Read Einstein and the Quantum Online
Authors: A. Douglas Stone
88
It is largely due to
: Folsing,
Albert Einstein
, 201.
89
simply a systematic
â¦
There has been a false
: Ibid., 211.
89
but more urgent than
: Planck to Einstein, 6 July 1907,
CPAE
, vol. 5, doc. 47, p. 31.
90
sufficient to account for all
: Einstein, “On a Heuristic Point of View,” 90.
90
In a study published last year
: Albert Einstein, “On the Theory of Light Production and Light Absorption” [original article no. 8 in References], reprinted in
CPAE
, vol. 2, doc. 34, p. 192.
92
Hence we must view the following proposition
: Ibid., 195.
92
For if the energy of a resonator
â¦
In my opinion
: Ibid., 196.
CHAPTER 12. CALAMITY JEANS
Page
95
the domain of natural sciences
: J. J. O'Connor and E. F. Roberston, “Presidential Address to the British Association in Montreal in 1884,” last modified February 2005, accessed 20 February 2009,
http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk./Biographies/Rayleigh.html
.
95
little more than a conjecture
: Lord Rayleigh, “Remarks upon the Law of Complete Radiation” [original article no. 3 in References], reprinted in
Scientific Papers by Lord Rayleigh
, vol. 6, doc. 260, p. 483.
97
what would appear to be wanted
: Lord Rayleigh, “The Law of Partition of Kinetic Energy” [original article no. 5 in References], reprinted in
Scientific Papers by Lord Rayleigh
, vol. 6, doc. 253, p. 451.
98
the question is one to be settled
: Rayleigh, “Remarks upon the Law,” 484.
98
although for some reason
: Ibid.
99
If an interaction between aether and matter
: Hermann,
Genesis of Quantum Theory
, 33.
100
We can now trace the course
: Ibid.
102
he is the model of the theorist
: Planck to Wien, 27 February 1909, in Heilbron,
Dilemmas of an Upright Man
, 8.
CHAPTER 13. FROZEN VIBRATIONS
Page
103
The whole thing started
: “Peter J. W. Debye: An Interview,”
Science
, vol. 145, p. 554 (1964).
103
one is allowed to infer
: Pais,
Subtle Is the Lord
, 390.
104
difficulty and expense
: Ibid.
106
through the diamond experiment
: Diana Kormos Barkan,
Walther Nernst and the Transition to Modern Physical Science
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), 163.
106
sunk back into the sea
: Einstein to Mileva Maric, April 4 1901,
CPAE
, vol. 1, doc. 96, p. 162.
107
For although one has thought before
: Albert Einstein, “Planck's Theory of Radiation and the Theory of Specific Heat,”
Annalen der Physik
, vol. 22, pp. 180â190 (1907), reprinted in
CPAE
, vol. 2, doc. 38, p. 218.
107
I believe we must not content ourselves
: Ibid., 218â219.
110
most certainly there could exist
: A. Einstein, “Correction to my Paper, âPlanck's Theory of Heat Radiation, etc.,'Â ”
CPAE
, vol. 2, doc. 42, p. 233.
CHAPTER 14. PLANCK'S NOBEL NIGHTMARE
Page
111
The two constants
: Hermann,
Genesis of Quantum Theory
, 11.
112
sacrifice him
: Patrick Coffey,
Cathedrals of Science
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), 3.
113
[Arrhenius] is somewhat corpulent
: Ibid., 17.
113
pronounced hostility toward atomism
: Elisabeth Crawford, “Arrhenius, the Atomic Hypothesis, and the 1908 Nobel Prizes in Physics and Chemistry,”
Isis
, vol. 75, p. 510 (1984).
114
he had seen many transmutations
(quoted in footnote): Pierre Marage and Gregoire Wallenborn, eds.,
The Solvay Councils and the Birth of Modern Physics
, Science Networks, vol. 22 (Basel: Birkauser Verlag, 1999), 118.
115
To conclude, I may point to
: Planck, “On the Theory of the Energy Distribution Law,” 82â90.
115
If the theory is at all correct
: Ibid.
116
concern for a physics
: Heilbron,
Dilemmas of an Upright Man
, 54.
