A Brief History and Philosophy of Physics

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A Brief History and Philosophy of Physics by Alan J. Slavin, Department of Physics, Trent University, August 1994 Introduction This brief history and philosophy of physics has been written to give physics students some appreciation of where their discipline has come from, and of the philosophical principles underpinning it. It is hoped that this will provide students with a sense of physics as a living, evolving discipline, and of their place in its evolution. Physics, indeed all of science, is not a static agglomeration of proven facts and inviolable theories. While there are many theories which are so well tried that they are generally accepted as being correct, all scientific theories are still open to attack from some new, reproducible experiment which disagrees with them. The history below bears this out. Furthermore, while science per se may be value-less, neither good or bad, the teaching or application of science always has values attached. If it is taught by a scientist without any mention of the need to use the learning responsibly, then students may assume that scientists need not be concerned about the application of science. If this happens, then the scientist ultimately abdicates to the politician or manufacturer the decision on the use of her or his own work, even though it is unlikely that either the politician or manufacturer will understand as well as the scientist the effects of its use. By this, I am not suggesting that scientists are the only ones qualified to decide on the application of science; scientists can also be blind to the potential in what they do. It is hoped that this paper will contribute to the ability of students to ask the necessary questions regarding the science they and others

Transcript of A Brief History and Philosophy of Physics

A Brief History and Philosophy of Physics by Alan J. Slavin, Department of Physics, Trent University, August 1994

Introduction

 This brief history and philosophy of physics has been written togive physics students some appreciation of where their disciplinehas come from, and of the philosophical principles underpinning it. It is hoped that this will provide students with a sense of physics as a living, evolving discipline, and of their place in its evolution. Physics, indeed all of science, is not a static agglomeration of proven facts and inviolable theories. While there are many theories which are so well tried that they are generally accepted as being correct, all scientific theories are still open to attack from some new, reproducible experiment whichdisagrees with them. The history below bears this out.  

Furthermore, while science per se may be value-less, neither good or bad, the teaching or application of science always has values attached. If it is taught by a scientist without any mention of the need to use the learning responsibly, then students may assume that scientists need not be concerned about the application of science. If this happens, then the scientist ultimately abdicates to the politician or manufacturer the decision on the use of her or his own work, even though it is unlikely that either the politician or manufacturer will understand as well as the scientist the effects of its use. By this, I am not suggesting that scientists are the only ones qualified to decide on the application of science; scientists canalso be blind to the potential in what they do. It is hoped that this paper will contribute to the ability of students to ask the necessary questions regarding the science they and others

participate in, both now and throughout their lives.  

This summary is designed to outline the general development of the main branches of physics as we know them today. It is presented here as occurring in a fairly linear fashion, and discusses only the principal figures in each area. However, it must always be remembered that there were a great many more people working on these problems than mentioned here, with many of them being unaware of the work of the others. As a result, many of these areas progressed in a more-or-less "random walk" between theory and experiment until about the last two hundred years, when improved communications made it much easier to keep up to date with developments world-wide.

Given the fact that half the world's population is female, there is a notable absence of women in this history. This is largely because women have been systematically excluded from science overthe centuries until very recently, with few exceptions. Even whenwomen did make major contributions as part of a larger team in relatively recent times, as was the case of the women "computers"in astronomy at Harvard College Observatory in the late 1800s, usually only the male team leader gained recognition [Rossiter]. One can only mourn the loss to the discipline from the exclusion of other Marie Curies, and work towards encouraging the participation of many more women in the future.  

 Earliest Beginnings, and the Greeks

People have always been acutely aware of the regularities in nature: the sun rises every day; the moon appears at the same place in the sky roughly every twenty-seven days, about the same as a woman's menstrual cycle; the seasons always follow in the same order; the pattern of the "fixed" stars (all the heavenly bodies except for the planets, sun, moon and comets) repeats itself at the same time every year; snowflakes all have six points; a dropped stone always falls. In fact, the very well-being of a family depended until recent times on knowing when to

plant, or when to move camp for the next season's game.  

This obvious order begged for explanation, and the earliest people attributed it to a range of gods and goddesses who controlled the world. With the Greeks, for example, Gaea was the earth goddess, Zeus threw lightning bolts, and Apollo drove the fiery chariot of the sun once per day across the heavens.  

"Science" is the attempt to give a rational, rather than religious or magical, explanation for the order in nature. Peoplein different parts of the world began to develop science at different times, with different emphases. As one example, as early as 36 B.C. [Cole, p.46] the Mayan people of what is now Mexico and Central America used a calendar with an accuracy equivalent to knowing the length of the year to within six seconds, and plotted the movement of the sun, moon and planets. They also used a "place system" for numbers (like our decimal place system) at the time when the Romans were still using a new symbol for every new power of ten they encountered, and the Mayans employed the zero centuries before Europe. (The zero was used in India from about 850 A.D.) Although the Mayans had recorded much of their customs and learning on hundreds of books made of beaten-bark paper, very little remains today. Their Spanish conquerors systematically destroyed almost all of this "heathen" literature.

The first European attempts to provide a rational explanation forthe workings of nature began with the Greeks, about 600 B.C. For example, Pythagoras (582-500 B.C.) and his followers belonged to a religious fraternity dedicated to the study of numbers. They believed that the world, like the whole number system, was divided into finite elements, an early precursor to the idea of atoms ("atom" means "indivisible"). Their discovery of irrationalnumbers such as 2, which could not be expressed as a ratio of whole numbers, was a serious threat to this system, and history tells us that they killed the Pythagorean who released this secret to the world.  

The Greeks Leucippus (~440 B.C.), Democritus (~420 B.C.) and Epicurus (342-270 B.C.) put forward the hypothesis that matter was composed of extremely small atoms, with different materials being composed of different combinations of these atoms. Aristarchus of Samos (310-230 B.C.) is the first person known to have proposed that the earth rotates once per year around the sun, rather than the intuitive explanation that the sun rotates around the earth. He also attempted to calculate relative sizes for the earth, moon and sun. However, it was not considered necessary by the Greeks to test such hypotheses experimentally; all that most of them were looking for was a self-consistent explanation of the world based on a small number of philosophicalprinciples.  

Aristotle is generally credited with providing the most comprehensive of such explanations. He believed that there were four earthly elements: earth, water, air and fire. Each had its natural place determined by its weight. Earth, being the heaviest, "wanted" to be at the centre of the universe. Water wasabove the earth, with air above water, and then fire. This order makes intuitive sense. Solid ("earthy") bodies sink in water; if you release air under water the air bubbles to the surface; and flames leap upward during burning. (Wood could float even though it was a solid body, because it contained both earth and fire; the fire was released on burning.) The farther a body was from the earth, the more perfect it became. Hence the moon was the least perfect of the heavenly bodies, as could be seen by its uneven appearance, while the fixed stars were the most perfect ofall, and were composed of a fifth element (the "quintessence") which had no weight at all.  

In Aristotle's physics, a moving body of any mass had to be in contact with a "mover", something which caused its motion, or it would stop. This mover could either be internal as for animals, or external as in the case of a bowstring pushing on an arrow. The arrow was kept in flight by air displaced from the front rushing to the back to fill the vacuum left by the arrow. Since

Aristotle said that a vacuum was impossible ("nature abhors a vacuum"), this explanation of an arrow's motion was again internally consistent. However, because the stars were without mass, once they were put in motion by a "prime mover" they could continue to move by themselves.

