corpuscular theory of light

physics

Learn about this topic in these articles:

contribution by Newton

  • Isaac Newton
    In Isaac Newton: Inaugural lectures at Trinity

    …that light consists of material corpuscles in motion. The corpuscular conception of light was always a speculative theory on the periphery of his optics, however. The core of Newton’s contribution had to do with colours. An ancient theory extending back at least to Aristotle held that a certain class of…

    Read More

development of classical radiation theory

  • Photosynthesis
    In electromagnetic radiation: Wave theory and corpuscular theory

    A conceptual difficulty in Newtonian mechanics, however, is the way in which the gravitational force between two massive objects acts over a distance across empty space. Newton did not address this question, but many of his contemporaries hypothesized that the gravitational force was mediated through an invisible and frictionless…

    Read More

origins in Atomism

  • Epicurus
    In atomism: The existence of the void

    …the phenomena of light, the corpuscular and hence atomic theory of Newton, which held that light is made of tiny particles, was adopted almost universally, in spite of Huygens’s brilliant development of the wave hypothesis.

    Read More

place in optics

  • Large Hadron Collider
    In physical science: Optics

    …Euler also rejected Newton’s essentially corpuscular theory of the nature of light by explaining optical phenomena in terms of vibrations in a fluid ether. The dominance of Newton’s theory throughout the 18th century was due partly to its successful direct application by Newton and his followers and partly to the…

    Read More

view of Fresnel