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The Genesis and Present State of Development of the Quantum Theory
"in recognition of the services he rendered to the advancement of
Physics by his discovery of energy quanta"
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Max Karl
Ernst Ludwig Planck |
| Germany |
Berlin University
Berlin, Germany |
b. 1858
d. 1947 |
Biography
Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck was
born in Kiel, Germany, on April 23, 1858, the son of Julius Wilhelm
and Emma (née Patzig) Planck. His father was Professor of
Constitutional Law in the University of Kiel, and later in Göttingen.
Planck studied at the Universities of
Munich and Berlin, where his teachers included Kirchhoff and
Helmholtz, and received his doctorate of philosophy at Munich in
1879. He was Privatdozent in Munich from 1880 to 1885, then
Associate Professor of Theoretical Physics at Kiel until 1889, in
which year he succeeded Kirchhoff as Professor at Berlin University,
where he remained until his retirement in 1926. Afterwards he became
President of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society for the Promotion of
Science, a post he held until 1937. The Prussian Academy of Sciences
appointed him a member in 1894 and Permanent Secretary in 1912.
Planck's earliest work was on the
subject of thermodynamics, an interest he acquired from his studies
under Kirchhoff, whom he greatly admired, and very considerably from
reading R. Clausius' publications. He published papers on entropy,
on thermoelectric ity and on the theory of dilute solutions.
At the same time also the problems of
radiation processes engaged his attention and he showed that these
were to be considered as electromagnetic in nature. From these
studies he was led to the problem of the distribution of energy in
the spectrum of full radiation. Experimental observations on the
wavelength distribution of the energy emitted by a black body as a
function of temperature were at variance with the predictions of
classical physics. Planck was able to deduce the relationship
between the ener gy and the frequency of radiation. In a paper
published in 1900, he announced his derivation of the relationship:
this was based on the revolutionary idea that the energy emitted by
a resonator could only take on discrete values or quanta. The energy
for a resonator of frequency v is hv where h is
a universal constant, now called Planck's constant.
This was not only Planck's most
important work but also marked a turning point in the history of
physics. The importance of the discovery, with its far-reaching
effect on classical physics, was not appreciated at first. However
the evidence for its validi ty gradually became overwhelming as its
application accounted for many discrepancies between observed
phenomena and classical theory. Among these applications and
developments may be mentioned Einstein's explanation of the
photoelectric effect.
Planck's work on the quantum theory, as
it came to be known, was published in the Annalen der Physik.
His work is summarized in two books Thermodynamik
(Thermodynamics) (1897) and Theorie der Wärmestrahlung
(Theory of heat radiat ion) (1906).
He was elected to Foreign Membership of
the Royal Society in 1926, being awarded the Society's Copley Medal
in 1928.
Planck faced a troubled and tragic
period in his life during the period of the Nazi government in
Germany, when he felt it his duty to remain in his country but was
openly opposed to some of the Government's policies, particularly as
regards the persecuti on of the Jews. In the last weeks of the war
he suffered great hardship after his home was destroyed by bombing.
He was revered by his colleagues not
only for the importance of his discoveries but for his great
personal qualities. He was also a gifted pianist and is said to have
at one time considered music as a career.
Planck was twice married. Upon his
appointment, in 1885, to Associate Professor in his native town Kiel
he married a friend of his childhood, Marie Merck, who died in 1909.
He remarried her cousin Marga von Hösslin. Three of his children
died young, leaving him with two sons.
He suffered a personal tragedy when one
of them was executed for his part in an unsuccessful attempt to
assassinate Hitler in 1944.
He died at Göttingen on October 4,
1947.
Nobel Lecture
The Genesis and Present State of Development of
the Quantum Theory
If I take it correctly that the duty imposed upon
me today is to give a public lecture on my writings, then I believe
that this task, the importance of which I am well aware through the
gratitude felt towards the noble-minded founder of our Foundation,
cannot be more suitably fulfilled than by my trying to give you the
story of the origin of the quantum theory in broad outlines and to
couple with this, a picture in a small frame, of the development of
this theory up to now, and its present-day significance for physics.
