Max Planck and Quantum Physics in the 1920s

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Nice video! 1900 -- 1950 really were exciting times for physicist... Old-fashioned ideals, crazy ideas, mistakes, irrational stupidity, war time, unspeakable crimes, terrible tragedy and a final dreadful success that begs the question. Planck's biography is like a sad story that connects everything. It seems to begin with a man that believes in patriotism and noble ideals and has him experience the madness born from those ideals that -- in their terrible conclusion -- take everything from him. Even if my summary is overly dramatized there still seems to be a lesson to learn here.

👍︎︎ 60 👤︎︎ u/clfcrw 📅︎︎ May 24 2020 🗫︎ replies

I love when physics overlaps to other fields like economics and even politics! Keep on working on stuff like this. While I am a physics major, I found it incredible when scientific discoveries prompted thinkers to re evaluate how we conceive society. Off the top of my head: Newton with action and effect, causality and the notion that the heavens are reigned by the same physical laws we have and also, after the industrial revolution, thermodynamics was suddenly useful. People started to use thermodynamical systems as a simplified version of society, look up how Marx and thermodynamics are related.

It makes me ponder on whether there will be a point where society and human behaviour can be accurately modeled by a physical principle. Science affects science (of course) but it also affects other fields, sometimes the philosophical implications of the discoveries can be as interesting if not more so than the discovery itself.

👍︎︎ 36 👤︎︎ u/leopancho 📅︎︎ May 24 2020 🗫︎ replies

You are awesome! Your videos are beyond compare.

👍︎︎ 13 👤︎︎ u/bigmp466 📅︎︎ May 24 2020 🗫︎ replies

Looking forward to the third installment, very interested in hearing more details about the famous meeting between Planck and Hitler in 1933.

👍︎︎ 8 👤︎︎ u/mofo69extreme 📅︎︎ May 24 2020 🗫︎ replies

Question: do you teach physics? If so, what level/courses do you teach?

Great video, I’ll be sure to look out for more

👍︎︎ 7 👤︎︎ u/PhascinatingPhysics 📅︎︎ May 24 2020 🗫︎ replies

I really enjoyed the video!

👍︎︎ 6 👤︎︎ u/ScottKansas 📅︎︎ May 24 2020 🗫︎ replies

Many Max Planck Institutes named after him through out Germany under Max Planck society continue to produce excellent research in many fields. The legacy lives on!

👍︎︎ 5 👤︎︎ u/[deleted] 📅︎︎ May 24 2020 🗫︎ replies

Nice video, your script and delivery has the flavor of Connections by James Burke. Very well done!

👍︎︎ 7 👤︎︎ u/[deleted] 📅︎︎ May 25 2020 🗫︎ replies

I recently started reading a collection of Planck's writings called "Scientific Autobiograhpy and Other Papers" (available in print and ebook) Not far in but I'm pretty wowwed!

