Essay, Research Paper
Werner Heisenberg, born in the dawn of the twentieth century became one of its greatest physicists; he is also among its most controversial. While still in his early twenties, he was among the handful of bright, young men who created quantum mechanics, the basic physics of the atom, and he became a leader of nuclear physics and elementary particle research. He is best known for his uncertainty principle, a component of the so-called Copenhagen interpretation of the meaning, and uses of quantum mechanics.Through his successful life, he lived through two lost World Wars, Soviet Revolution, military occupation, two republics, political unrest, and Hitler’s Third Reich. He was not a Nazi, and like most scientists of his day he tried not to become involved in politics. He played a prominent role in German nuclear testing during the World War II era. At age twenty-five he received a full professorship and won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1932 at the age of thirty-two. He climbed quickly to the top of his field beginning at the University of Munich when his interest in theoretical physics was sparked Heisenberg was born the son of August Heisenberg in W?rzburg, Germany on December 5, 1901. August Heisenberg was a professor of Greek at the University of Munich. His grandfather was a middle-class craftsman who’s hard work paid enough to afford a good education for August Heisenberg. The successfulness of August Heisenberg allowed him to support his family well. The professorship at the University of Munich put them in the upper middle-class elite, and was paid three times the salary of skilled workers.Through his life Werner Heisenberg was pestered with health problems. At the age of five, he nearly died with a lung infection which helped him get a little preferential treatment from his parents. During his early years, Werner was in constant competition with his brother Erwin which caused friction. The Heisenberg family were accomplished musicians. Every evening they would sit and practice together. August was on the piano, Erwin played the violin, and Werner played the cello. Their mother insisted that she had no musical talent as an excuse to not be involved in the male competition. Later Werner also learned the piano and used his musical talents as a social vehicle during the course of his life. This manly competition carried out in many other activities in the house. Sometimes August Heisenberg would make games out of difficult homework problems that the boys had. Werner once said when reflecting back on his childhood, “Our father used to play all kinds of games with [us] …. And since he was a good teacher, he found that the games could be used for the educating the children. So when my brother had some mathematical problems in his schoolwork …. he tried to use these problems as a kind of game and find out who could do them quickly, and so on. Somehow, I discovered that I could do that kind of mathematics rather quickly, so from that time on I had a special interest in mathematics.” This constant competition caused many fights between the brothers. As they grew older the fights became more vicious. One time the fight became particularly bloody where they beat each other with wooden chairs. After this confrontation the brothers called a truce and hardly interacted with each other except for occasional family get togethers when they were adults. In school, Werner began to show his amazing ability early on. He excelled through school and always received complementary remarks from his teachers. As a result from the competition with his brother he developed a hard work ethic and a strong drive to succeed. Even though Werner was not a good runner he would run around the track timing himself with a stopwatch trying to improve his running times. A teacher of his once said, “The pupil is also extraordinary, self-confident and always wants to excel.” Werner Heisenberg excelled in math, physics, and religion in which he consistently received 1’s (the equivalent of A’s). The subjects that he did not fair as well in were German and Athletics which he usually received 2’s (or B’s). At the age of thirteen one of his teachers noted that his interests were moving to more “physical-technical things”. This change in interests moved Heisenberg along the path from the geometry of objects into the realm of theoretical physics, especially the mathematical analysis of physical objects and data. As a pupil at the Gymnasium, he was intrigued by Einstein’s theory of relativity and it’s explanation. He later recalled that mastering the mathematics in Einstein’s book gave him no difficulty. At the age of sixteen he tutored a 24 year old university calculus student to pass her final examination. Having no previous knowledge in calculus, he set out to teach himself so in turn he could teach the woman(by 1903 women were accepted to study at the University of Munich with the equal opportunities of men). During the three month time period he was able to teach the woman enough to pass her examination. Heisenberg said, “And in that time I didn’t know whether she had learned it, but I certainly had.”In the Summer of 1920 Werner Heisenberg graduated Munich’s Maximiliams-Gymnasium and entered the University of Munich the following Fall. Not yet knowing which field of study he wished to commit to, his father arranged an appointment for Werner with Ferdinand von Lindemann, the professor of mathematics at the University of Munich. When he arrived for the appointment he saw the older professor sitting in his dimly lit office with his poodle hiding under his desk. When Heisenberg began to speak, the dog started to bark. For the duration of the entire conversation, the dog kept yapping. In the brief conversation Lindemann only asked a few questions of Heisenberg, one of which was what books he had been reading. Heisenberg responded with Weyl’s Space, Time and Matter, through the noise of the dog Lindemann closed the conversation with, “In that case you are completely lost in mathematics.” Rejected by Lindemann, Werner’s father decided that he should try his hand in theoretical physics. In his first meeting with Sommerfeld, he also asked Heisenberg which books he had recently been reading. Werner replied with the same answer but Sommerfeld’s response was completely different, saying, “You are too demanding… You can’t possibly start with the most difficult part and hope that the rest will automatically fall into your lap.”The first semester that he attended at the University of Munich, Werner was conscientious not to sign up for too many theoretical physics classes just in case he found out that he was not cut out for it. He took a couple theoretical physics