When I look back to the time, already twenty
years ago, when the concept and magnitude of the physical quantum of
action began, for the first time, to unfold from the mass of
experimental facts, and again, to the long and ever tortuous path
which led, finally, to its disclosure, the whole development seems
to me to provide a fresh illustration of the long-since proved
saying of Goethe's that man errs as long as he strives. And the
whole strenuous intellectual work of an industrious research worker
would appear, after all, in vain and hopeless, if he were not
occasionally through some striking facts to find that he had, at the
end of all his criss-cross journeys, at last accomplished at least
one step which was conclusively nearer the truth. An indispensable
hypothesis, even though still far from being a guarantee of success,
is however the pursuit of a specific aim, whose lighted beacon, even
by initial failures, is not betrayed.
For many years, such an aim for me was to find
the solution to the problem of the distribution of energy in the
normal spectrum of radiating heat. Since Gustav Kirchhoff has shown
that the state of the heat radiation which takes place in a cavity
bounded by any emitting and absorbing substances of uniform
temperature is entirely independent upon the nature of the
substances, a universal function was demonstrated which was
dependent only upon temperature and wavelength, but in no way upon
the properties of any substance. And the discovery of this
remarkable function promised deeper insight into the connection
between energy and temperature which is, in fact, the major problem
in thermodynamics and thus in the whole of molecular physics. To
attain this there was no other way but to seek out from all the
different substances existing in Nature one of known emissive and
absorptive power, and to calculate the properties of the heat
radiation in stationary energy exchange with it. According to
Kirchhoff's Law, this would have to prove independent of the nature
of the body.
Heinrich Hertz's linear oscillator, whose laws of
emission, for a given frequency, Hertz had just previously
completely developed, seemed to me to be a particularly suitable
device for this purpose. If a number of such Hertzian oscillators
are set up within a cavity surrounded by a sphere of reflecting
walls, then by analogy with audio oscillators and resonators, energy
will be exchanged between them by the output and absorption of
electromagnetic waves, and finally stationary radiation
corresponding to Kirchhoff's Law, the so-called black-body
radiation, should be set up within the cavity. I was filled at that
time with what would be thought today naively charming and agreeable
expectations, that the laws of classical electrodynamics would, if
approached in a sufficiently general manner with the avoidance of
special hypotheses, be sufficient to enable us to grasp the most
significant part of the process to be expected, and thus to achieve
the desired aim. I, therefore, developed first the laws of emission
and absorption of a linear resonator on the most general basis, in
fact I proceeded on such a detour which could well have been avoided
had I made use of the existing electron theory of
H.A. Lorentz,
already basically complete. But since I did not quite trust the
electron hypothesis, I preferred to observe that energy which flowed
in and out through an enclosing spherical surface around the
resonator at a suitable distance from it. By this method, only
processes in a pure vacuum came into account, but a knowledge of
these was sufficient to draw the necessary conclusions however,
about the energy changes in the resonator.
The fruit of this long series of investigations,
of which some, by comparison with existing observations, mainly the
vapour measurements by V. Bjerknes, were susceptible to checking,
and were thereby confirmed, was the establishment of the general
connection between the energy of a resonator of specific natural
period of vibration and the energy radiation of the corresponding
spectral region in the surrounding field under conditions of
stationary energy exchange. The noteworthy result was found that
this connection was in no way dependent upon the nature of the
resonator, particularly its attenuation constants - a circumstance
which I welcomed happily since the whole problem thus became
simpler, for instead of the energy of radiation, the energy of the
resonator could be taken and, thereby, a complex system, composed of
many degrees of freedom, could be replaced by a simple system of one
degree of freedom.
Nevertheless, the result meant no more than a
preparatory step towards the initial onslaught on the particular
problem which now towered with all its fearsome height even steeper
before me. The first attempt upon it went wrong, for my original
secret hope that the radiation emitted from the resonator can be in
some characteristic way or other distinguished from the absorbed
radiation and thereby allow a differential equation to be set up,
from the integration of which one could gain some special condition
for the properties of stationary radiation, proved false. The
resonator reacted only to those rays which it also emitted, and was
not in the slightest bit sensitive to the adjacent spectral regions.
