FITTING EPITAPH TO EINSTEIN'S LIGHT BOX.NO IDEA if the theory of relativity theory of relativity Einstein’s contribution to the space-time relationship. [Science: NCE, 843–844] See : Turning Point has a clause to explain this or if it was sheer coincidence that when physicists across the world were flipping through ' Quantum', their peers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business, ( MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology ) revealed newer aspects of Max Planck's famous 1900 experiment on non- reflective objects -- the blackbodies. Manjit Kumar's book has a fair share of Planck but is widely hyped as an account of the spat between two other Titans -- Neils Bohr and Albert Einstein. For those who get excited over the grandeur and mystique of one of the most debated realities of Physics -- the ' Quantum Theory' -- the book cruises past the lives and works of old masters and young turks Young Turks: see Ottoman Empire. Young Turks Turkish Jöntürkler Coalition of young dissidents who ended the sultanate of the Ottoman Empire. -- Ernest Rutherford, Prince Louis De Broglie, Wolfgang Pauli, Erwin Schrodinger and Arnold Sommerfield, to name a few. And for the uninitiated, there's plenty of insight into the rigours of doing science in an age when the " search for the absolute was the loftiest of all scientific activity" -- again a Planck quote. They threw theories to test themselves against hard experimental facts and went to great lengths to do so. Sample this: Planck getting up in the middle of the night to post a note with the equation for the blackbody blackbody Theoretical surface that absorbs all radiant energy that falls on it, and radiates electromagnetic energy at all frequencies, from radio waves to gamma rays, with an intensity distribution dependent on its temperature. spectrum. Or Einstein hurrying to work at the Swiss Patent Office in Bern in a plaid suit and a pair of worn- out slippers with embroidered em·broi·der v. em·broi·dered, em·broi·der·ing, em·broi·ders v.tr. 1. To ornament with needlework: embroider a pillow cover. 2. flowers in 1905. The same year saw the ' patent slave' publish four landmark papers, explaining the quantum, atom sizes, Brownian motion and relativity -- transforming all physics to come in the years to come. He also found time and energy that year to write 21 book reviews for the journal Annalen der Physik Annalen der Physik is one of the best-known and oldest (since 1790) physics journals worldwide. The journal publishes original papers in the areas of experimental, theoretical, applied and mathematical physics and related areas. . A fifth paper, as an afterthought, had the famous equation: E= mc2. The comparison between Einstein and Bohr makes for interesting anecdotes. Like Einstein, Bohr, the handsome Dane, did badly in languages at school but had an aptitude for maths and science. Bohr struggled to express himself in English, so on his honeymoon, he wrote his paper on alpha particles dictating it to wife Margrethe as she corrected his English and put words to his random thoughts. These brilliant nuggets Nuggets can refer to several branches of interest:
The public play of the Einstein- Bohr conflict in The New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times in 1935 is reassuring -- the more things change the more they remain the same. The cheeky practice of advance publication of scientific announcements in the press is not new after all! The controversy began in the journal Nature when Bohr challenged Einstein over quantum mechanics quantum mechanics: see quantum theory. quantum mechanics Branch of mathematical physics that deals with atomic and subatomic systems. It is concerned with phenomena that are so small-scale that they cannot be described in classical terms, and it is with a promise by the Dane that a " fuller development of this argument would be given in an article to be published shortly in Physical Review ." The book leaves the debate hanging -- towards the end of the ' Quantum' plot, Einstein dies at 112 Mercer Street, an address that goes on to become one of the most famous in the world, surrounded by portraits of Faraday faraday /far·a·day/ (F ) (far´ah-da) the electric charge carried by one mole of electrons or one equivalent weight of ions, equal to 9.649 × 104coulombs. far·a·day n. , Maxwell and Gandhi. There he ' hibernates' till his death in 1937, which, incidentally, does not end the debate. In 1962, Bohr dies and the last drawing on the blackboard in his study replays the keenest of his arguments with Einstein -- that of Einstein's celebrated light box. Physicists across the world have not been able to avoid getting sucked into the quantum debate ever since, like Planck, who steered clear of the theory as much as he could but became the ' reluctant revolutionary when he hinted about it first. " We have to live with the quantum theory," he said, " and believe me, it will expand." -- The reviewer is the editor of the scientific journal, Nature India Copyright 2009 India Today Group. All Rights Reserved. Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company |
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