116
I could derive some satisfaction
: Hermann,
Genesis of Quantum Theory
, 21.
117
made it extremely plausible
: Ibid., 362.
117
it is very far from being
: Bengt Nagel, “The Discussion concerning the Nobel Prize for Max Planck,” in
Science, Technology and Society in the Time of Alfred Nobel: Nobel Symposium 52
, ed. C. G. Bernhard, E. Crawford, and P. Sorbom (New York: Pergamon Press, 1982), 361.
118
[if true] I presume
: Crawford, “Arrhenius, the Atomic Hypothesis, and the 1908 Nobel Prizes,” 519.
118
Einstein simply postulates
: Folsing,
Albert Einstein
, 215.
118
Everything which emanated
: H. A. Lorentz,
Impressions of His Life and Work
, ed. G. L. de Haas-Lorentz (Amsterdam: North-Holland, 1957), 8.
119
Whatever was accepted by Lorentz
: Hermann,
Genesis of Quantum Theory
, 45.
119
wrestled continuously
: Lorentz to Wien, 6 June 1908, ibid., 34.
119
The theory of Planck is the only one
: Ibid., 37.
120
If we examine the Jeans-Lorentz formula
: Ibid., 40.
120
I was extremely disappointed
: Wien to Sommerfeld, 18 May 1908, ibid., 39â40.
120
thus we should really dismiss
: Lorentz to Wien, 6 June 1908, ibid., 41.
121
a completely new hypothesis
: Nagel, “The Discussion concerning the Nobel Prize for Max Planck, 363.
121
It is I, along with Phragmen
: Ibid.
CHAPTER 15. JOINING THE UNION
Page
122
So, now I too am an official
: Einstein to Jakob Laub, 19 May 1909,
CPAE
, vol. 5, doc. 161, p. 120.
122
I must tell you quite frankly
: Laub to Einstein, 1 May 1908,
CPAE
vol. 5, doc. 91, p. 63.
123
a few old fogies
: Einstein to Besso, 6 March 1952, ibid.
123
pigsty
: Einstein to Besso, 7 March 1903, in Folsing,
Albert Einstein
, 228.
123
I can't understand a word
: Seelig,
Albert Einstein
, 88.
124
[Einstein] will most likely
: F. Adler to V. Adler, 19 June 1908, in Folsing,
Albert Einstein
, 247.
124
I was really lucky
: Einstein to Laub,
CPAE
, 19 May, vol. 5, doc. 161, p. 120. I have used the Folsing translation.
125
impression of a colonel
: “Sommerfeld, Arnold (Johannes Wilhelm),”
Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
(2008),
Encyclopedia.com
,
http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-2830904080.html
, accessed February 4, 2013.
126
we are now all longing
: Arnold Sommerfeld to Hendrik Lorentz, 26 December 1907, Folsing,
Albert Einstein
, 203.
126
Your letter made me uncommonly happy
: Einstein to Sommerfeld, 14 January 1908,
CPAE
, vol. 5, doc. 72, p. 5.
126
I believe that we are still
: Einstein to Sommerfeld,
CPAE
, vol. 5, doc. 72, p. 5.
127
There can be no doubt
: Albert Einstein, “On the Present Status of the Radiation Problem” [original article no. 10 in References], reprinted in
CPAE
, vol. 2, doc. 56, pp. 360â361.
127
Though every physicist
: Ibid., 363.
127
In my opinion, the last
: Ibid., 369.
127
the fundamental [Maxwell] equation
: Ibid., 374.
128
I am ceaselessly concerned
: Einstein to Laub, 17 May 1909,
CPAE
, vol. 2, doc. 160, p. 119.
CHAPTER 16. CREATIVE FUSION
Page
129
I am very sorry
: Einstein to George Meyer, 7 June 1909,
CPAE
, vol. 2, doc. 166, p. 167.
129
Your postcard made me
: Einstein to Anna Meyer-Schmid, 12 May 1909,
CPAE
, vol. 5, doc. 154, p. 115.
130
With that kind of fame
: Isaacson,
Einstein
, 154.
130
That's not true, Herr Einstein
: Seelig,
Albert Einstein
, 92.