Furthermore, my hypothesis that the resonator
could exercise a unilateral, i.e. irreversible, effect upon the
energy in the surrounding radiation field, was strongly contested by
Ludwig Boltzmann, who, with his riper experience in these problems,
proved that according to the laws of classical dynamics each of the
processes observed by me can proceed in exactly the opposite
direction, in such a way, that a spherical wave emitted from the
resonator, returns and contracts in steadily diminishing concentric
spherical surfaces inwards to the resonator, and is again absorbed
by it, thereby allowing the formerly absorbed energy to be
re-transmitted into space in the direction from which it came. And
when I excluded this kind of singular process, such as an inwardly
directed wave, by means of the introduction of a limiting
definition, the hypothesis of natural radiation, all these analyses
still showed ever more clearly that an important connecting element
or term, essential for the complete grasp of the core of the
problem, must be missing.
So there was nothing left for me but to tackle
the problem from the opposite side, that of thermodynamics, in which
field I felt, moreover, more confident. In fact my earlier studies
of the Second Law of Heat Theory stood me in good stead, so that
from the start I tried to get a connection, not between the
temperature but rather the entropy of the resonator and its energy,
and in fact, not its entropy exactly but the second derivative with
respect to the energy since this has a direct physical meaning for
the irreversibility of the energy exchange between resonator and
radiation. Since I was, however, at that time still too far oriented
towards the phenomenological aspect to come to closer quarters with
the connection between entropy and probability, I saw myself, at
first, relying solely upon the existing results of experience. In
the foreground of interest at that time, in 1899, was the energy
distribution law established by
W. Wien
shortly before, whose experimental proof was taken up, on the one
hand, by F. Paschen at the Technische Hochschule in Hannover, and,
on the other hand, by O. Lummer and E. Pringsheim at the State
Institution in Charlottenburg. This law brought out the dependence
of the radiation intensity on the temperature, representing it by an
exponential function. If one calculates the connection between the
entropy and the energy of a resonator, determined by the above law,
the remarkable result is obtained that the reciprocal value of the
above-mentioned differential coefficient, which I will call R,
is proportional to the energy. This extremely simple relationship
can be considered as the completely adequate expression of Wien's
energy distribution law; for with the dependence upon the energy,
the dependence upon the wavelength is always directly given through
the general, well-established displacement law by Wien.
Since the whole problem concerned a universal law
of Nature, and since at that time, as still today, I held the
unshakeable opinion that the simpler the presentation of a
particular law of Nature, the more general it is - though at the
same time, which formula to take as the simpler, is a problem which
cannot always be confidently and finally decided - I believed for a
long time that the law that the quantity R is proportional to
the energy, should be looked upon as the basis for the whole energy
distribution law. This concept could not be maintained for long in
the face of fresh measurements. Whilst for small values of the
energy and for short waves, Wien's law was satisfactorily confirmed,
noteworthy deviations for larger wavelengths were found, first by O.
Lummer and E. Pringsheim, and finally by H. Rubens and F. Kurlbaum,
whose measurements on the infrared residual rays of fluorite and
rock salt revealed a totally different, though still extremely
simple relationship, characterized by the fact that the quantity
R is not proportional to the energy, but to the square of the
energy, and in fact this holds with increasing accuracy for greater
energies and wavelengths.
So, through direct experiment, two simple limits
were determined for the function R: for small energies,
proportionality with the energy; for greater energies,
proportionality with the square of the energy. There was no better
alternative but to make, for the general case, the quantity R equal
to the sum of two terms, one of the first power, and one of the
second power of the energy, so that for small energies the first is
predominant, whilst for the greater energies the second is dominant.
Thus the new radiation formula was found, which, in the face of its
experimental proof, has stood firm to a reasonable extent until now.
Even today, admittedly, we cannot talk of final exact confirmation.
In fact, a fresh attempt at proof is urgently required.
However, even if the radiation formula should
prove itself to be absolutely accurate, it would still only have,
within the significance of a happily chosen interpolation formula, a
strictly limited value. For this reason, I busied myself, from then
on, that is, from the day of its establishment, with the task of
elucidating a true physical character for the formula, and this
problem led me automatically to a consideration of the connection
between entropy and probability, that is, Boltzmann's trend of
ideas; until after some weeks of the most strenuous work of my life,
light came into the darkness, and a new undreamed-of perspective
opened up before me.
