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A “Brief” History of Physics

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A “Brief” History of Physics. 1. Mr. Hughes Ridgefield Memorial High School Tuesday, October 21, 2014 Based on “A Brief History of Physics” By Dean Baird, Fred Hendel, and Walter Scheider. I. In the beginning…. 2. Physics began when the first thinking creature wondered, “why?” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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1 Mr. Hughes Ridgefield Memorial High School Monday, January 17, 2022 Based on “A Brief History of Physics” By Dean Baird, Fred Hendel, and Walter Scheider A “Brief” History of Physics
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Page 1: A “Brief” History of Physics

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Mr. HughesRidgefield Memorial High School

Thursday, April 20, 2023

Based on “A Brief History of Physics”By Dean Baird, Fred Hendel, and Walter

Scheider

A “Brief” History of Physics

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I. In the beginning…2

Physics began when the first thinking creature wondered, “why?”

Why did the rain fall at certain times?

Why was there a perpetual cycle of light (day) and dark (night)?

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I. In the beginning…3

Why could one type of pain be remedied by eating while many others could not be remedied at all?

Why did females give birth and why did living things die?

Why did things move as they did?

Why, why, why?

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II. The Greeks4

The first people to deal with these questions on a rational basis (i.e., without reference togods or magic) were the Greeks.

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II. The Greeks5

The Greeks held the process of reasoning in high esteem.

Experimentation was generally considered unnecessary.

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Aristotle 6

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Aristotle (384-322 B.C.E.) devised the first comprehensive explanation for motion.

Aristotle’s explanation was basedon the concept of natural places.

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Ptolemy8

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The Greeks were also fascinated by the heavens, and Aristotle deduced that the planets, the moon, and the sun traveled in perfect circles around the earth.

Ptolemy (TAH leh mee) worked out an awkward mathematical explanation of the geocentric solar system (Ptolemaic epicycles) in the 2nd century C.E.

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III. The Copernican Revolution

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Nicolaus Copernicus11

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The heavens continued to fascinate those who asked “why?” and in 1543, a Pole by thename of Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) suggested that the sun was at the center of the solar system, and the earth and other planets orbited around it.

By then, however, the Greek view of nature had persisted so long, it had become part of Church doctrine.

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Copernicus was aware of the controversy his theory would bring; he did not publish hiswork until he was near death.

A supporter of Copernicus’ heliocentric (sun-centered) model was burned at the stake for espousing this “heretical” view.

Galileo was chastised and imprisoned for providing observable evidence for the heliocentric system.

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Johannes Kepler14

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The truth prevailed, however, and theheliocentric model became well established with the mathematical work of JohannesKepler (1571-1630) of Germany.

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IV. The Time of Galileo16

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Galileo Galilei17

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The Italian scientist Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) is credited with asserting the importance of experimentation in the study of nature.

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In addition to promoting Copernicus’heliocentric model, Galileo discovered that all objects fall at the same rate.

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V. Newtonian Mechanics20

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Isaac Newton21

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Isaac Newton (1642-1727) was born the same year that Galileo died and is considered by many to be the greatest physicist ever.

Newton reaffirmed Galileo’s findings about motion.

He went on to explain the relation of force to the resulting motion and how objects interact.

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VI. After Newton: Electromagnetism

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Benjamin Franklin24

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Although Newton demystified motion and forces and gravity, he left many wonders ofnature unexplained.

Electric charge was one.

American Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)experimented with electricity and explained a great deal of the behavior of electric charge.

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Charles Coulomb26

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Frenchman Charles Coulomb (1736-1806) discovered the law that describes the strength of electric force.

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Alessandro Volta28

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Alessandro Volta (1745-1827), an Italian physicist, put together the first

electric battery.

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George Ohm30

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German Georg Ohm (1787-1854) was the first to publish details of electric circuits.

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Robert Millikan32

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American Robert Millikan (1868-1953) determined that electric charge comes in small, indivisible packets (electrons).

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Hans Orsted34

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Magnetism had mystified many when in 1820, a Danish high school physics teacher by the name of Hans Christian Ørsted (1777-1851) found that electric current created a magnetic effect.

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Michael Faraday36

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Michael Faraday (1791-1867), a brilliant English experimenter with only a grammar school education, found that a moving magnet induces electric current to flow.

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James Clerk Maxwell38

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Based on Ørsted’s and Faraday’s findings, Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell(1831-1879) was able to mathematically unify electricity and magnetism into what hecalled electromagnetism.

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VII. Light40

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What was it made of? Why does it behave as it does?

Newton postulated that light was a stream of particles, or corpuscles. Others argued that light was some sort of wave, like sound.

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Thomas Young42

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The Newtonian view was held by many until 1801, when Thomas Young (1773-1827) conducted an experiment in which light behaved in a way that could not be explained by the particle model, but could be explained in terms of wave phenomena.

