Quantum Physics

   

A Brief History of Quantum-Mechanical Ideas

Authors: Jean Louis Van Belle

In this paper, we pick some less well-known contributions of great minds to the history of ideas from the proceedings of the Solvay Conferences. We hope to show there was nothing inevitable about the new physics winning out. In fact, we suggest modern-day physicists may usefully go back to some of the old ideas – most notably the idea that elementary particles do have some shape and size – and that they should, perhaps, try somewhat harder to explain intrinsic properties of these particles, such as angular momentum and their magnetic moment, in terms of classical physics. The contributions which we discuss are those of Ernest Rutherford, Joseph Larmor, Hendrik Antoon Lorentz and Louis de Broglie.

Comments: 20 Pages.

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Submission history

[v1] 2020-05-03 16:06:43
[v2] 2020-05-04 17:30:04
[v3] 2020-05-05 15:58:02

Unique-IP document downloads: 759 times

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