I must make a small intercalation at this point.
According to Boltzmann, entropy is a measure for physical
probability, and the nature and essence of the Second Law of Heat
Theory is that in Nature a state occurs more frequently, the more
probable it is. Now one always measures in Nature the difference in
entropies, never the entropy itself, and to this extent one cannot
speak of the absolute entropy of a state, without a certain
arbitrariness. Nevertheless, it is useful to introduce the suitably
defined absolute value of entropy, namely for the reason that with
its help certain general laws can be particularly easily formulated.
The case seems to be parallel, as I see it, with that of energy.
Energy itself cannot be measured, only its difference. For that
reason one used to deal, not with energy, but with work, and even
Ernst Mach, who had so much to do with the Law of Conservation of
Energy, and who in principle kept away from all speculations beyond
the field of observation, has always avoided speaking of energy
itself. Likewise, in thermochemistry, one has always stuck to the
thermal effect, that is, to energy differences, until
Wilhelm Ostwald
in particular emphatically showed that many detailed considerations
could be significantly abbreviated if one dealt with energy itself
instead of with calorimetric numbers. The additive constant which
was at first still undetermined in the expression for energy, has
later been finally determined through the relativistic law of the
proportionality between energy and inertia.
In a similar way to that for energy, an absolute
value can be defined also for entropy and, as a result thereof, for
the physical probability too, e.g. by so fixing the additive
constant that energy and entropy disappear together. On the basis of
a consideration of this kind a specific, relatively simple
combinatorial method was obtained for the calculation of the
physical probability of a specified energy distribution in a system
of resonators, which led exactly to that entropy expression
determined by the radiation law, and it brought me much-valued
satisfaction for the many disappointments when Ludwig Boltzmann, in
the letter returning my essay, expressed his interest and basic
agreement with the train of thoughts expounded in it.
For the numerical treatment of the indicated
consideration of probability, knowledge of two universal constants
is required, both of which have an independent physical meaning, and
whose subsequent evaluation from the law of radiation must provide
proof as to whether the whole method is to be looked upon as a mere
artifice for calculation, or whether it has an inherent real
physical sense and interpretation. The first constant is of a more
formal nature and is connected with the definition of temperature.
If temperature were to be defined as the average kinetic energy of a
molecule in an ideal gas, that is, as a tiny, little quantity, then
the constant would have the value 2/3. In conventional temperature
measure, on the contrary, the constant has an extremely small value
which stands, naturally, in close association with the energy of a
single molecule, and an exact knowledge of which leads, therefore,
to the calculation of the mass of a molecule and those parameters
related to it. This constant is often referred to as Boltzmann's
constant, although, to my knowledge, Boltzmann himself never
introduced it - a peculiar state of affairs, which can be explained
by the fact that Boltzmann, as appears from his occasional
utterances, never gave thought to the possibility of carrying out an
exact measurement of the constant. Nothing can better illustrate the
positive and hectic pace of progress which the art of experimenters
has made over the past twenty years, than the fact that since that
time, not only one, but a great number of methods have been
discovered for measuring the mass of a molecule with practically the
same accuracy as that attained for a planet.
At the time when I carried out the corresponding
calculation from the radiation law, an exact proof of the number
obtained was quite impossible, and not much more could be done than
to determine the order of magnitude which was admissible. It was
shortly afterward that
E. Rutherford
and H. Geiger succeeded in determining, by direct counting of the
alpha particles, the value of the electrical elementary charge,
which they found to be 4.65 x 10-10 electrostatic units;
and the agreement of this figure with the number calculated by me,
4.69 x 10-10, could be taken as decisive confirmation of
the usefulness of my theory. Since then, more sophisticated methods
have led to a slightly higher value, these measurements being
carried out by E. Regener,
R.A. Millikan,
and others.
