- Related Topics:
- physical science
The process of dissection was early taken to its limit in the kinetic theory of gases, which in its modern form essentially started with the suggestion of the Swiss mathematician Daniel Bernoulli (in 1738) that the pressure exerted by a gas on the walls of its container is the sum of innumerable collisions by individual molecules, all moving independently of each other. Boyle’s law—that the pressure exerted by a given gas is proportional to its density if the temperature is kept constant as the gas is compressed or expanded—follows immediately from Bernoulli’s assumption that the mean speed of the molecules is determined by temperature alone. Departures from Boyle’s law require for their explanation the assumption of forces between the molecules. It is very difficult to calculate the magnitude of these forces from first principles, but reasonable guesses about their form led Maxwell (1860) and later workers to explain in some detail the variation with temperature of thermal conductivity and viscosity, while the Dutch physicist Johannes Diederik van der Waals (1873) gave the first theoretical account of the condensation to liquid and the critical temperature above which condensation does not occur.
The first quantum mechanical treatment of electrical conduction in metals was provided in 1928 by the German physicist Arnold Sommerfeld, who used a greatly simplified model in which electrons were assumed to roam freely (much like non-interacting molecules of a gas) within the metal as if it were a hollow container. The most remarkable simplification, justified at the time by its success rather than by any physical argument, was that the electrical force between electrons could be neglected. Since then, justification—without which the theory would have been impossibly complicated—has been provided in the sense that means have been devised to take account of the interactions whose effect is indeed considerably weaker than might have been supposed. In addition, the influence of the lattice of atoms on electronic motion has been worked out for many different metals. This development involved experimenters and theoreticians working in harness; the results of specially revealing experiments served to check the validity of approximations without which the calculations would have required excessive computing time.
These examples serve to show how real problems almost always demand the invention of models in which, it is hoped, the most important features are correctly incorporated while less-essential features are initially ignored and allowed for later if experiment shows their influence not to be negligible. In almost all branches of mathematical physics there are systematic procedures—namely, perturbation techniques—for adjusting approximately correct models so that they represent the real situation more closely.
Recasting of basic theory
Newton’s laws of motion and of gravitation and Coulomb’s law for the forces between charged particles lead to the idea of energy as a quantity that is conserved in a wide range of phenomena (see below Conservation laws and extremal principles). It is frequently more convenient to use conservation of energy and other quantities than to start an analysis from the primitive laws. Other procedures are based on showing that, of all conceivable outcomes, the one followed is that for which a particular quantity takes a maximum or a minimum value—e.g., entropy change in thermodynamic processes, action in mechanical processes, and optical path length for light rays.
General observations
The foregoing accounts of characteristic experimental and theoretical procedures are necessarily far from exhaustive. In particular, they say too little about the technical background to the work of the physical scientist. The mathematical techniques used by the modern theoretical physicist are frequently borrowed from the pure mathematics of past eras. The work of Augustin-Louis Cauchy on functions of a complex variable, of Arthur Cayley and James Joseph Sylvester on matrix algebra, and of Bernhard Riemann on non-Euclidean geometry, to name but a few, were investigations undertaken with little or no thought for practical applications.
The experimental physicist, for his part, has benefited greatly from technological progress and from instrumental developments that were undertaken in full knowledge of their potential research application but were nevertheless the product of single-minded devotion to the perfecting of an instrument as a worthy thing-in-itself. The developments during World War II provide the first outstanding example of technology harnessed on a national scale to meet a national need. Postwar advances in nuclear physics and in electronic circuitry, applied to almost all branches of research, were founded on the incidental results of this unprecedented scientific enterprise. The semiconductor industry sprang from the successes of microwave radar and, in its turn, through the transistor, made possible the development of reliable computers with power undreamed of by the wartime pioneers of electronic computing. From all these, the research scientist has acquired the means to explore otherwise inaccessible problems. Of course, not all of the important tools of modern-day science were the by-products of wartime research. The electron microscope is a good case in point. Moreover, this instrument may be regarded as a typical example of the sophisticated equipment to be found in all physical laboratories, of a complexity that the research-oriented user frequently does not understand in detail, and whose design depended on skills he rarely possesses.
It should not be thought that the physicist does not give a just return for the tools he borrows. Engineering and technology are deeply indebted to pure science, while much modern pure mathematics can be traced back to investigations originally undertaken to elucidate a scientific problem.