👍︎︎ 5 👤︎︎ u/Albion_Tourgee 📅︎︎ May 24 2020 🗫︎ replies
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- When we think about the historical contribution of Max Planck, we usually think about how he invented the whole idea of quantum energy in 1900. But we often ignore how Max Planck was at the center of the wild revolution in physics in the 1920s. He often financially supported, and sometimes morally supported, and sometimes restrained the work of Albert Einstein, Werner Heisenberg, Max Born, Lise Meitner, James Frank, Erwin Schrodinger and more. Way, way more. I contend that all of this happened in the 1920s because of Max Planck's political actions in World War I, and his personal tragedies around the same time, which made him a pariah in international circles, and truly beloved and powerful in German circles. Ready for the story? Let's go. ♪ Electricity, electricity ♪ ♪ Electricity, electricity ♪ When World War I started, Max Planck was 56 years old and the father of four children, from his first wife Maria, who died from tuberculosis five years earlier. 26 year old Karl, 25 year old twins, Emma and Grete, and 21 year old Erwin, and his second wife, Marga, was pregnant with his fifth child. Max Planck was admired and respected by almost everyone who knew him. For example, the physicist Lise Meitner, who had traveled to Berlin in 1907 specifically to study under Planck, and became his assistant in 1913, said that Planck, quote: was such a wonderful person that when he entered the room, the air of the room got better. Also, before the start of the war in 1913, Max Planck was instrumental in getting 35 year old Albert Einstein a position in Berlin, working to create a new section of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Theoretical Physics, just for Einstein. Einstein was happy about the move, because it meant working near Planck, being near his girlfriend/cousin, Elsa, and living near his very good friend, the chemist, Fritz Haber. Once in Berlin, Einstein, Planck, and Haber all became very close. Surprisingly, this closeness between Einstein, Planck, and Haber, did not diminish with the outbreak of World War I. I say it was surprising because Planck, like almost all of his German compatriots, welcomed the outbreak of World War I. And was pleased that his two sons volunteered for the military and his daughters joined the Red Cross. Planck wrote his sister: what a glorious time we are living in; it is a great feeling to be able to call oneself a German. Fritz Haber was even more moved by patriotic fervor, and immediately turned to using his chemical expertise from the development of nitrogen fertilizer, which saved millions of lives, to the production of munitions, and then became the father of chemical weapons, with the invention and deployment of chlorine gas. Einstein, on the other hand, was actively against the war, and very upset with this madness taking over his friends, and his workplace. It wasn't long into the war when reports that Germany had violated a treaty by attacking Belgium, killing, raping, and enslaving thousands, reached Berlin. However, Planck and other German intellectuals thought it was propaganda, and in September of 1914, Planck and Haber added their names to a long list of prominent scientists that denied Germany started the war, or even caused the harm to the life and property of a single Belgian citizen, except out of self-defense. Einstein was disgusted, and was not only one of the few prominent scientists not to sign the manifesto, but also co-wrote a rebuttal. The pro-war letter that Planck signed was published with a feeling of great patriotic acclaim in Germany, but it also created great disgust and revulsion among the Allies. Soon, Planck's Dutch friend, Hendrik Lorentz, who he met at the first Solvey Conference, started sending him accounts of the terrors of the German occupation. Planck started to admit things were happening that do not, quote: conduce to the honor of Germans. By 1916, Planck wrote an open letter to Lorentz, slightly backtracking on his previous signing of the declaration, saying that he, quote: noticed with distress that it gave rise to incorrect ideas about the feelings of its signers. That same year, Planck's feelings about the war became more personal. His younger adult son Erwin was captured by the French, and his older son Karl was killed in action. And Planck tried to focus on his teaching and research, but it wasn't easy; the winter of 1916, 1917, was particularly brutal, and a student named Gabriele Rabel recalled: we were without coal. Indeed, some universities had completely closed their doors, but in Berlin, teachers and students kept on their overcoats and plodded ahead. Each day, Planck made a little speech, encouraging us to endure. When Planck once asked if he should delay class for the weather, he was overjoyed to learn that his students wanted to keep on going, no matter what. Planck's happiness and pride at our devotion, and the childlike candor with which he expressed his joy, was overwhelming, and whatever hearts had not flown to him before were conquered now. Then, tragedy struck again. In May of 1917, Planck's daughter, Grete, died in childbirth to a daughter they called Grete in her honor. Planck was devastated. He wrote Einstein, quote: I must tell you that I still feel physically incapable of work these days. My grief over my daughter, who passed