The Greeks spent much effort trying to explain the motion of the sun, moon, planets and stars. Since this motion also played a major role in the development of modern science, it is worth discussing in some detail. The stars are so far from us that their relative motions cannot be observed except over timescales of a few centuries. Therefore, to someone standing on the earth the stars appear to be fixed in a vast sphere, concentric with the earth. This sphere rotates at constant speed about the earth at a rate of just more than once in twenty-four hours, returning to almost the same position at a given time of day once every year. Similarly, the sun and moon appear to lie on spheres, whichrotate about the earth once per day and once every 27 days, respectively. The motions of the planets appear much more complicated to an earthly observer. We now know that the planets are all on orbits with different average distances from the sun, and orbital periods that increase the farther the planet is from the sun. For example Venus, Earth's nearest and brightest planetary neighbour, has a period of 225 days, compared to Earth's 365. This means that as Venus makes its annual pilgrimagethrough the night sky as viewed from Earth, it occasionally movesbackwards relative to the fixed stars, in "retrograde motion", asits orbit carries it opposite to the direction the earth is moving. (Hence the name "planet", meaning "wanderer".)  

The Greeks usually described this motion using a device invented by Eudoxus of Cnidus (409-356 B.C.), who was apparently the firstGreek to use quantitative observation to develop a mathematical description. Noting that the motion of the planets was periodic, he developed a system of spheres each of which carried a planet, with each sphere centred on the earth but with its axis of rotation fixed in a larger sphere. This explanation fitted with the Greek belief that the circle was the most perfect geometrical

form. However, this system was approximate at best. Apollonius ofPerga (~220 B.C.) suggested, instead, that each planet was attached to a small sphere which, in turn, rolled on a large sphere centred on the earth, with the larger one rotating roughlyonce per day. The large sphere accounted for the daily motion of the planet, while the small one (the "epicycle") explained the retrograde motion. A later addition was the use of the "eccentric", which allowed the centre of rotation of the large sphere for each planet to lie away from the centre of Earth.  

As the accuracy of the mathematical description increased, so didthe need for reliable observations. This was recognized by Hipparchus of Nicea (190-120 B.C.) who had studied the observational records of the earlier Greeks and Babylonians, withthe latter dating back to the seventh century B.C. In this process, Hipparchus discovered the "precession of the equinoxes";that is, that it takes the sun about 20 seconds more to return toits position at the equinox every year than it does to return to its position among the fixed stars. To satisfy the need for accurate data, Hipparchus catalogued the position and brightness of 1080 stars. By the time of Ptolemy (85-165 A.D.), who observedat Alexandria in Egypt, the system of system of epicycles and eccentrics required eighty circles to describe the known periodicities of the heavens.  

Of course, the Greeks did not restrict their science to physics. For example, the Hippocratic oath sworn by doctors today takes its name from Hippocrates of Cos (~460-377 B.C.). Aristotle's most lasting contribution to science was in biology, where he classified about 540 animal species, and carried out careful dissections of at least 50 different animals. Archimedes (287-212B.C.), scientist-engineer, has been described as one of the threegreatest geniuses of all time [Kramer]. He invented the Archimedean screw for raising water, discovered the principle of buoyancy of a body in a liquid, and calculated an accurate value for , among other accomplishments.  

In light of his future influence on the course of European science, it is of interest to look at Aristotle's attitude towards the role of women. In his "Generation of Animals" he says, "Wherever possible and so far as possible the male is separate from the female, since [he] is something better and moredivine in that [he] is the principle of movement for generated things, while the female serves as their matter ... We should look upon the female state as it were a deformity, though one which occurs in the ordinary course of nature." [French p.130]. This attitude was not shared by all Greeks. For example, Pythagoras admitted women to his school equally with men. [French, p.144.]  

The Dark Ages, and the Translations

 With the fall of the Roman empire about 400 A.D., most of the Greek learning was lost to Europe as it entered the Dark Ages. Even the knowledge that the Earth was round, known to the Greeks who had a good estimate for its diameter, was replaced by the conception of a flat Earth. (This does not mean that all learningstopped during the Dark Ages; important technological discoverieswere made during this period, such as the invention of the ploughand the water wheel.) The Greek knowledge itself, however, was not lost. It had migrated into the Middle East and Egypt under the Greek and Roman empires, and was translated into Arabic by the people who lived in these regions. The Arabs not only kept Greek science alive, they added to it considerably. For example, the Arabs had important medical schools and first discovered the law of refraction, now known as Snell's law. They also translatedmajor Indian scientific works into Arabic, and began to use the numerals and algebra developed in India. Al-Battani (~858-929 A.D.) measured a value for the precession of the equinoxes that was more accurate than Ptolemy's. The Arabs also transported the art of paper-making from China to the west. Their contribution remains enshrined in Arabic words which we still use today, including algebra and algorithm.  

When Christians recaptured Spain in the eleventh century, the bridge was formed to carry this learning back into Europe. A major translation centre was set up in Toledo after it was captured in 1085, with a lesser centre in Sicily after it fell tothe Christians in 1091. Translation was done primarily into Latin, the language of learning in Europe at this time. However, most of the translators focused on the Greek works, and some Arabic and Persian works remain untranslated today.  

The Middle Ages

The scholarly work in Europe during the Dark Ages (roughly from the fall of Rome to the beginning of the Middle Ages, or Medievalperiod, about 1100) had been primarily concerned with the copyingof church manuscripts. As a result, it was natural that as ancient learning began to reach Europe it should be studied firstin the cathedral schools. These schools evolved into the first universities, with colleges in Cambridge and Oxford, for example,being founded in the 1200s. These were followed by universities set up by both city (e.g. Bologna, Padua) or state (e.g. Naples) governments. The scholars in these early universities laid much of the groundwork for later scientific developments.  

One of the most important schools for the development of physics was in Oxford, where the impetus theorists, beginning with William of Ockham (~1295-1349), investigated the cause of motion.They believed that a body in motion did not need to be in contactwith a "mover" to stay in motion as Aristotle had claimed, but did so out of its own "impetus". This was a precursor to our modern concept of momentum. Another major contribution has becomeknown as "Ockham's Razor". This principle states that the best scientific theory, other things being equal, is the one which requires the fewest new starting assumptions. It is still accepted today. It was important historically because it providedan objective means for choosing between two theories and did not attempt to answer the question of which was "true".  

The flood of ancient, "pagan" knowledge into Europe through the translations from Arabic produced a crisis for Christian theologians: How could one accept a world philosophy which was not rooted in the Christian faith? This problem was largely overcome, at least for the time being, by St. Thomas Aquinas (1225-74) who integrated Aristotelian philosophy and Greek logic with Catholic theology. For example, his first proof of the existence of God was that the fixed stars needed a source of motion, which he identified with Aristotle's "Prime Mover".  

One must ask why, when so many of the early scientific discoveries were made in the east, the development of modern science was primarily in the west. Alfred North Whitehead, in Science and the Modern World, suggests that this was due to the integration of Greek rationality with Christian monotheism under Thomas Aquinas. The all-seeing God of Christianity created the world in an ordered, logical fashion as related in the biblical book of Genesis. Therefore it was only natural to look for a rational explanation of the phenomena of nature.  

The Renaissance (1300-1700)

The rebirth ("Renaissance") of knowledge and learning in Europe, which followed the rediscovery of Greek and Arab learning, affected all of society. Awakened to the fact that there was so much "new" knowledge to be explored, people became free to inventtheir own. The arts flourished, with Durer inventing perspective drawing in Germany, Michelangelo studying anatomy to give life tohis sculpture in Italy, and orchestral music being born. It saw the beginning of the Protestant Reformation in 1517, with Martin Luther nailing his 95 theses to the door of Wittenburg Cathedral.This was the period of the great European voyages of discovery, with Columbus arriving in America in 1492 and Magellan sailing around the tip of South America. Unfortunately, this period also saw the destruction of much of the learning of the peoples "discovered" by the Europeans, who still believed that non-Christian/European culture was valueless. This Eurocentrism is still active today, as witnessed by the almost complete omission

of the great Central American civilizations from today's school curriculum in Canada.  