courses and the rest were math classes. By the next semester, it was not an issue anymore and he signed up for all of Sommerfeld’s course offerings. When Heisenberg first devoted himself in Sommerfeld’s department, Sommerfeld was struggling, trying to find an explanation for the behavior of optical spectrums emitted by atoms. When white light is sent through a spectrum, each color corresponds to a different band of frequencies. If the atom if one element are stimulated by heat or high voltage they will emit not an entire spectrum of radiation but only certain colored lines corresponding to certain definite frequencies of light characteristic of that element. One year later, Heisenberg presented his atomic “core model” of complicated atoms that resolved every spectroscopic riddle in one stroke and still saved the phenomena. This model worked only because he disregarded all other previous explanations. This model was way too controversial for widespread acceptance of his theory. In the duration of the first two years that he attended the University of Munich he published four physics research papers, submitting the first one eighteen months after graduating at the Gymnasium. Three of the papers dealt with atomic spectroscopy and one with hydrodynamics. These papers thrust Heisenberg at the ripe age of twenty to the forefront of quantum atomic physics research. This extraordinary achievement was largely due to the marvelous training that he received from his university mentor, physics professor Arnold Sommerfeld who was well respected in his field. Sommerfeld was the first of many men to influence Heisenberg and his research of quantum mechanics. During that time period Bohr-Sommerfeld made a quantum theory of the atom that utilized a puzzling combination of classical and quantum notions that only somewhat seemed to work. By the conclusion of World War I experimental techniques improved and many physicists tried to improve the inadequate theory and overcome its limitations. Heisenberg fully participated in all of these experiments. These new mechanics and its Copenhagen interpretations achieved by the end of 1927 were combined with other innovations such as the electron spin and the exclusion principle. These new innovations opened up the realm of the atom and enabled entirely new and profound advances in understanding all aspects of the physical world, from nuclei and quarks to the big-bang theory which had profound implications for the world in which we live, from philosophy to the technology of nuclear reactors, atomic bombs, semiconductors and superconductivity. Heisenberg played a leading role in many of these developments from the moment he entered the University of Munich as an eighteen year old student. In October of 1921, Heisenberg traveled to Jena for his first physics conference. He was able to briefly meet many top physicists in the world at that time such as Max Planck, and Max von Laue. Unfortunately, to his dismay, Albert Einstein was unable to attend this conference. During the nineteenth century German physicists concerned themselves more with the experimental side of physics such as Newtonian Physics. By the twentieth century the transformation from experimental physics to theoretical physics such as Einstein’s theory of relativity were slowly taking place.Sommerfeld accepted a guest professorship at the University of Wisconsin the second year that Heisenberg attended the University of Munich. With his mentor in the United States, Werner decided to travel to G?tingen to study with Professor Born. While in G?tingen, his parents supported him monetarily while he experienced much more knowledge in the field of theoretical physics. After a while he was offered a job as an assistant with a generous salary of twenty-thousand marks a month. As an example of inflation and political unrest inflation had brought the average wage of a skilled worker twenty years prior from a little over one-thousand marks a year to twenty-thousand a month for a professor’s assistant. In May 1923, Professor Sommerfeld returned to the University of Munich and so did Heisenberg. During Heisenberg’s time in G?tingen Born and Heisenberg did extensive studies on the helium atom. This research yielded a strictly orthodox helium calculation that gained widespread recognition which was the beginning of the end for the earlier successful Bohr-Sommerfeld quantum theory of the atom. They modeled this research off of the Balmer formula for the case of the outer helium electron and treated the excited helium electron the same as a hydrogen electron. After a very successful three years of study at the University of Munich, Heisenberg prepared for his oral examination for his doctorate. The format had four professors to ask four questions on three subjects. These subjects were Math, Astronomy, and Physics. The physics department at the University of Munich was split between experimental physics and theoretical physics and therefore he would be asked two physics questions and would only receive one grade in which both professors would have to agree on. In math Perron gave him a I for his explanation of the mathematical question. Seeliger asked the astronomical question that he received a II. For physics, Sommerfeld, head of theoretical physics, gave Heisenberg a I and Wein, head of experimental physics, gave him a V which is not passing. Heisenberg had had a confrontation with Wein the previous semester when he made his final project for the class out of cigar boxes and cardboard. During the final examination he was biased in his question as well as his grade. The average of his physics score became a III which was fairly disappointing. The final score for Heisenberg’s oral examination was a III which is equaled to a ‘C’ in the American grading system. August Heisenberg was troubled by Werner’s low score and wondered if physics was the correct field for him to be in. Werner shocked by his surprising score and caught a late train to G?tingen. The next morning he appeared in Born’s office. When he left G?tingen he was promised a job the next winter, in Born’s office Heisenberg asked if the job was still out on the table because of his low score on his examination. Born asked what Wein’s question was and they went over it together. Born said that it was a very tricky question and that he could understand his answer.On September 1925 Heisenberg published a fifteen page article with the title “On a Quantum Theoretical Reinterpretation of Kinematic and Mechanical Relations”. The intent of this paper was to establish a basis for theoretical quantum mechanics, founded exclusively on relationships between quantities which in principle, are ob
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