130
my lectures keep me very busy
: Einstein to Besso, 17 November 1909,
CPAE
, vol. 5, doc. 187, p. 140.
131
I am sending you a short paper
: Einstein to Lorentz, 30 March 1909,
CPAE
, vol. 5, doc. 146, p. 105.
131
a real event
: Einstein to Lorentz, 13 April 1909,
CPAE
, vol. 5, doc. 149, p. 106.
132
their existence [free electrons] in metals
: Lorentz to Einstein, 6 May 1909,
CPAE
, vol. 5, doc. 153, p. 108.
132
If one regards h
: Ibid., 110.
132
The individuality of each
: Ibid., 112.
132
as soon as one makes
: Ibid., 113.
132
permit me to say
: Ibid., 114.
133
I am presently carrying on
: Einstein to Laub, 19 May 1909, ibid., 119.
134
My work on light quanta
: Ibid.
134
delighted ⦠the difficulty of generalizing
: Einstein to Lorentz, 23 May 1909,
CPAE
, vol. 5, doc. 163, p. 122.
134
I consider it a great blessing
: Ibid.
135
energy elements ⦠play a certain
: Planck to Lorentz, 10 July 1909, in Hermann,
Genesis of Quantum Theory
, 41.
135
stubbornly opposes
: Einstein to Johannes Stark, 31 July 1909,
CPAE
, vol. 2, doc. 172, p. 129.
135
The quarrel between Stark and Sommerfeld
(quoted in footnote): Einstein to Laub, 16 March 1910,
CPAE
, vol. 2, doc. 199, p. 148.
136
one of the turning points
: Folsing,
Einstein
, 257.
136
Once it has been recognized
â¦
However, today we must
: Einstein, “On the Development of Our Views,” 379.
137
It is therefore my opinion that the next stage
: Ibid.
137
Regarding our conception of the structure of light
: Ibid., 386.
138
to accept Planck's theory
: Ibid., 390.
138
Isn't it conceivable
: Ibid.
139
The forces of pressure exerted
: Ibid., 391.
140
it has not yet been possible
: Ibid., 394.
140
listening with greatest interest
: “Discussion Following the Lecture: On the Development of Our Views concerning the Nature and Constitution of Radiation” [original article no. 12 in References], reprinted in
CPAE
, vol. 2, doc. 61, pp. 395â396.
140
It had no [great effect]
: Hermann,
Genesis of Quantum Theory,
68.
CHAPTER 17. THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING NERNST
Page
141
I visited Prof. Einstein in Zurich
: W. Nernst to A. Schuster, 10 March 1910, in Barkan,
Walther Nernst
, 183.
141
Einstein's achievement received its seal
: Folsing,
Albert Einstein
, 257.
142
the best that any laboratory practitioner
: Coffey,
Cathedrals of Science
, 18.
142
fishlike mouth
; â¦
in the main, popular
â¦; and the Perrin anecdote: Robert A. Millikan, “A Great Physicist Passes,”
Scientific Monthly
, vol. 54, pp. 84â86 (1942).
142
his truly amazing scientific instinct
: Albert Einstein, “The Work and Personality of Walther Nernst,”
Scientific Monthly
, vol. 54, pp. 195â196 (1942).
144
How much did you get
: Coffey,
Cathedrals of Science
, 29â30.
144
versatile, many-faceted
: Barkan,
Walther Nernst
, 148.
144
Kommerzienrat
: Phillip Frank,
Einstein: His Life and Times
, trans. George Rosen, ed. Schuichi Kusaka (New York: Da Capo Press, 1947), 107.
146
rather shabby attire
: Seelig,
Albert Einstein
, 100.
146
I am most interested in the associate professor
: George Bredig to Arrhenius, in Barkan,
Walther Nernst
, 183â4.
146
made Einstein famous
: Kuhn,
Black-Body Theory
, 215.
147
I visited Prof. Einstein ⦠“a beautiful memory”
: Nernst to A. Schuster, 10 March 1910, in Barkan,
Walther Nernst
, 183.
147
The specific heat decreases
(quoted in footnote): 17 February 1910, ibid., 167.
148
I have made inquiries
: W. Nernst postcard, recipient unknown, 31 July 1910, ibid.