The explanation of the second universal constant
of the radiation law was not so easy. Because it represents the
product of energy and time (according to the first calculation it
was 6.55 x 10-27 erg sec), I described it as the
elementary quantum of action. Whilst it was completely indispensable
for obtaining the correct expression for entropy - since only with
its help could the magnitude of the "elementary regions" or "free
rooms for action" of the probability, decisive for the assigned
probability consideration, be determined - it proved elusive and
resistant to all efforts to fit it into the framework of classical
theory. As long as it was looked upon as infinitely small, that is,
for large energies or long periods of time, everything went well;
but in the general case, however, a gap yawned open in some place or
other, which was the more striking, the weaker and faster the
vibrations that were considered. The foundering of all efforts to
bridge the chasm soon left little doubt. Either the quantum of
action was a fictional quantity, then the whole deduction of the
radiation law was in the main illusory and represented nothing more
than an empty non-significant play on formulae, or the derivation of
the radiation law was based on a sound physical conception. In this
case the quantum of action must play a fundamental role in physics,
and here was something entirely new, never before heard of, which
seemed called upon to basically revise all our physical thinking,
built as this was, since the establishment of the infinitesimal
calculus by Leibniz and Newton, upon the acceptance of the
continuity of all causative connections.
Experiment has decided for the second
alternative. That the decision could be made so soon and so
definitely was due not to the proving of the energy distribution law
of heat radiation, still less to the special derivation of that law
devised by me, but rather should it be attributed to the restless
forwardthrusting work of those research workers who used the quantum
of action to help them in their own investigations and experiments.
The first impact in this field was made by
A. Einstein
who, on the one hand, pointed out that the introduction of the
energy quanta, determined by the quantum of action, appeared
suitable for obtaining a simple explanation for a series of
noteworthy observations during the action of light, such as Stokes'
Law, electron emission, and gas ionization, and, on the other hand,
derived a formula for the specific heat of a solid body through the
identification of the expression for the energy of a system of
resonators with that of the energy of a solid body, and this formula
expresses, more or less correctly, the changes in specific heat,
particularly its reduction with falling temperature. The result was
the emergence, in all directions, of a number of problems whose more
accurate and extensive elaboration in the course of time brought to
light a mass of valuable material. I cannot give here even an
approximate report on the abundance of the work carried out. Only
the most important and characteristic steps along the path of
progressive knowledge can be high-lighted here.
First come thermal and chemical processes. As far
as the specific heat of solid bodies is concerned, Einstein's
theory, which rested upon the assumption of a single natural
vibration of the atom, was extended by M. Born and Th. von Kármán to
the case of various kinds of natural vibrations, which approached
more nearly to the truth. P. Debye succeeded, by means of a bold
simplification of the stipulations for the character of natural
vibrations, in producing a relatively simple formula for the
specific heat of solid bodies which, particularly for low
temperatures, not only satisfactorily reproduces the measurements
obtained by
W. Nernst
and his pupils, but is also compatible with the elastic and optical
properties of these substances. The quantum of action also comes to
the fore in considering the specific heat of gases. W. Nernst had
earlier suggested that to the quantum of energy of a vibration there
must also correspond a quantum of energy of a rotation, and
accordingly it was to be expected that the rotational energy of the
gas molecules would disappear with falling temperature. The
measurements by A. Eucken on the specific heat of hydrogen confirmed
this conclusion, and if the calculations of A. Einstein and O.
Stern, P. Ehrenfest and others have not until now afforded any
completely satisfactory agreement, this lies understandably in our,
as yet, incomplete knowledge of the model of a hydrogen molecule.
The fact that the rotations of the gas molecules, as specified by
quantum conditions, do really exist in Nature, can no longer be
doubted in view of the work on absorption bands in the infrared by
N. Bjerrum, E. von Bahr, H. Rubens, G. Hetmer and others, even
though it has not been possible to give an all-round exhaustive
explanation of this remarkable rotation spectra up to now.
Since, ultimately, all affinity properties of a
substance are determined by its entropy, the quantum-theoretical
calculation of the entropy opens up the way to all the problems of
chemical relationships. The Nemst chemical constant, which O. Sackur
calculated directly through a combinatorial method as applied to
oscillators, is characteristic for the absolute value of the entropy
of a gas. H. Tetrode, in close association with the data to be
obtained by measurement, determined the difference in entropy values
between vapour and solid state by studying an evaporation process.
