At
the end of the 1800s we finally knew how the universe worked. Newton’s
laws of motion and gravity had been studied for 200 years, and had
become the pinnacle of scientific precision. James Clerk Maxwell had
unified the electricity, magnetism and light into a single elegant
theory, and Darwin’s theory of evolution explained how living things
were connected. There were still mysteries to be explored, but it
seemed the grand structure of the universe was now known. We lived in a
clockwork universe, where cause led to effect, where simple laws
governed complex mechanisms. It was a proven world, as I’ve written
about in an earlier series of posts
At
the time it was generally thought that the nagging mysteries such as
the structure of atoms and the structure of the universe would
eventually come into the Newtonian fold. But they didn’t. Instead,
small mysteries became large ones. The physical laws we thought we
understood didn’t always apply. Understanding atoms and light would
require a radically new way of looking at the universe. Some of the
most cherished scientific ideas of precision and determinism would have
to be discarded or revised. Science would undergo a quantum revolution
Between
1900 and 1950 our understanding of the universe underwent a fundamental
shift from a classical, clockwork universe to a quantum universe of
probabilities and interactions. It was a shift that revealed a universe
that was larger, younger and more profoundly complex than we had
imagined.
This shift can be summarized in six simple equations shown below. Each one was a step toward modern quantum theory.
1. The more you have, the faster it is gone.
2. Sometimes you have to make a quantum leap.
3. Every temperature has a color.
4. Light is a wave, except when it’s not.
5. What you observe depends on how you observe it.
6. There are some things you can never know.
So
this week we’ll look at each of these equations, how we came to
understand them, and how they changed our view of the universe forever.
We’ll start with the first one tomorrow. It describes radioactive
decay, and it was the first clue that certain effects don’t have a
mechanical cause.
The quantum revolution starts tomorrow.
Update: Part 1 can be found here:
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