
 the last 100 years, but in 1905 the most famous prediction of
 Einstein's theory was still to come.

 After a short family holiday in Serbia, Einstein submitted his fifth
 and final paper of 1905 on 27 September. Just three pages long and
 titled "Does the inertia of a body depend on its energy content?",
 this paper presented an "afterthought" on the consequences of special
 relativity, which culminated in a simple equation that is now known as
 E = mc^2 (Ann. Phys., Lpz 18 639-641).

 This equation, which was to become the most famous in all of science,
 was the icing on the cake.

 "The special theory of relativity, culminating in the prediction that
 mass and energy can be converted into one another, is one of the
 greatest achievements in physics - or anything else for that matter,"
 says Wilczek.

 "Einstein's work on Brownian motion would have merited a sound Nobel
 prize, the photoelectric effect a strong Nobel prize, but special
 relativity and E = mc^2 were worth a super-strong Nobel prize."

 However, while not doubting the scale of Einstein's achievements, many
 physicists also think that his 1905 discoveries would have eventually
 been made by others.

 "If Einstein had not lived, people would have stumbled on for a number
 of years, maybe a decade or so, before getting a clear conception of
 special relativity," says Ed Witten of the Institute for Advanced
 Study in Princeton.

 't Hooft agrees. "The more natural course of events would have been
 that Einstein's 1905 discoveries were made by different people, not by
 one and the same person," he says. However, most think that it would
 have taken much longer - perhaps a few decades - for Einstein's
 general theory of relativity to emerge.

 Indeed, Wilczek points out that one consequence of general relativity
 being so far ahead of its time was that the subject languished for
 many years afterwards.

 The aftermath

 By the end of 1905 Einstein was starting to make a name for himself in
 the physics community, with Planck and Philipp Lenard - who won the
 Nobel prize that year - among his most famous supporters. Indeed,
 Planck was a member of the editorial board of Annalen der Physik at
 the time.

 Einstein was finally given the title of Herr Doktor from the
 University of Zurich in January 1906, but he remained at the patent
 office for a further two and a half years before taking up his first
 academic position at Zurich.  By this time his statistical
 interpretation of Brownian motion and his bold postulates of special
 relativity were becoming part of the fabric of physics, although it
 would take several more years for his paper on light quanta to gain
 wide acceptance.

 1905 was undoubtedly a great year for physics, and for Einstein. "You
 have to go back to quasi-mythical figures like Galileo or especially
 Newton to find good analogues," says Wilczek.

 "The closest in modern times might be Dirac, who, if magnetic
 monopoles had been discovered, would have given Einstein some real
 competition!" But we should not forget that 1905 was just the
 beginning of Einstein's legacy. His crowning achievement - the general
 theory of relativity - was still to come.
.



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