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In unifying electricity and magnetism, Maxwell determined that light was a form of electromagnetism: an electromagnetic wave.

However, the argument was not over. With the rise of quantum theory came the wave-particle duality which not only describes electromagnetic radiation as having properties of both waves and particles, but also specifies that all objects—large and small—have wave characteristics

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Erwin Schrodinger45

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Louis de Broglie46

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Much of this work is credited to Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger (1887-1961) and French physicist Louis de Broglie (1892-1987).

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VIII. Relativity48

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Until 1881, physicists believed that there was a substance that pervaded the universe called Ether.

Ether was thought to be the stuff through which electromagnetic waves traveled (in the same sense that sound waves travel through air).

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Albert Michelson50

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Edward Morley51

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In 1881, however, American physicist Albert Michelson (1852-1931) and chemist Edward Morley (1838-1923) conducted a clever experiment that showed that Ether did not exist.

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Albert Einstein53

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German-born American physicist Albert Einstein’s (1879-1955) Theory of Relativity is based, somewhat, on the fact that Ether does not exist.

It had previously been thought that the earth was a body that moved through the Ether, which was at rest in an absolute sense.

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A fundamental principle of relativity is that there is no absolute frame of reference that isat rest.

For example, you may think you are motionless right now; but you are moving on a spinning earth, which also moves around the sun, which is a star moving around the hub of the Milky Way galaxy, which is moving through space as the universe expands.

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Most importantly, relativity explains that mass and energy are two forms of the same thing, and even gives the mathematical relationship of the two in the most famous equation of the twentieth century:

E = mc2.

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IX. Quantum Theory57

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Max Planck58

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It seemed that the energy in the light did not increase or decrease in a smooth, continuous manner, but rather it increased or decreased in steps, as if the energy came in discrete packets.

Planck called these tiny energy packets quanta and suggested that all light was emitted in specific numbers of quanta.

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Many physicists scoffed, but Einstein accepted it and in 1905 advanced quantum theory by contending that light was also absorbed in discrete quanta.

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Neils Bohr61

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The next advance in quantum theory came in 1913 when Danish physicist and former member of the championship All-Danish soccer team, Neils Bohr (1885-1962), advanceda model of the Hydrogen atom based on the new quantum theory.

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Bohr’s model of the atom replaced the classical Rutherford atom, which depicts the atom as a miniature solar system with a nucleus at the center and electrons circling outside.

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Quantum mechanics do not fix cars, or even quantums; rather it is a field in whichquantum principles are applied to the inner workings of atoms.

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Wolfgang Pauli65

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One of the accomplishments in quantum mechanics is the Pauli exclusion principle, advanced by Austrian physicist Wolfgang Pauli (1900-1958) in 1925.

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The Pauli Exclusion Principle excludes two electrons in the same atom from having the same four quantum characteristics.

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Werner Heisenberg68

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Another famous finding of quantum mechanics is the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. In1927, Werner Heisenberg (1901-1976) of Germany stated that it is impossible to knowboth the position and speed of an electron at the same time.

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Any method of measuring the electron’s position would change the electron’s speed; measuring the electron’s speed alters its position.

It is as if you walked into a dark room with a flashlight, looking for your car keys. But as soon as the light from your flashlight hits an object, the object is blown out of its position as if struck with a great force. You spot the car keys, but immediately they are blasted across the room to a new position.

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X. The Grand Unification71

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Among the few “rules of the universe” are the rules regarding the four fundamental forces: gravity, electromagnetism, nuclear weak and nuclear strong.

A Grand Unified Theory (GUT) is one that shows how all four descended from a “superforce” that existed only in the earliest stage of the big bang.

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Remember that Maxwell had unified what had beenthought were two separate forces: electricity and magnetism.

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Abdus Salam74

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Sheldon Glashow75

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Steven Weinberg76

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Recently, Pakistani Abdus Salam (1926- ) and Americans Sheldon Glashow (1932- ) and Steven Weinberg (1933- ) have advanced a theory connecting electromagnetism and the weak nuclear force into the “electroweak” force.

Unifying the other forces with gravity seems to be the most difficult hurdle in GUT thinking today.

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So there you have it, a quick tour through the history of physics. It is by no means comprehensive; many exciting aspects were left out, but it does cover the central advancesin our understanding of the universe.

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Regarding the caveman’s questions in section I, ourunderstanding of physics in the field of atmospheric science and meteorology allow us to understand and predict weather patterns.

We have long since understood the planetarymechanics that result in night and day.

Advances in the science of biology, which is basedin chemistry, which is based in physics, have led us to an understanding of biological processes and medicine.

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The ultimate goal of physics is to understand completely how the universe works.

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THE END.


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