Quantum Mechanics History
A History of Quantum Mechanics
Article by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
It is hard to realise that the electron was only discovered a little
over 100 years ago in 1897. That it was not expected is illustrated
by a remark made by J J Thomson, the discoverer of the electron. He
said
I was told long afterwards by a distinguished physicist who
had been
present at my lecture that he thought I had been pulling their leg.
The neutron was not discovered until 1932 so it is against this
background
that we trace the beginnings of quantum theory back to 1859.
In 1859 Gustav Kirchhoff proved a theorem about blackbody radiation.
A blackbody is an object that absorbs all the energy that falls upon
it and, because it reflects no light, it would appear black to an
observer. A blackbody is also a perfect emitter and Kirchhoff proved
that the energy emitted E depends only on the temperature T and the
frequency v of the emitted energy, i.e.
E = J(T,v).
He challenged physicists to find the function J.
In 1879 Josef Stefan proposed, on experimental grounds, that the total
energy emitted by a hot body was proportional to the fourth power
of the temperature. In the generality stated by Stefan this is false.
The same conclusion was reached in 1884 by Ludwig Boltzmann for
blackbody
radiation, this time from theoretical considerations using
thermodynamics
and Maxwell's electromagnetic theory. The result, now known as the
Stefan-Boltzmann law, does not fully answer Kirchhoff's challenge
since it does not answer the question for specific wavelengths.
In 1896 Wilhelm Wien proposed a solution to the Kirchhoff challenge.
However although his solution matches experimental observations closely
for small values of the wavelength, it was shown to break down in
the far infrared by Rubens and Kurlbaum.
Kirchhoff, who had been at Heidelberg, moved to Berlin. Boltzmann
was offered his chair in Heidelberg but turned it down. The chair
was then offered to Hertz who also declined the offer, so it was
offered
again, this time to Planck and he accepted.
Rubens visited Planck in October 1900 and explained his results to
him. Within a few hours of Rubens leaving Planck's house Planck had
guessed the correct formula for Kirchhoff's J function. This guess
fitted experimental evidence at all wavelengths very well but Planck
was not satisfied with this and tried to give a theoretical derivation
of the formula. To do this he made the unprecedented step of assuming
that the total energy is made up of indistinguishable energy elements
- quanta of energy. He wrote
Experience will prove whether this hypothesis is realised
in nature
Planck himself gave credit to Boltzmann for his statistical method
but Planck's approach was fundamentally different. However theory
had now deviated from experiment and was based on a hypothesis with
no experimental basis. Planck won the 1918 Nobel Prize for Physics
for this work.
In 1901 Ricci and Levi-Civita published Absolute differential calculus.
It had been Christoffel's discovery of 'covariant differentiation'
in 1869 which let Ricci extend the theory of tensor analysis to
Riemannian
space of n dimensions. The Ricci and Levi-Civita definitions were
thought to give the most general formulation of a tensor. This work
was not done with quantum theory in mind but, as so often happens,
the mathematics necessary to embody a physical theory had appeared
at precisely the right moment.
In 1905 Einstein examined the photoelectric effect. The photoelectric
effect is the release of electrons from certain metals or
semiconductors
by the action of light. The electromagnetic theory of light gives
results at odds with experimental evidence. Einstein proposed a quantum
theory of light to solve the difficulty and then he realised that
Planck's theory made implicit use of the light quantum hypothesis.
By 1906 Einstein had correctly guessed that energy changes occur in
a quantum material oscillator in changes in jumps which are multiples
of v where h is Planck's reduced constant and v is the frequency.
Einstein received the 1921 Nobel Prize for Physics, in 1922, for this
work on the photoelectric effect.
In 1913 Niels Bohr wrote a revolutionary paper on the hydrogen atom.
He discovered the major laws of the spectral lines. This work earned
Bohr the 1922 Nobel Prize for Physics. Arthur Compton derived
relativistic
kinematics for the scattering of a photon (a light quantum) off an
electron at rest in 1923.
However there were concepts in the new quantum theory which gave major
worries to many leading physicists. Einstein, in particular, worried
about the element of 'chance' which had entered physics. In fact
Rutherford
had introduced spontaneous effect when discussing radio-active decay
in 1900. In 1924 Einstein wrote:-
There are therefore now two theories of light, both
indispensable,
and - as one must admit today despite twenty years of tremendous effort
on the part of theoretical physicists - without any logical connection.