However, during the Renaissance Aquinas' integration of Greek, and particularly Aristotelian, philosophy with Catholic theology eventually led to as many problems for the church as it had solved. Copernicus' suggestion (about 1530) that the Earth and the other planets moved around the sun, rather than the reverse, was seen as heresy by the Church. Not only did it contradict Aristotle's teaching and several Biblical assertions that the Earth was stationary, it also challenged the authority of the Church by questioning the hierarchical structure on which its entire existence was based. If the Earth was not stationary at the centre of the universe, perhaps Heaven was not outside the sphere of the stars, and where did this leave God, not to mentionall of His ecclesiastical delegates? The idea of a moving Earth was so revolutionary that Copernicus did not agree to have it published until he was on his death bed (1543). It is no surprisethat the two people most responsible for the publishing of Copernicus' book were followers of Martin Luther, who had dared to question the authority of the Catholic church on scriptural matters.  

The Renaissance also saw the beginnings of modern science under Galileo Galilei (1564-1642). One of Galileo's greatest contributions was to recognize that the role of the scientist wasnot to explain "why" things happened as they do in nature, but only to describe them. In one of his "Dialogues" he asks a colleague why objects fall when released. When the colleague replies that everyone knows that gravity makes them fall, Galileoreplies that he has not explained anything, just given it a name.This new role greatly simplified the work of the scientist, who no longer had to wonder why God would have caused a particular phenomenon to occur. It sufficed to recognize that it did occur, and allowed one to get on with the job of deciding how best to describe it.  

This leads us to Galileo's second major contribution, the description of natural phenomena using mathematics and the appealto nature through experimentation to see if the description is correct. This was a major deviation from the qualitative science of Aristotle in which, for the most part, all that was required of an explanation was that it agreed qualitatively with reality: solid objects fell because they were composed of earthy material whose natural place was at the centre of the universe. In Galileo's science, on the other hand, one had to describe mathematically how far an object fell in a given time, and then verify experimentally that this description was correct. Moreover, he recognized that the experimenter had to devise the experiment so as to isolate the phenomenon being studied; for example, to minimize the effect of friction in the study of falling bodies.  

Galileo's most important applications of these ideas was in the mechanics of falling bodies, building on the early ideas of the impetus theorists. He showed that all compact bodies fell at the same rate, such that the distance covered was proportional to thesquare of the elapsed time of fall. Because objects in free fall drop too fast for easy measurement, Galileo did his measurements by rolling balls down an inclined plane. Even so, there were no clocks at the time accurate enough to make the measurements Galileo has recorded. (Galileo is, in fact, credited with the suggestion of using a pendulum as clock.) Stillman Drake, a Canadian who was one of the world's foremost scholar of Galileo, has noted that a person can keep time while singing with a precision of about 0.01 seconds. Drake shows that Galileo could have made his measurements by noting where the rolling ball was at each beat in a song [Drake, 1975].  

Galileo is probably best known for his conflict with the Catholicchurch over his support for Copernicus' description of the solar system. When Galileo heard of the invention of the telescope, he designed and built one for himself. This, the first telescope usable for astronomical observations, quickly led Galileo to

realize that Copernicus' theory was more than just an alternativeto the Ptolemaic approach for calculating the positions of the planets. He saw that Jupiter had moons, and so was a miniature model of the solar system in itself; that Venus showed phases similar to those of the moon, as it must under the Copernican system; and that the moon had mountains and so was similar to theEarth. No wonder the church saw him as a threat! Galileo, aged sixty-eight, was tried by the Inquisition and sentenced to house arrest for the remainder of his life for daring to support Copernicus' theory, even though he recanted when faced with the death penalty. Ironically, he used this time to develop mechanicsto the point at which it could explain why the planets would not fall into the sun if they were not held up by their "natural place".  

Development of The Scientific Method  

Francis Bacon (1561-1626) takes credit for providing much of the philosophical basis for our modern scientific method. His major works, published in 1605 and 1620, were very influential in directing the approach to science over the next two hundred yearsand remain relevant today. Bacon had a vision that science could greatly improve the lot of humanity, and set out how he thought this could best be accomplished. This belief in human "progress",that humanity is moving towards some ultimate state of happiness in which war, illness and poverty will be abolished, was unique to the west. Part of this vision was his belief, founded in the Genesis story of creation, in the right of man to dominate nature, "to bind her to your service and make her your slave" [French, p.117]. This right of domination over the rest of naturehas been a guiding principle of science and technology for most of the time since Bacon. It is only now beginning to be challenged by the developing ecological awareness that people, too, are part of nature, and that they ignore the inter-relationship at their peril. Marilyn French goes on to argue that, since nature has generally been seen as "female", Bacon's claim for the right of men to dominate nature has helped

perpetrate the domination of women by men.    

Bacon's approach was basically experimental, qualitative and inductive. He rejected a priori assumptions such as the idea of theperfection of spherical motion used by the Greeks. Rather, Bacon believed that if enough observations could be made which involveda particular phenomenon, an observer could use these to induce the fundamental principles involved. The first step of this process, then, was the gathering of as many unbiased facts as possible, drawing heavily on information already available in craft and industrial processes. The next was to correlate these so as to discern the fundamental truths within them.  

René Descartes (1596-1650), from France, proposed a different approach to the development of science. Instead of starting with raw facts, as Bacon had suggested, Descartes believed that the basic principles ruling nature could be obtained by a combinationof pure reason and mathematical logic (e.g., "I think, therefore I exist.") His approach was analytic. It involved breaking down aproblem into its parts and arranging them logically, a technique which is still used constantly in science today. It is termed "reductionism", because its basic assumption is that we can reduce a phenomenon to a collection of independent components; ifwe can understand each of them taken independently, then we can understand the entire phenomenon, in a way similar to our understanding of the operation of a machine. This approach has dominated scientific investigation over the last three hundred years, and has proven very successful in areas in which in which the parts really are largely independent. "Holism", the opposite of reductionism, assumes that some phenomena, at least, can only be understood as integrated wholes, and so cannot be broken down into independent parts. An excellent discussion of the need for more holistic thinking in modern science can be found in Fritjof Capra's The Turning Point. Capra argues that the need for a holisticapproach has a theoretical basis in the quantum nature of matter,

as discussed below.  

Descartes' "mathematical-deductive" approach was diametrically opposed to Bacon's "qualitative-inductive" method, whereas modernscience uses a combination of the two. Given Bacon's emphasis on experimentation, and Descartes' emphasis on deductive reasoning, it is not too surprising that in the next hundred years English scientists stressed experimentation while French scientists stressed mathematical theory. In developing his approach, Descartes made several important mathematical contributions of his own. Principal among these was the invention of cartesian geometry, which describes geometrical figures in the form of algebraic equations.  

Descartes really believed that the world and most of what was in it were essentially machines. God had created and wound up the system at the beginning, and it had been running ever since underthe laws of nature without further intervention. The one exception to a machine was the soul (or mind) of a human, which was divine and separate from the mechanical body. Since animals did not possess a mind, they were pure machines which could not feel pain. For a period there were Cartesian followers who would vivisect animals to show how well a machine made by nature could mimic suffering. This concept of the world as a machine persistedfor many years, and was strengthened by Newton's mechanics. In fact, in 1812 Laplace, a great mathematical physicist, made the following statement, [Schneer, p.129] "If an intelligence, for a given instant, recognizes all the forces which animate Nature, and the respective positions of all things which compose it, and if that intelligence is sufficiently vast to subject these data to analysis, it will comprehend in one formula the movements of the largest bodies of the universe as well as those of the minutest atom; nothing will be uncertain to it, and the future aswell as the past will be present to its vision. The human mind offers in the perfection which it has been able to give to astronomy, a modest example of such an intelligence.

The Development of Classical Physics: Mechanics, Heat, Optics, Electromagnetism, Atoms

 

Mechanics

Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727), born the year Galileo died, is the most important figure in the development of mechanics. His three "laws" form the base on which all of mechanics prior to 1900 was constructed. This model of building an edifice of theory on the foundation of a few fundamental definitions and laws is essentially that used by Euclid in his geometry. It became the ideal for all future physical theories, including thermodynamics with three basic laws (zeroth, first and second), optics (laws ofreflection and refraction) and electromagnetism (Maxwell's laws).Much of the physics of the hundred years after the death of Newton was spent in applying his three laws to different phenomena.  