Whilst in the cases so far considered, states of
thermodynamic equilibrium are concerned, for which therefore the
measurements can only yield statistically average values relating to
many particles and lengthy periods of time, the observation of
electron impacts leads directly to the dynamic details of the
process under examination. Thus the determination of the so-called
resonance potential carried out by J. Franck and G. Hertz, or that
concerning the critical velocity is the minimum an electron must
possess in order to cause emission of a light quantum or photon by
impact with a neutral atom, supplied a method of measuring the
quantum of action which was as direct as could be wished for. The
experiments by D.L. Webster and E. Wagner and others resulted in the
development of methods suitable for the
Röntgen
spectrum which also gave completely compatible results.
The production of photons by electron impact
appears as the reverse process to that of electron emission through
irradiation by light-, Röntgen-, or gamma-rays and again here, the
energy quanta, determined by the quantum of action and by the
vibration frequency, play a characteristic role, as could be
recognized, already at an early time, from the striking fact that
the velocity of the emitted electrons is not determined by the
intensity of radiation, but only by the colour of the light incident
upon the substance. Also from the quantitative aspect, Einstein's
equations with respect to the light quantum have proved true in
every way, as established by R.A. Millikan, in particular, by
measurements of the escape velocity of emitted electrons, whilst the
significance of the photon for the initiation of photochemical
reactions was discovered by E. Warburg.
If the various experiments and experiences
gathered together by me up to now, from the different fields of
physics, provide impressive proof in favour of the existence of the
quantum of action, the quantum hypothesis has, nevertheless, its
greatest support from the establishment and development of the atom
theory by
Niels Bohr.
For it fell to this theory to discover, in the quantum of action,
the long-sought key to the entrance gate into the wonderland of
spectroscopy, which since the discovery of spectral analysis had
obstinately defied all efforts to breach it. And now that the way
was opened, a sudden flood of new-won knowledge poured out over the
whole field including the neighbouring fields in physics and
chemistry. The first brilliant acquisition was the derivation of
Balmer's series formula for hydrogen and helium including the
reduction of the universal Rydberg constant to merely known
numerical quantities, whereby even the small discrepancies for
hydrogen and helium were recognized as essentially determined by the
weak motion of the heavy atom nucleus. Investigation then turned to
other series in the optical and the Röntgen spectrum using the
extremely fruitful Ritz combination principle, which was at last
revealed clearly in all its fundamental significance.
Whoever, in view of the numerous agreements which
in the case of the special accuracy of spectroscopic measurements
could lay claim to particularly striking confirmatory power, might
have been still inclined to feel that it was all attributable to the
play of chance, would been forced, finally, to discard even his last
doubt, as A. Sommerfeld showed that from a logical extension of the
laws of quantum distribution in systems with several degrees of
freedom, and out of consideration of the variability of the inertial
mass in accordance with the relativity theory, that magic formula
arose before which both the hydrogen and the helium spectrum had to
reveal the riddle of their fine structure, to such an extent that
the finest present-day measurements, those of F. Paschen, could be
explained generally through it - an achievement fully comparable
with that of the famous discovery of the planet Neptune whose
existence and orbit was calculated by Leverrier before the human eye
had seen it. Progressing further along the same path, P. Epstein
succeeded in fully explaining the Stark effect of the electrical
splitting up of the spectral lines, P. Debye produced a simple
explanation of the K-series of the Röntgen spectrum, which had been
investigated by
Manne Siegbahn,
and now followed a great number of further experiments, which
illuminated with more or less success the dark secrets of the
construction of the atom.
After all these results, towards whose complete
establishment still many reputable names ought essentially to have
been mentioned here, there is no other decision left for a critic
who does not intend to resist the facts, than to award to the
quantum of action, which by each different process in the colourful
show of processes, has ever-again yielded the same result, namely,
6.52 x 10-27 erg sec, for its magnitude, full citizenship
in the system of universal physical constants. It must certainly
appear a unique coincidence that just in that time when the ideas of
general relativity have broken through, and have led to fantastic
results, Nature should have revealed an "absolute" in a place where
it could be least expected, an invariable unit, in fact, by means of
which the action quantity, contained in a space-time element, can be
represented by a completely definite non-arbitrary number, and
thereby divested itself of its (until now) relative character.