away in my arms last week, still gnaws too persistently at my thoughts for them to be able to exert their normal freedom of action. In February of 1918, to improve Planck's mood, Einstein arranged a big birthday celebration for Planck's birthday in April. Quote: because I'm very fond of Planck, and he will certainly be pleased when he sees how much we all like him, and how highly everyone regards his life work. Planck enjoyed the celebration, but the good feeling didn't last long, because in November of that year, 1918, Germany lost the war. And Germany was thrust into chaos and economic free-fall. Although Planck's younger son Erwin was released from captivity. Then, more tragedy. I know! In November of the following year, 1919, Planck's other daughter, Emma, who had moved in with her brother in law, to take care of her orphan niece, and fell in love with her brother in law, got married, she died in childbirth. Einstein said that, quote: I could not hold back my tears when I visited Planck; his aching pain shows through. Planck wrote Lorentz: now I mourn both my dearly beloved children in bitter sorry, and feel robbed and impoverished. There have been times when I doubted the value of life, itself. Despite the personal tragedy going on around him, Planck's professional life was at its pinnacle. Because just as he was finding out about his second daughter's death, he also learned that he was awarded the 1918 Nobel Prize. They gave the award a year late, for his discovery of energy quanta. Planck's birthday celebration is considered a big part of the reason that Planck was finally receiving the recognition he deserved, and one physicist, Arnold Summerfield, actually re-used his speech for the birthday party in his recommendation for a Nobel Prize. Fritz Haber went with Planck to Sweden that same year, as he won the Nobel Prize for chemistry for his production of nitrogen fertilizer, causing mass protests and a melding of Planck's accomplishments with Haber's chemical weapons in many people's minds. The immediate post-war years were very hard. There were food shortages, transit strikes, riots, and an inflation out of control. In addition, all German scientists, with the exception of Einstein, were hated by the international community. For signing the manifesto, and for facilitating chemical warfare. For example, Einstein was the only german scientist to be invited to the Solvey Conference of 1921 and 1924. He didn't go out of solidarity. Knowing how much they were struggling in 1920, Planck got together with Fritz Haber and created an emergency association of German science to collect money from industry and government, and keep German science afloat. Planck made sure a significant portion of the money went to theoretical research in physics. Even though industry and government saw very little use for it at the time. Because two well-known, Nobel Prize winners were collecting money, and one of them was arguably history's most influential chemist, they're pretty successful. One of Planck's and Haber's first acts was inviting the Danish man, Niels Bohr, to a talk in Berlin in April of 1920. Bohr was too excited about the opportunity of meeting Planck and Einstein to refuse. And he ended up forming many close friendships. Bohr called his conversations with Einstein the greatest experience he ever had. The Germans were overjoyed with Bohr's visit, and a scientist named George de Hevesy recalled that he had never experienced an ovation similar to that given to Bohr in Berlin. Young and old celebrated him with complete conviction and enthusiasm. Lise Meitner felt a little jealous about all the professors dominating Bohr's time, so she asked Planck if she could have an afternoon without big-wigs, and he agreed. It was at this luncheon, where Bohr became very close to many up and coming scientists, including James Frank. I mention Frank in particular, because in November of 1920, Frank became a professor at the University of Gottingen. At the request of his friend, Max Born, who was just made the chair. And soon there was a revolving door of students, visitors, and ideas between the scientists at Gottingen and Bohr's newly-formed Institute of Theoretical Physics in Copenhagen, now called The Niels Bohr Institute. Meanwhile, Albert Einstein's life was changing drastically, with major implications not just for him, but for the entire world. See, a few months before Max Planck's second daughter's death, in May of 1919, an English scientist named Arthur Eddington photographed an eclipse and proved that the stars near the sun were deviated from their path by the mass of the sun, just as Einstein predicted by general relativity. The papers went crazy, and soon Einstein was the most famous scientist in the world. The burgeoning Nazi movement started to focus on Einstein, because he was a pacifist, he was Jewish, and he was helped by an English scientist. A trifecta of things that Nazis did not like. In August of 1920, a Nazi named Paul Weyland announced the series of 20 lectures against relativity. Quote: for the preservation of pure science. When Planck heard about this, he called it: scarcely believable filth. But was surprised to learn that there were many legitimate scientists who objected to relativity, led by the Nobel Prize winners, Philipp Lenard, and Johannes Stark. Planck, who was the first scientist to promote Einstein's relativity, way back