Newton's crowning accomplishment was the application of his mechanics to show that the entire universe obeyed the same laws of nature, as published in his Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy (the Principia) in 1687. By assuming that two masses attracted each other with a force inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them, Newton proved that the mechanics which determined how bodies fall on Earth also explained the periodic motions of the planets. However, Newton did not restrict his work to mechanics; he also did extensive studies on light and shares the credit for the invention of calculus with the German, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibnitz (1646-1716),with whom he fought a long battle over who was first. Newton alsowrote on theology, and was Master of the Royal Mint.  

Thermal Physics

The invention of a practical steam engine by Thomas Newcomen (1663-1729) prompted great scientific interest in the study of

heat, and was a major contribution to the industrial revolution which began in England in the mid 18th century. (It is ironic that the industrial revolution, which began to apply scientific principles to the production of goods as predicted by Bacon one hundred years earlier, also led to the virtual slave labour of children and the poor in mines and factories.) Sadi Carnot (1796-1832), a French engineer, laid the basis for our understanding ofheat engines (any engine which uses heat to produce power, such as the automobile engine, or a coal or nuclear electrical power station). He compared the operation of a heat engine with that ofa waterwheel, with heat "falling" from a higher to a lower temperature. Joseph Black (1728-99), the professor of medicine atGlasgow University, began to quantify heat by the measurement of the specific heat capacities (the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a given mass by one degree) of differentsubstances, compared to that of water. Motivated by the heat generated in the boring of cannons, Count Rumford (1753-1814), first showed that heat could be produced in limitless quantities by friction, and so was not a material substance (caloric) as hadbeen believed previously.  

James Prescott Joule (1818-89), by rotating a "paddle wheel" under water and measuring the increase of temperature, established a numerical equivalence between work and heat. He also showed that the heat produced by an electrical current I in a wire of resistance R was given by I2R, a relationship now knownas Joule's law. Joule's quantitative work on the interconversion of energy laid the basis for the first law of thermodynamics, which says that the change in the energy of a system is equal to the heat input to it plus the mechanical work done on it. This law was first stated explicitly by the German Rudolph Clausius and Englishman William Thomas Kelvin in 1851. Clausius also realized that a heat engine could utilize only some of the available heat to do work, and from this developed the concept ofentropy, the quantity of heat transferred divided by the temperature. Clausius showed that the entropy always increased inany spontaneous natural process, and so established the second law of thermodynamics. As with Newton's three laws, the laws of

thermodynamics form the foundation for the understanding of thermal physics.  

Light and Optics

The Greeks had applied the methods of geometry to the study of optics, and Ptolemy had a crude approximation to the law of refraction. This work was extended by the Arab Al-Hazen (965-1038), who showed that Ptolemy's law was just an approximation, valid at small angles. Al-Hazen also carried out experiments which brought him close to the thin lens formula for convex lenses. The telescope and compound microscope were invented in Holland near the beginning of the seventeenth century, with the telescope used to advantage by the early astronomers including Galileo. In 1621 Willebrod Snell rediscovered the correct formulafor the refraction of light, which now bears his name.  

From the time of Descartes there was considerable debate as to whether light consisted of small particles which were localized and travelled in straight lines, or of waves which spread out in space. Descartes adhered to the former explanation whereas in thelate 1600s Christian Huygens argued for a wave theory, with the waves travelling through an ether which permeated all space and all objects. Newton used a combination of the two approaches: while light itself consisted of "corpuscles", he believed that these particles could induce vibrations in the ether through which they travelled, which in turn could affect the transport ofthe particles. For example, he used this theory to explain "Newton's rings", alternating light and dark bands which appear when a slightly curved lens is placed in contact with a flat mirror. For a century after Newton, the majority of scientists adhered to the corpuscular theory.

Thomas Young (1773-1829) revived the wave theory for light. It was generally accepted that sound was transported by waves carried through the air, and Young argued that light travelled ina similar way. He used the interference pattern produced in his famous "two-slit experiment", still studied in introductory

physics courses today, as proof of this wave nature. (A similar pattern, in the form of a cross, can be seen with the naked eye by looking at a distant street light through a window screen, although using binoculars improves the image.) From these patterns he was able to measure the wavelength of light which he proved to be very small. He went on to show that this led to light travelling in approximately straight lines for the vast majority of common cases, although it did bend slightly around objects to produce patterns in their shadows, patterns which could be explained by his wave theory. Then, in 1817, the Frenchman Augustin Fresnel showed that all known optical phenomena could be explained by the wave theory provided that, following a suggestion of Young's, the vibrations were transverse(perpendicular to the direction of light propagation) rather thanparallel to it as for sound waves. This firmly established the wave theory as dominant, although it did raise the question of how a fluid such as the ether could support a transverse vibration, since fluids usually have only longitudinal vibrations. This problem was a harbinger of an upcoming debate over the very existence of the ether.  

Electromagnetism

The study of electromagnetism began in experimental studies of such effects as static electricity and magnetism. People had known from ancient times that rubbing certain materials on dry hair would make the two attract each other, and the naturally occurring, magnetic lodestone was used as a navigating compass bythe Chinese from about 100 B.C. Systematic studies of electricitybegan in earnest once apparatus had been invented for generating and storing electrical charge. The first electrostatic generator,a machine which rubbed a cloth against a rotating ball of sulphur, was invented by Otto von Guerike (1602-86), while Pietervan Muschenbroek (1692-1761) made the first Leiden jar to store electrical charge. In contrast to the spark discharges of an electrostatic generator, the voltaic cell (battery), invented by Volta in Italy in 1799, could provide a continuous flow of

current.  

In a famous (and dangerous!) experiment in 1752, Benjamin Franklin used a kite to collect charge from a thunder cloud and store it in a Leiden jar. He then showed that this charge had identical properties to that produced by an electrostatic generator, proving that lightning was just one manifestation of electricity. However, Franklin's main contribution to the theory of electricity was his suggestion that charge came in two types, which he called positive and negative, with like charges repelling each other and unlike charges attracting. By these simple assumptions he could explain all known experimental facts about electricity, whereas previous theories had required about 20 different assumptions, including different shapes for particles of electricity in different media. This is one example of the use of Ockham's Razor in deciding between rival theories. Franklin also showed that there was a connection between electricity and magnetism, because iron needles could be magnetized by placing them near a wire carrying an electrical current.  

In 1750 John Mitchell, at Cambridge, had discovered the inverse-square repulsion of magnetic poles, by using a "torsion balance" to measure the twisting of a thread supporting one magnet when another was brought close. In a period beginning in 1785, the Frenchman Charles Augustin Coulomb reinvented the torsion balanceand showed that both magnetic and electric forces experienced an inverse-square dependence on distance, now called "Coulomb's law"in the case of electrostatics.  

In Germany there developed a separate school of thought, that of the "nature philosophers". They believed that matter was not inert, as claimed by the mechanist school, but alive, with a universal world spirit that interconnected all forces. One memberof this movement was the philosopher Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), who asserted that it was the interplay of innate repulsive and attractive forces that governed matter. If only repulsive forces

existed, all matter would disperse; if only attractive forces were present, all matter would coalesce into a point. This balance between attractive and repulsive forces is today the starting point for the theoretical analysis of the structure of solids and liquids, although the forces are no longer believed toreflect a life force.  

The study of both electricity and magnetism was popular with German scientists, because the presence of opposite polarities inthese phenomena fitted with their philosophy. These ideas also led to the conviction that every effect in nature had its inverseeffect, since the vital forces were all connected. This idea thatevery effect has its inverse is fundamental to modern physics. For example, if you connect two wires made of different materials, and heat the junction, a voltage develops between the free ends of the wires. This effect, discovered by Thomas Seebeck, another German Nature-Philosopher, is the principle behind the use of a "thermocouple" for measuring temperatures. Conversely, a voltage applied with the correct polarity across the free ends of the two wires causes the junction to decrease intemperature. This is the principle behind the "thermoelectric cooler", often used to cool devices in electronic circuits.