To be sure, the introduction of the quantum of
action has not yet produced a genuine quantum theory. In fact, the
path the research worker must yet tread to it is not less than that
from the discovery of the velocity of light by Olaf Römer to the
establishment of Maxwell's theory of light. The difficulties which
the introduction of the quantum of action into the well-tried
classical theory has posed right from the start have already been
mentioned by me. During the course of the years they have increased
rather than diminished, and if, in the meantime, the impetuous
forward-driving research has passed to the order of the day for some
of these, temporarily, the gaps left behind, awaiting subsequent
filling, react even harder upon the conscientious systematologist.
What serves in Bohr's theory as a basis to build up the laws of
action, is assembled out of specific hypotheses which, up to a
generation ago, would undoubtedly have been flatly rejected
altogether by every physicist. The fact that in the atom, certain
quite definite quantum-selected orbits play a special role, might be
taken still as acceptable, less easily however, that the electrons,
circulating in these orbits with definite acceleration, radiate no
energy at all. The fact that the quite sharply defined frequency of
an emitted photon should be different from the frequency of the
emitting electron must seem to a theoretical physicist, brought up
in the classical school, at first sight to be a monstrous and, for
the purpose of a mental picture, a practically intolerable demand.
But numbers decide, and the result is that the
roles, compared with earlier times, have gradually changed. What
initially was a problem of fitting a new and strange element, with
more or less gentle pressure, into what was generally regarded as a
fixed frame has become a question of coping with an intruder who,
after appropriating an assured place, has gone over to the
offensive; and today it has become obvious that the old framework
must somehow or other be burst asunder. It is merely a question of
where and to what degree. If one may make a conjecture about the
expected escape from this tight comer, then one could remark that
all the signs suggest that the main principles of thermodynamics
from the classical theory will not only rule unchallenged but will
more probably become correspondingly extended. What the armchair
experiments meant for the foundation of classical thermodynamics,
the adiabatic hypothesis of P. Ehrenfest means, provisionally, to
the quantum theory; and in the same way as R. Clausius, as a
starting point for the measurement of entropy, introduced the
principle that, when treated appropriately, any two states of a
material system can, by a reversible process, undergo a transition
from one to the other, now the new ideas of Bohr's open up a very
similar path into the interior of a wonderland hitherto hidden from
him.
There is in particular one problem whose
exhaustive solution could provide considerable elucidation. What
becomes of the energy of a photon after complete emission? Does it
spread out in all directions with further propagation in the sense
of Huygens' wave theory, so constantly taking up more space, in
boundless progressive attenuation? Or does it fly out like a
projectile in one direction in the sense of Newton's emanation
theory? In the first case, the quantum would no longer be in the
position to concentrate energy upon a single point in space in such
a way as to release an electron from its atomic bond, and in the
second case, the main triumph of the Maxwell theory - the continuity
between the static and the dynamic fields and, with it, the complete
understanding we have enjoyed, until now, of the fully investigated
interference phenomena - would have to be sacrificed, both being
very unhappy consequences for today's theoreticians.
Be that as it may, in any case no doubt can arise
that science will master the dilemma, serious as it is, and that
which appears today so unsatisfactory will in fact eventually, seen
from a higher vantage point, be distinguished by its special harmony
and simplicity. Until this aim is achieved, the problem of the
quantum of action will not cease to inspire research and fructify
it, and the greater the difficulties which oppose its solution, the
more significant it finally will show itself to be for the
broadening and deepening of our whole knowledge in physics.
Source:
http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/2000/index.html
CPH Stands
of: Creative Particle of Higgs that
propounded by Hossein Javadi in
1987
Biography

Download of GSJ;
Hossein Javadi, F. Forouzbakhsh
Oct. 28, 2008:
A New Definition for the Graviton
Mar. 21, 2006:
Logical Foundation of CPH Theory [PDF]
Persian Translation
Mar.
21, 2006: English
Experimental Foundation of CPH Theory [PDF]
Persian Translation
Mar.
21, 2006: English
Definition, Principle and Explanation of CPH Theory [PDF]
Persian Translation
Mar.
23, 2006: English
Analysis of CPH Theory [PDF]
Persian Translation
Apr.
