Total Number of Books in Collection Library : 127

 

Page number: 11
 

Boltzmanns Atom : The Great Debate That Launched A Revolution In Physics

Author: David Lindley
ISBN: 0684851865
Publisher: Free Press         Place:
MyRating:
Format: Hardcover         # Pages: 272
Reader Rating: 4.29 (7 votes)
Release: 2001
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Summary: Born in Austria and something of a bumpkin by nature, the 19th-century physicist Ludwig Boltzmann did not fit in easily in the highly cultured German universities in which he taught for many years. To add to his difficulties, he stirred up controversy by proposing that scientists could make intelligent guesses about the behaviour of atoms, which, though they moved randomly, could be described by certain probabilistic generalisations. His suggestion, hinging on novel interpretations of statistical theory, was not immediately acclaimed. "To an audience of physicists raised in the belief that scientific laws ought to encapsulate absolute certainties and unerring rules", writes scientist and journalist David Lindley, "these were profound and disturbing changes".
Opposed by the then influential physicist and philosopher Ernst Mach, who urged that scientists should stick to classical thermodynamics, Boltzmann was hard-pressed to convince his colleagues that the behaviour of atoms could in fact be explained by laws thought to apply only to the gaming table; Mach objected, and with some cause, that "the fact that the theory worked was not enough to prove that the assumptions on which the theory rested were true". It would take the next generation of scientists, among them Albert Einstein, to provide more solid proof for Boltzmann's hunches, and while Mach's contributions to physics have largely been superseded, Boltzmann's endure in quantum mechanics and the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution for the velocities of atoms in a gas. In this lively account, David Lindley tells the story of his many failures, and of his eventual success. --"Gregory McNamee"


 

Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb

Author: Richard Rhodes
ISBN: 0684824140
Publisher: Simon & Schuster         Place:
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Format: Paperback         # Pages: 736
Reader Rating: 4.0 (39 votes)
Release: 1996
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Summary: An engrossing history of the scientific discoveries, political maneuverings, and cold-war espionage leading to the creation of mankind's most destructive weapon.
Includes 94 archival photographs and a glossary with brief descriptions of the hundreds of people interviewed and discussed in the book. Author Richard Rhodes won the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award for his previous atomic tome, The Making of the Atomic Bomb.


 

The Discovery of Subatomic Particles Revised Edition

Author: Steven Weinberg
ISBN: 052182351X
Publisher: Cambridge University Press         Place:
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Format: Hardcover         # Pages: 222
Reader Rating: 5 (1 votes)
Release: 2003
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Summary: I wavered between four or five stars and finally gave the authors, a brilliant scientist, the benefit of the doubt. The book is actually a chronological review of the exploration of the atom. Starting with electricity and the discovery of the electron, we then go on to weighing the atoms to the discovery of the nucleus. A truly fascinating observation of Einstein's work notes that the "energy released by a moving body is larger than when at rest by an amount proportional to the square of its velocity"..e=mc2 was originally expresses as m=e/c2.
After the nucleus we descend further into all the subatomic particles. One must remember that although this book is a revised edition, the 1983 original version seems almost innocent in many of its assumptions. A LONG appendix is provided as much for explanation as for reference.


 

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