The belief in the interconnectedness of all forces in nature led Hans Christian Oersted, in Copenhagen, to announce in 1807 that he was looking for a connection between magnetism and electricity. He found that a magnet would move in a circle arounda wire carrying a current, and that a wire carrying a current would move around a magnet. This is the principle required for the construction of an electric motor. The magnetic forces near current-carrying wires were the first forces which had been discovered which did not operate radially from the two interacting bodies. The next major contributions in electricity and magnetism came from the theoretician André Marie Ampère in France, and the experimentalist Michael Faraday in England. Ampère (1775-1836) developed a theory for the calculation of magnetic forces caused by a given electrical current, and suggested that the magnetic effects of some solids were caused by

small circulating currents in the particles making up these materials.  

Faraday (1791-1867), on the other hand, had very little mathematics but was a superb experimentalist. His most important experimental observation in electromagnetism was that of induced currents, made in 1831: a wire loop would have an electric current developed in it, if either the loop was moved near a magnet, or the magnet was moved. This is the principle behind thegeneration of electricity by mechanical means, as occurs in everyhydro- or thermo-electric power generating station, or in every car alternator.  

Even though mathematically unlearned, Faraday made a very important contribution to the development of the theory of electromagnetism by constructing a qualitative model of how electrical and magnetic forces acted. He supposed that each "particle" of electricity or magnetism produced a "line of force"which emanated from a positive pole of a particle and returned toa negative pole. These lines tended to contract along their length, and to expand perpendicular to their length. The lines could not cross. The number of such lines passing through a givenarea (i.e. the areal density) was a measure of the strength of the force provided by them. These assumptions explained the repulsion and attraction of magnetic and charged bodies: the tendency to contract lengthwise would pull bodies of opposite polarity together, whereas the tendency for them to expand laterally would push bodies of opposite polarity apart. Since thearea of a sphere increases with the square of the radius, the inverse-square decrease in intensity of the forces was a natural consequence of the decrease in the areal density of the lines of force with distance from the charge or magnetic poles. The visualappeal of these lines of force still plays an important role in our understanding of electromagnetic phenomena. Moreover, Faradaybelieved that the lines of force would be present even if only a single charged or magnetic object existed; that is, even if therewere no other body on which the first one could exert a force.

Thus he invented the concept of the "field", as a physical presence which had the ability to produce a force -- magnetic, electric or gravitational -- if a second body happened to come into its vicinity. The concept of the field has served as one of the most powerful of all theoretical tools of modern physics.

James Clerk Maxwell (1831-79) set out to make Faraday's ideas quantitative. He described the lines of force using Newtonian mechanics, envisioning them as rotating tubes of fluid (the ether) which had the properties required by Faraday: the rotationwould cause the tubes to expand laterally and contract longitudinally. The resulting set of only four equations ("Maxwell's equations") described all known electric and magneticphenomena exactly. Maxwell, however, realized that the enormous machinery with which he had filled all space was not an essentialpart of his theory, and eventually just used his equations as though the machinery did not exist. This is how we use his equations today. The relationship between the original machinery and the final equations was not without its detractors, however. One French reader stated that when he started to read Maxwell's work he expected to find himself in the midst of the quiet grovesof electromagnetic theory, and instead found himself inside a factory! [Williams, p.122].  

One of the unexpected results of Maxwell's work was that it predicted that electromagnetic waves could be produced which would propagate at the speed of light. This showed that light wasan electromagnetic phenomenon, and not a separate subject.  

Discoveries in electromagnetism were applied quite rapidly to thedevelopment of useful devices. For example, the telegraph was invented in 1837 by Charles Wheatstone only one year after the development of the first reliable battery, and the first practical electrical generator was invented by Werner Siemens in Germany in 1866, 35 years after Faraday's discovery of induced currents.  

Atoms

Until the twentieth century, the development of the atomic theoryof matter was pursued by scientists who are often more closely identified with chemistry than with physics. In 1789 Antoine Lavoisier published his Elements of Chemistry. In this work, he emphasized the need for quantitative methods in chemistry. By carefully devised experiments, he was able to isolate 23 elements, fundamental substances that could not be broken down into simpler forms. In England in the late 1700s, the experimentalists Joseph Black, Henry Cavendish and Joseph Priestley isolated several different gases and showed how they could be produced. Schneer makes the interesting point that a large number of the most successful scientists of this era, including Priestley, Dalton, Faraday, James Watt (who greatly improved the steam engine), Thomas Young, and Franklin, were all Quakers, a non-conforming religious group who dared to challenge the established beliefs of the day.  

Then in 1802 John Dalton, an English schoolmaster, revived the theory of atoms. It was known by this time that gases always combine in fixed ratios by mass. For example one gram of hydrogenburns with eight grams of oxygen to produce nine grams of water. Dalton proposed that these ratios of whole numbers could be explained if the gases were formed of atoms whose masses were, themselves, in the ratio of simple integers. The formation of water discussed above could then be explained by the combination of two hydrogen atoms with one oxygen atom. At this time, Dalton was unaware that both hydrogen and oxygen gas consisted of "molecules" which were each composed of two atoms, but his theorywas correct in essence.  

In 1869 Dimitri Mendeleev of Russia, combining Dalton's atomic description with the fact that certain groups of elements had similar chemical properties, constructed the first periodic table. He pointed out that the gaps in this table should correspond to as-yet-undiscovered elements, and was able to predict their properties and atomic masses. Armed with this

knowledge, scientists very quickly discovered most of the missingelements.  

Darwin's Theory of Evolution

A brief mention must be made here to the theory of biological evolution, because of its philosophical relevance to the physicalidea of an evolving universe. A basic tenet of the theory of evolution is that the world as we know it today has evolved from an earlier form of the world under the pressures of natural forces which were in existence at the time, such as erosion and sedimentation, and not by divine intervention in this process. This idea of "uniformitarianism" was first put forward by James Hutton of Edinburgh in 1785, as an explanation for the formation of the geological structures of the earth. He found part of his justification for this theory in the motion of the planets, whichrequired only the forces of nature to keep them moving in their orbits forever. In analogy to the timeless motion of the planets,Hutton assumed that the formation of the earth had occurred over extremely long periods of time. Hutton's ideas were unpopular in his time because they were perceived to be in conflict with the teaching of the Bible. They were received little better by scientists when revived by Charles Lyell in The Principles of Geology published in 1830-33, but were accepted much more readily by the populace. Mason suggests that one of the reasons for this change in reception was that the idea of the progress of humanity, championed by such writers as Francis Bacon and the economist Adam Smith who published An Enquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations in 1776, was now generally accepted by society.  

Charles Darwin acknowledges that it was the concept of uniformitarianism that led him to his theory of evolution, the idea that biological species might evolve in the same way that the earth's geology did, under the natural forces continually in existence. The part that needed to be added was the answer to what determined the direction of this evolution. Offspring are born with characteristics which are slightly different from thoseof the parents. Darwin claimed that when these new

characteristics better prepared the organism to live to reproductive age, then it would be able to pass these characteristics on to its children: thus, nature selected those offspring for survival much as a cattle owner selected for breeding those animals born with desirable characteristics. His theory did not require a reason for the variation readily observed in offspring, although he speculated that it might be due to changes in food or climate. However, he believed that these changes were exceedingly slight, and could result in a new species (a class of life that is only fertile within that class) over very long periods of time. Knowing that his theory was in contradiction with a literal interpretation of the Bible, Darwin spent twenty years amassing data before the publication of On The Origin of the Species in 1859.  