in 1905, decided to host a debate between Lenard and Einstein, in September of 1920. Planck ensured that this happened without drama, but he also did not seem to change anyone's mind. Einstein flirted heavily with leaving Germany, and was given many offers, but he didn't accept them out of a desire no to disappoint Planck. In 1922, Einstein accepted the Nobel Prize awarded for the previous year, and Planck limited Einstein's duties to a bare minimum. One lecture a year to keep him in Berlin. Which did nothing to squash the anti-Einstein, anti-relativity, antisemitic faction. By 1924, Lenard and Stark were publishing a public manifesto proclaiming their devotion to Hitler as a, quote: gift to God from a long, darkened earlier time, when races were sill pure. Bleh! Meanwhile, Planck was still supporting theoretical physicists in Germany, irrespective of whether they were Jewish or not. For example, in 1921, Planck began the process to have Lise Meitner become a paid instructor of physics in Berlin, leading to her becoming the first female professor in Germany. Within a year, she discovered the Auger effect, which is named after the French, male scientist, who discovered it after her. Planck also financially supported Max Born and James Frank at the University of Gottingen. Fun fact: Max Born coined the term "quantum mechanics" in 1924. Anyway, in 1922, Born and Frank invited Niels Bohr to give a series of lectures, and a 21 year old wunderkind named Werner Heisenberg went and was inspired. Three years later, in 1925, Heisenberg was Max Born's assistant, and he came up with this idea of using matrix mathematics to describe how electrons behave. Heisenberg went to Born and told him that he'd written a, quote/unquote: crazy paper. And he didn't dare send it in for publication on his own. Luckily, Born was incredibly impressed. And Max Born, Werner Heisenberg, and a fellow scientist named Pascual Jordan published a series of papers that arguably marked the beginning of modern equations and theories of quantum mechanics. Planck gloated: quantum mechanics is the center of interest in all countries, and just there in the work of Heisenberg and Born, which the committee has supported, it is clear how useful the committee has already been for the development of physics in Germany. At almost the same time, an Austrian scientist named Erwin Schrodinger created a wave equation for quantum mechanics. Planck wrote Schrodinger, quote: I'm reading your paper as an excited child listens to the answer to a riddle that has long perplexed it. Heisenberg, however, was not a fan. He called his paper disgusting, and worried that his matrix theory would be discarded for Schrodinger's far easier wave theory. In 1926, Heisenberg went to Copenhagen to study with Niels Bohr. There, in February of 1927, while trying to create a quantum theory without waves or particles, Heisenberg ended up realizing the position and momentum, mass times speed, are linked. And that the more precisely you measure one property, the less accurately you can measure the other property, in what is called: the uncertainty principle. Planck and Schrodinger and Einstein and others, hated the uncertainty principle, which Planck called the ominous relation of Heisenberg's. Planck stated that Heisenberg's uncertainty principle creates, quote: an unacceptable limitation of the freedom of thought, and a mutilation of the main instrument with which the theorist must work. Around this time, the Solvey Committee decided there are too many exciting ideas coming out of Germany, and they remove their anti-German embargo. And most other conferences followed suit. Also in 1927, Planck invited Schrodinger to Berlin, and for the next five years, the Berlin view of quantum mechanics, led by Schrodinger and supported by Einstein and Planck and more, was in direct debate with the Copenhagen view, led by Heisenberg and supported by Bohr and Born, and more. Despite his dislike of the uncertainty principle, Planck continued to mentor and support Heisenberg and Born and many other people who followed the Copenhagen view. However, soon outside politics would take over. And destroy everything that Planck held dear. And that story is next time on The Lightning Tamers. Whew, so that was my second part out of three of my biography of Max Planck. I really do find him fascinating and I hope you do as well. Please, if you haven't checked out the first video, you should definitely check it out, and if you're interested in other parts of history of science, I have a lot of videos. So, feel free to check them out, share them on social media, give me thumbs up; I love all of that. Just putting a comment on the bottom really helps me out, so that would be great. If you wanna do more, you can become one of my patrons. Oh, thank you patrons! There's a link down below. Anyway, have a good day; thanks! I'm gonna go with: Gottingen. And it's gonna be wrong. And then I'm gonna have to apologize.
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Channel: Kathy Loves Physics & History
Views: 52,661
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Max Planck, History of Quantum, Heisenberg, Lise Meitner, World War 1, Great War, Schrodinger, History of Science
Id: wdeX8FQY-Po
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 18min 8sec (1088 seconds)
Published: Sun May 24 2020
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