7, 2006: English
Opinions on CPH Theory [PDF]
Persian
Translation
Apr.
7, 2006: English
Questions and Answers on CPH Theory [PDF]
Persian Translation
Apr.
11, 2006: English
Realization Hawking - End of Physics by CPH [PDF]
Persian Translation Only
Apr.
12, 2006: English
Maxwell's Equations in a Gravitational Field [PDF]
Persian Translation
Apr.
17, 2006: English
Effective Nuclear Charge [PDF]
Persian Translation
Apr. 28, 2006:
Color Charges Curve Space [PDF]
Persian Translation
May. 14,
2006:English
Speed of Light and CPH Theory
[PDF]
Persian Translation
Mar. 19, 2006:
Sub-Quantum Chromodynamics [PDF]
Mar.
19, 2006:
Color Charge/Color Magnet and CPH [PDF]
H. Poor Imani, S. Hoghoghi Esfahani:
Apr. 17, 2006:
Rotation, Time Revolution and its Biological Effect
H. Poor Imani:
Mar. 20, 2006:
Time, Revolution and Spin
Download of CPH
Theory site
Section 1; Logical
Foundation of CPH Theory
PDF
DOC
HTM
Section 2; Experimental
Foundation of CPH Theory
PDF
DOC
HTM
Section 3;
Theory of
CPH; Formats Defination and Principle of CPH
PDF
DOC
HTM
Section 4;
Analysis
of CPH Theory
PDF
DOC
HTM
Section Five;
Opinions About CPH
Theory
PDF
DOC
HTM
Section six; Questions and answers
CPH Theory
PDF
DOC
HTM
Section Nine; Maxwell equations in
gravitational Field
PDF
DOC
HTM
Section Ten; Effective Nuclear
Charge
PDF
DOC
HTM
Section Eleven; Color Charges Curve
Space
PDF
DOC
HTM
Section 12;
Speed of Light
and CPH Theory
PDF
DOC
HTM
Time
Function and Absolute Black Hole
PDF
H. Poor Imani: Time,
Revolution and Spin
PDF
DOC
H. Poor Imani and Salman
Hoghoghi: Time, Revolution and Biological Time
PDF

Contains: names, biographies and
lectutures
|
Faster Than Light
Light that travels…
faster than light!
Before the Big Bang
Structure of Charge Particles
Move Structure of Photon
Structure of Charge Particles
Faster Than Light
Light that travels…
faster than light!
Before the Big Bang
Structure of Charge Particles
Move Structure of Photon
Structure of Charge Particles
Zero Point Energy and the Dirac Equation
[PDF]
Persian Text
Unification
and CPH Theory [PDF]
Strong Interaction and CPH Theory [PDF]
Summary of Physics Concepts [PDF]
Quantum Electrodynamics and CPH Theory [PDF]
Vocabulary of CPH Theory [PDF]
Thermodynamic Laws, Entropy and CPH Theory
[PDF]
Time Function and Absolute Black Hole [PDF]
CPH and Time [PDF]Persian
Text Only
Time Function and Work Energy Theorem [PDF]
Persian Text Only
Properties of CPH [PDF]Persian
Text Only
CPH Theory and Special Relativity [PDF]
Persian Text Only
CPH Theory and Newton's Second Law [PDF]
Persian Text Only
A New Mechanism of Higgs Bosons in Producing
Charge Particles [PDF]
Persian Text
Logical Foundation of CPH Theory [PDF]
Persian Text
Experimental Foundation of CPH Theory [PDF]
Persian Text
Definition, Principle and Explanation of CPH
Theory [PDF]
Persian Text
Analysis
of CPH Theory
Persian Text
Opinions on CPH Theory [PDF]
Persian Text
Questions
and Answers on CPH Theory [PDF]
Persian Text
Realization
Hawking - End of Physics by CPH [PDF]Persian
Text Only
Maxwell's
Equations in a Gravitational Field [PDF]
Persian Text
Effective
Nuclear Charge [PDF]
Persian Text
Color
Charges Curve Space [PDF]
Persian Text
Sub-Quantum Chromodynamics [PDF]
Color
Charge/Color Magnet and CPH [PDF]
Speed
of Light and CPH Theory [PDF]
Persian Text
|