Although this book raised a furore when first published, the logic of its arguments and its philosophical consistency with other scientific theories gradually won the day. Indeed, evolution turned out to be a useful, though fallacious, argument for justifying both colonialism and racism. Herbert Spencer coined the phrase "survival of the fittest" to replace Darwin's "natural selection", and applied it to the evolution of society. With the idea of human progress fully ensconced in society's thinking, it was a short step to assume that the race or nationality in power deserved to be there, because it was the onemost fit to rule. "Survival of the fittest" soon became "might isright", a belief which is still at work in the world today.

 

Modern Physics: Relativity and Quantum Physics  

Relativity

By the end of the nineteenth century, most physicists were feeling quite smug. They seemed to have theories in place that would explain all physical phenomena. There was clearly a lot of cleaning up to do, but it looked like a fairly mechanical job:

turn the crank on the calculator until the results come out. Apart from a few niggling problems like those lines in the light emitted by gas discharges, and the apparent dependence of the mass of high-speed electrons on their velocity ....  

Twenty-five years later, this complacency had been completely destroyed by the invention of three entirely new theories: special relativity, general relativity, and quantum mechanics. The outstanding figure of this period was Albert Einstein. His name became a household word for his development, virtually single-handedly, of the theory of relativity, and he made a majorcontribution to the development of quantum mechanics in his explanation of the photoelectric effect.  

Einstein was a clerk in a Swiss patent office when he published his special theory of relativity in 1905. He claimed in later life that the need for this theory emerged out of Maxwell's equations. Those equations changed their form when one rewrote them from the conventional perspective of a person moving at constant velocity. On the other hand, our experience tells us that we cannot tell if we are moving as long as our velocity is constant: you can throw a ball back and forth in a rapidly movingtrain car just as you can when the train is still. It is only when it accelerates -- slows down or speeds up -- that one experiences a change. Moreover, Maxwell's equations indicated that the speed of light did not depend on the speed of the personmeasuring this speed, whereas if one throws a stone while running, the speed of the runner contributes to the speed of the stone. To overcome these apparent difficulties with Maxwell's theory, which Einstein believed to describe reality correctly, heconsidered the effect of two postulates. The first was that all physical phenomena must obey the same equations for people movingat different constant velocities (the principle of relativity), and the second was that the speed, c, measured for light does notdepend on the speed of the "observer" (the person carrying out the measurement).  

These two postulates led directly to almost unbelievable results.They showed that the measurement of space and time depended on each other (that the time you measured for an occurrence dependedon your position), and also depended on the speed of the observer. One immediate result is that "simultaneity " is relative to the observer. Two "events" that occur at the same time for one observer occur at different times as seen by an observer in motion relative to the first, provided that the events occur at different spatial locations; the concept of absolute time and space which had underpinned mechanics for two centuries lay in shatters. Einstein's theory also showed that themeasured mass of an object depended on its velocity, and that mass (m) could be converted to energy (E) according to E=mc2, theprinciple behind the atomic bomb and nuclear power plants.  

One of the beauties of Einstein's theory was that, as you let a body's speed become small compared to the speed of light, the equations would reduce to those of Newtonian mechanics. This requirement of physics, that a more general theory must reduce insome limit to more restrictive theories, is called the "correspondence principle". Thus we see that the development of the special theory of relativity in no way diminishes the statureof Newton. Although his concept of absolute space and time were incorrect, his genius remains: Newton's mechanics is still correct except for bodies whose speeds approach that of light.  

It is important to discuss the fact that the results of the special theory contradict "common sense": we know that we do not have to correct our watches after we have been in a car, and thatpeople who are running do not appear thinner than when at rest. The problem here is that our common sense is, by definition, the sense of how the common world works. However, the effects predicted by the special theory are significant only at a speed approaching that of light, and none of us has ever moved at such a speed relative to another object with which we can interact. Therefore, we must not assume that our low-speed common sense also applies at very high speeds. Similarly, we will see that the

mechanics governing sub-microscopic bodies such as atoms is quitedifferent to the mechanics describing 60-kg human beings.  

In 1887 the Americans Albert Michelson and Edward Morley had attempted to measure the speed of the Earth through the ether by measuring the difference in the speed of light travelling in two perpendicular directions. A difference was expected, for the samereason that the speed of a water wave relative to you depends on whether you are travelling in the same direction as the wave or otherwise. They found no dependence on the direction of motion ofthe light, and interpreted this null result by claiming that the Earth dragged the ether with it. But if the ether interacted withmatter in this way, why could it not be detected directly? Moreover, the observation by James Bradley in 1725 of stellar aberation rules out the hypothesis of ether drag. (Stellar aberation is the apparent movement of the stars in a small ellipse over the course of a year, because the Earth is moving and it takes some time for the light of the stars to reach Earth.) In 1892, Hendrik Lorentz and G.F. Fitzgerald independently hypothesized that the size of Michelson and Morley's measuring device must depend on its velocity so as to contract in the direction of motion exactly enough to give the null result.  

Einstein's second postulate presented yet another possibility: the measured speed of light was intrinsically independent of the speed of the observer. However, it went much beyond interpreting the Michelson -Morley result and explained, for example, the experimental observation that an electron's mass depended on its velocity. In fact, Henri Poincaré, a renowned physicist, had suggested a year before Einstein's publication that a whole new mechanics might be required, in which mass depended on velocity. Einstein's theory cleared up so many outstanding problems that itwas quite quickly accepted by most physicists.  

Before leaving special relativity it is important to discuss briefly Einstein's role in the development of nuclear weapons.

Nuclear fission had been discovered in Germany in 1938, just after the invasion of Austria by Hitler's forces. In 1939, faced with the threat that Germany would develop a nuclear bomb, Einstein was convinced by physicist Leo Szilard to write to President Roosevelt, pointing out the possibility and encouragingAmerican research in this direction. In spite of this, Einstein actively opposed further development of nuclear weapons followingthe Second World War. In fact, he and British philosopher/mathematician Bertrand Russell founded the Pugwash organization, named after its first meeting in Pugwash, Nova Scotia, in 1954. This organization of leading scientists throughout the world, and its student wing, still meet regularly to discuss issues concerning the impact of science on society, and to prepare position papers for presentation to governments and the United Nations.  

The General Theory of Relativity extended Einstein's ideas to bodies which are accelerating, rather than moving at constant velocity. Einstein showed that spacetime near masses could not bedescribed by Euclidean geometry, but rather that a geometry invented by Riemann must be used. In this way, gravitation was shown to be a result of the curvature of spacetime in the vicinity of mass. The general theory allowed Einstein to predict the amount of the deflection of light in the eclipses of 1919 and1921, a value which agreed with that measured. However, Einstein's theory of general relativity was not the last word on the subject. General relativity is still an active area of research today, partly because it provides us with much evidence on the evolution of the universe including such questions as, "Will the universe someday begin to collapse back upon itself under its gravitational attraction?"  

Quantum Physics

Einstein's theories of relativity were developed in a way close to Descartes' mathematical-deductive method. The special theory came from an attempt to harmonize electromagnetic theory with theprinciple of relativity. The general theory evolved from trying

to reconcile the fact that inertial mass, the "resistance" to theforce in the equation F=ma, has the same value as gravitational mass, even though the two are totally unrelated in Newtonian mechanics. Quantum physics, on the other hand, emerged from attempts to explain experimental observations. In the late 1800s a major area of research centred on the explanation of "blackbody" radiation: a black object such as a fireplace poker, when heated until it begins to glow, emits light whose intensity depends on wavelength in a way which depends largely on the temperature of the body and little on its material of construction. Because of the universal nature of this phenomenon,it was apparent that it must depend on fundamental physical principles. In 1900 Max Planck used a "lucky guess" [Jammer p.19]to obtain a mathematical equation which fitted the experimental data accurately. Three months later he derived the expression theoretically. To do this he assumed that a blackbody contained many small oscillators which emitted the light, much the way the oscillations of electrons along a transmission antenna emit radiowaves. However, he had to allow these oscillators to emit energy only at certain frequencies rather than with a continuous range of frequencies, as would be expected from classical electromagnetism. Planck had no physical basis for this assumption; it was just the only way that he could fit the data.