In the same year, 1924, Bohr, Kramers and Slater made important
theoretical
proposals regarding the interaction of light and matter which rejected
the photon. Although the proposals were the wrong way forward they
stimulated important experimental work. Bohr addressed certain
paradoxes
in his work.
(i) How can energy be conserved when some energy changes
are continuous
and some are discontinuous, i.e. change by quantum amounts.
(ii) How does the electron know when to emit radiation.
Einstein had been puzzled by paradox (ii) and Pauli quickly told Bohr
that he did not believe his theory. Further experimental work soon
ended any resistance to belief in the electron. Other ways had to
be found to resolve the paradoxes.
Up to this stage quantum theory was set up in Euclidean space and
used Cartesian tensors of linear and angular momentum. However quantum
theory was about to enter a new era.
The year 1924 saw the publication of another fundamental paper. It
was written by Satyendra Nath Bose and rejected by a referee for
publication.
Bose then sent the manuscript to Einstein who immediately saw the
importance of Bose's work and arranged for its publication. Bose
proposed
different states for the photon. He also proposed that there is no
conservation of the number of photons. Instead of statistical
independence
of particles, Bose put particles into cells and talked about
statistical
independence of cells. Time has shown that Bose was right on all these
points.
Work was going on at almost the same time as Bose's which was also
of fundamental importance. The doctoral thesis of Louis de Broglie
was presented which extended the particle-wave duality for light to
all particles, in particular to electrons. Schrödinger in 1926
published a paper giving his equation for the hydrogen atom and
heralded
the birth of wave mechanics. Schrödinger introduced operators
associated with each dynamical variable.
The year 1926 saw the complete solution of the derivation of Planck's
law after 26 years. It was solved by Dirac. Also in 1926 Born abandoned
the causality of traditional physics. Speaking of collisions Born
wrote
One does not get an answer to the question, What is the
state after
collision? but only to the question, How probable is a given effect
of the collision? From the standpoint of our quantum mechanics, there
is no quantity which causally fixes the effect of a collision in an
individual event.
Heisenberg wrote his first paper on quantum mechanics in 1925 and
2 years later stated his uncertainty principle. It states that the
process of measuring the position x of a particle disturbs the
particle's
momentum p, so that
Dx Dp = h/2p
where Dx is the uncertainty of the position and Dp is the uncertainty
of the momentum. Here h is Planck's constant and is usually called
the 'reduced Planck's constant'. Heisenberg states that
the nonvalidity of rigorous causality is necessary and not
just consistently
possible.
Heisenberg's work used matrix methods made possible by the work of
Cayley on matrices 50 years earlier. In fact 'rival' matrix mechanics
deriving from Heisenberg's work and wave mechanics resulting from
Schrödinger's work now entered the arena. These were not properly
shown to be equivalent until the necessary mathematics was developed
by Riesz about 25 years later.
Also in 1927 Bohr stated that space-time coordinates and causality
are complementary. Pauli realised that spin, one of the states proposed
by Bose, corresponded to a new kind of tensor, one not covered by
the Ricci and Levi-Civita work of 1901. However the mathematics of
this had been anticipated by Eli Cartan who introduced a 'spinor'
as part of a much more general investigation in 1913.
Dirac, in 1928, gave the first solution of the problem of expressing
quantum theory in a form which was invariant under the Lorentz group
of transformations of special relativity. He expressed d'Alembert's
wave equation in terms of operator algebra.
The uncertainty principle was not accepted by everyone. Its most
outspoken
opponent was Einstein. He devised a challenge to Niels Bohr which
he made at a conference which they both attended in 1930. Einstein
suggested a box filled with radiation with a clock fitted in one side.
The clock is designed to open a shutter and allow one photon to escape.
Weigh the box again some time later and the photon energy and its
time of escape can both be measured with arbitrary accuracy. Of course
this is not meant to be an actual experiment, only a 'thought
experiment'.
Niels Bohr is reported to have spent an unhappy evening, and Einstein
a happy one, after this challenge by Einstein to the uncertainty
principle.
However Niels Bohr had the final triumph, for the next day he had
the solution. The mass is measured by hanging a compensation weight
under the box. This is turn imparts a momentum to the box and there
is an error in measuring the position. Time, according to relativity,
is not absolute and the error in the position of the box translates
into an error in measuring the time.
Although Einstein was never happy with the uncertainty principle,
he was forced, rather grudgingly, to accept it after Bohr's
explanation.
In 1932 von Neumann put quantum theory on a firm theoretical basis.
Some of the earlier work had lacked mathematical rigour, but von
Neumann
put the whole theory into the setting of operator algebra.
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