Einstein used Planck's idea in his explanation of the photoelectric effect, in which electrons are ejected from a metalwhen it is exposed to light whose frequency exceeds a certain value. Einstein extended Planck's ideas on the emission of light from a blackbody to the general statement that light, itself, came in packets of energy, or quanta (called "photons" from the Greek "photos" meaning "light"). Each quantum has an energy E=hf,where f is the frequency of light and h is "Planck's constant". This was a bold move, since the work of Young and Fresnel had seemed to establish beyond all doubt that light acted as a wave, and Maxwell's theory did not include any mention of a particle nature to light. However, Einstein's assumption explained the fact that even an intense light below a certain frequency could not cause the emission of electrons: if each incoming light quantum gave all its energy to an electron in the metal, the

electron could not escape if this energy was less than the binding energy of the electron. This explanation dismayed Planck,who never expected his suggestion to be applied so broadly.  

In 1911 Ernest Rutherford fired very small particles, emitted in radioactive decay, at a thin film of gold. From the scattering pattern of the particles, he determined that the atom consisted of a small, heavy, positively charged nucleus surrounded by very light electrons. Niels Bohr used this model and the quantum ideasof Planck and Einstein in 1913 to explain why the light from gas discharges was emitted at only a few, discrete frequencies; this light formed emission "lines" of different colours when the lightwas passed through a slit and dispersed by a prism. Bohr suggested that the electrons in an atom were only allowed to occupy certain orbits of definite radius r around the nucleus, namely orbits whose angular momentum was given by mvr=nh/2 wherem and v are the mass and velocity of the electron, and n is an integer. When an electron gained energy and was "excited" to a higher orbit during the gas discharge, it could lose this energy only by falling back to one of the lower allowed orbits, with itsenergy loss E being carried off by the emission of a quantum oflight of energy f=E/h. The predicted frequencies for hydrogen matched the experimental values.  

Beginning with the claim that mechanical models such as Bohr's were inappropriate because they tried to use the mechanics which had been developed for macroscopic bodies in situations where it might not apply, Werner Heisenberg in 1925 derived a purely mathematical theory that incorporated directly the empirical data, such as the wavelengths of spectral lines. The same year, Louis de Broglie argued that if light could act both as a wave and as a particle (photon) with definite energy, then perhaps material particles such as electrons could as well. He suggested that such a particle should have a wavelength given by =h/mv, where m is the particle's mass and v is its velocity.

By the next year, de Broglie's hypothesis had been used by Erwin Schrödinger to explain the quantization of Bohr's orbits.

Moreover, Schrödinger showed that his wave mechanics was equivalent to Heisenberg's theory. By 1927, C.J. Davisson and L.H. Germer had confirmed de Broglie's hypothesis directly by producing a diffraction pattern by scattering electrons from the ordered atoms on the surface of a nickel sample, much like the two-slit interference pattern used by Thomas Young to prove that light behaved as a wave. This result is impossible if we considerthe electron as a classical particle: it means that the electron must scatter off more than one nickel atom simultaneously or, in the two-slit analogy, go through both slits at the same time!  

Rather than placing the electrons in the atom in definite orbits as envisioned by Bohr, Schrödinger's wave mechanics, as interpreted by Born, treated the square of the particle's wave amplitude as giving the probability that the electron was at aparticular place in space, with the most probable positions corresponding to Bohr's orbits. From this discussion it is clear that we are treating the electron both as a particle and a wave. Consider Young's two-slit experiment again, but using electrons instead of light as the incident radiation. Suppose we position afluorescent screen behind the two holes, and decrease the intensity of the electron beam until only one electron hits the screen at a time. Experimentally we see that each electron produces a tiny flash on the screen, as though it were struck by a particle rather than a wave. However, the number of particles arriving in a given region of the screen is greater where the diffraction pattern has its maxima. The electron acts like a particle when we demand a particle-like response, but like a wavewhen we demand a wave-like response. This is the conclusion come to by Bohr, in establishing his "principle of complementarity": the wave and particle descriptions of matter (or electromagnetic radiation) are complementary, in the sense that our experiments can test for one or the other, but never for both properties at the same time.  

In 1927 Heisenberg proved that it was impossible to determine both a particle's position and momentum with arbitrary precision;

if one is known very accurately, then the uncertainty in the other becomes large. This "Uncertainty Principle" showed that there are theoretical limits on a person's ability to describe the world. The limits are not a serious consideration for large bodies, but become very important for bodies the size of an atom or smaller. The uncertainty principle also makes it clear that the presence of the experimenter always affects the results of anexperiment at some level. For example, if we try to determine theposition of a small particle very accurately we must, in principle, change its momentum by the very act of observing it.

Quantum mechanics has now been extended to explain a wide range of phenomena at the sub-microscopic level, including the structure of the atomic nucleus. Experimentally, this structure has been determined in a manner similar in principle to Rutherford's scattering experiment, using accelerators which produce incident particles of very high energy.  

Philosophically, the developments of quantum mechanics were far-reaching. Like relativity, they again showed that humans could not assume that the physical laws which seem to govern a 60-kg person moving at speeds up to several hundred kilometres per houralso applied to bodies far from this regime. They also brought into question the assumption of the perfectly deterministic worldproposed by Laplace. Clearly it was impossible to predict the position and velocity of every body for all future times if you could not even know these coordinates accurately at a single instant in time. This conclusion has even been used as the basis of the claim that humans have free will, that all is not predetermined as would seem to be the case in a purely mechanistic, deterministic world governed by the laws of physics.These ideas are still heavily debated today, as in a recent article by Roger Penrose in the book Quantum Implications.  

Indeed, Einstein himself was never able to accept fully the uncertainty implied in quantum mechanics, declaring that he did not believe that God played dice (Clark, pp.414,415). In an attempt to show that quantum theory was at variance with the real

world, he helped develop the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) paradox, a "thought experiment" which shows that quantum mechanical theory must lead to what seems like an impossible situation: what you do to one particle can affect a second, even if they are sufficiently separated in space that a light signal could not pass from the first to the second fast enough to cause the observed effect. That is, either the knowledge of the event can travel between the particles faster than the speed of light, or the two particles really are not separate but remain interconnected in some fundamental sense. It was the latter option which was under debate.  

An experiment designed to test this hypothesis was carried out byD. Aspect and coworkers in 1981 [Physical Review Letters 47,460 (1981) and 49, 91 (1982)] and was shown to confirm what was predicted: the two particles really were connected over large distances by "non-local" forces acting instantaneously. That is, the EPR paradox, rather than showing a basic inconsistency in quantum theory, actually points to one more aspect of nature thatcontravenes common sense.  

The Unification of Physical Phenomena

The work of Maxwell represents the first great theoretical unification of physical phenomena, in this case the integration of magnetic, electrical and optical theory into one all-encompassing framework. Again, this must be seen as desirable under Ockham's Razor, which argues for economy of understanding. Such economy is the strength of modern analytical science, which emphasizes the logical description of a vast range of physical phenomena from a few basic principles, rather than the memorization of a large number of isolated facts or formulae. Theformer approach enables the user to predict effects not seen previously, to invent, whereas the latter restricts one to what already is known.  

Other great unifications that have taken place in physics includethe integration of classical mechanics, quantum physics and heat in the development of statistical mechanics. This subject assumesthat the properties of large systems, such as gases or solids, can be calculated by working out the average of the properties ofall their constituent particles. For example, the relationship between the temperature and pressure of a gas can be calculated by treating the gas as being made up of a very large number of independent molecules, and calculating the average force they produce as they collide with the container walls, using Newtonianmechanics for the particles. This approach was followed for gasesby Maxwell and Ludwig Boltzmann (1844-1906). Boltzmann also showed that Clausius' entropy could be interpreted as a measure of the disorder of a system. In particular, he proved that the value for entropy can be obtained from a knowledge of the total number of different states in which a system can be found. That, in turn, depends on the number of different potential configurations of all the particles which comprised the system. This statistical approach has led to the development of "quantum statistics", the application of statistical mechanics to quantum phenomena.  

Perhaps the greatest such unification that has taken place in this century is the integration of electromagnetism and quantum mechanics, in quantum electrodynamics (QED). This feat earned Richard Feynman, Julian Schwinger, and Sin-itiro Tomonaga the Nobel Prize for physics in 1965. It is capable of predicting the spin g-factor of the electron with a numerical accuracy of 1 partin 1010!  

In 1979, Sheldon Glashow, Abdus Salam, and Stephen Weinberg were given the Nobel Prize for their "electroweak theory" that unifiedthe electromagnetic and weak nuclear forces. Attempts have also been made to form a quantum theory of the strong nuclear force. Because of its similarity to QED, it has been called quantum chromodynamics (QCD). "Chromo" comes from the Greek word for colour, and refers to the fact that the quarks that make up

neutrons and protons come in several varieties that have been given the names red, blue and green, and their antiparticles. (These names have been chosen in analogy to light. These three colours can be combined to give white light; the three quarks combine to give a "colourless" particle.) The combination of electroweak theory and QCD comprises what is called the "StandardModel". Attempts are still under way to integrate QCD and electroweak theory into a single "Grand Unified Theory" (GUT).  

Much effort has also gone into trying to unify electromagnetism and gravitation. In fact, Einstein spent most of the latter part of his life trying to create a quantum form of the general theoryof relativity. As can be seen from these few examples, the nineteenth-century belief that the main theoretical work of physicists was over could not have been further from the truth!  

Dissemination of the Results of Scientific Research

Written exchange of information among scientists in different countries was common from before the time of Galileo, and books on science were published from shortly after the development of the printing press in Europe by 1450. Starting in 1644 in England, John Wilkins, a Puritan clergyman, organized weekly meetings of several scientists in London, who called themselves the "Philosophical College". They met to discuss scientific theory and carry out experiments, first at a pub and then at Gresham College. When the Puritans under Cromwell came to power, Wilkins was appointed the head of Wadham College in Oxford. Therehe established the Philosophical Society for the discussion of science. Under the Commonwealth, interest in science had increased substantially, and shortly after the restoration of Charles II to the throne in 1660 a group of forty-one persons founded a college for scientific learning which became the "RoyalSociety for the Improvement of Natural Knowledge" two years later, with about one hundred members; John Wilkins was one of its two secretaries. This organization eventually became the Royal Society of London, which persists to today. Similar societies emerged on the continent. These organizations published

regular journals of the findings of their members.  

Today, there are hundreds of scientific societies world-wide, some discipline-based and national in focus such as the Canadian Association of Physicists, and some research-area-based and very international in membership, such as the American Vacuum Society.Most hold meetings annually or more often. There are more than 100,000 articles published per year in physics alone. With this enormous amount of information, it has been necessary to develop bibliographic search tools just to enable researchers to find papers of interest. In physics these include three major journals. Physics Abstracts, published monthly, catalogues by subjectand author almost all the articles published in physics in the previous period. Current Contents, published weekly, lists by journal, author and subject all papers in the main journals. Science Citation Index, published monthly, lists articles covering allthe sciences, which have been published or cited (referred to) inthe previous period. This last journal enables researchers to usetheir knowledge of a seminal article in a given field to find themost current related work. These search tools have become immensely more powerful recently, with the application of computer programs which provide rapid searching, cross-referencing and automatic print-outs. Searching can even be done on-line using remote data banks.  

Applied Physics

Bacon's vision of the application of science for human use has been realized this century, with tens of thousands of scientists and engineers working world-wide to develop usable products. However, the deal has been Faustian. We have our jumbo jets, cellular telephones, catscans, personal computers and CD-players,all direct applications of physics which we enjoy. We have also developed the fission bomb which killed 110,000 in Hiroshima and similar numbers in Nagasaki, with some 2500 people continuing to die per year for decades from radiation-related illness (the fusion bombs currently deployed are typically 50 times more powerful); modern conventional weapons and communications keep

millions of the world's people in economic slavery; the world's ecosystem, of which we are a part, is endangered by the pollutionresulting from our technological successes; the technologically developed world consumes some ten times that of the lesser developed world per capita, so limiting the economic viability ofthe rest of the world.  

As suggested by Capra in The Turning Point, it is time to take a lesson from the EPR paradox and consider the world more holistically. Physics still has a powerful role to play in the evolution of our society, and it is our individual and collectiveresponsibility to choose its direction carefully.  

Acknowledgements

The motivation for writing this paper arose from long discussionswith my partner, Linda, on the need for physics students to question their role in the world. The material presented above has been chosen as that which the author has found most useful indoing this for himself. It has come from a wide variety of secondary sources, many of which are given in the attached bibliography. However, the dates and other details have been confirmed for this writing using primarily the excellent book, A History of the Sciences by Stephen F. Mason, with some assistance from Schneer's The Evolution of Physical Science. Many useful comments from Peter Dawson have been incorporated into the text.

A Partial Bibliography

Butterfield, H., The Origins of Modern Science, 1300-1800

(Clarke-Irwin, Toronto) 1977. A good discussion of the interplay between science and society.

Capra, F., The Turning Point (Simon and Schuster, New York) 1982. Reductionist vs. holistic science, from a physicist's perspective.

Clark, R.W., Einstein, The Life and Times (Avon, New York) 1971.

Cline, B.L., Men who Made a New Physics (previously entitled The Questioners) (Signet, New York) 1965. A very readable account of the origins of quantum physics and relativity.

Cole, M.D., The Maya, 3rd ed. (Thames and Hudson, London) 1984.

Dijksterhuis, E.J., The Mechanization of the World Picture (Oxford University) 1961.

Drake, S., Telescopes, Tides and Tactics: A Galilean Dialogue about the Starry Messenger and Systems of the World (University of Chicago Press, Chicago) 1983. This book includes a translation of Galileo's description of his first astronomical observations, and MUST be read. It contains copies of Galileo's original sketches of the appearance of the Moon and of the moons of Jupiter.

Drake, S., The Role of Music in Galileo's Experiments Scientific American, p. 98, June 1975.

Finocchiaro, M.A., The Galileo Affair, A Documentary History (University ofCalifornia Press, Berkeley) 1989. Gives the context for Galileo'strial, and a translation of a number of the original documents.

French, M., Beyond Power (Ballantine, New York) 1985. A feminist perspective on patriarchal society.

Hawking, S.W., A Brief History of Time (Bantam, 1988). A discussion of modern cosmology for the layperson, from one of the world's experts.

Horgan, J., Quantum Philosophy, Scientific American, July 1992, p.94. A discussion of recent investigations of the EPR paradox.

Hiley, B.J. and Peat, F.D. (editors), Quantum Implications - Essays in Honour of David Bohm (Routledge, New York) 1987. An excellent but fairly mathematical consideration of the implications of quantum theory.

Kramer, E., Nature and Growth of Modern Mathematics, (Princeton University Press, New York) 1982.

Jammer, M., The Conceptual Development of Quantum Mechanics, (McGraw-Hill, New York) 1966. This book is quite mathematical.

Mason, S.F., A History of the Sciences (Collier, New York), 1962. An excellent general history, very complete.

Rossiter, M.W., Women Scientists in America: Struggles and Strategies to 1940, (John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore) 1982.

Schneer, C.J., The Evolution of Physical Science (Grove Press, New York) 1960. Greeks to modern physical science.

Tuana, N. (editor), Feminism and Science (Indiana University Press, Bloomington) 1989. Addresses gender bias in science.

Whitehead, A.N., Science and the Modern World, (Cambridge University Press) 1933.

Williams, L.P., The Origins of Field Theory (Random House, Toronto) 1966. (Not in Trent Library).

Updated 15 June 2001