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Haphazard Reality: Half a Century of Science (Amsterdam Academic Archive) PDF

375 Pages·2010·4.94 MB·English
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AUP -Casimir AAA:AUP /Crombag AAA 02-07-2010 14:06 Pagina 1 Casimir, himself a famous physicist, studied and worked with three great physi- H cists of the twentieth century: Niels Bohr, Wolfgang Pauli and Paul Ehrenfest.In .B . his autobiography, the brilliant theoretician lets the reader witness the revolu- G . tion that led to quantum physics, whose influence on modern society turned C a out to be many times larger than the first atomic physicists could have imag- s i H.B.G. Casimir m ined. i r H Through his involvement in the technical-scientific and the business aspects of a physics, through management positions at Philips Research Laboratory and as a p Haphazard Reality h member of the Board of Directors of Philips, Professor Casimir is the ideal per- a z son to place half a century of developments in physics within the context of a r d important events in the world. R e a Half a Century Hendrik Brugt Gerhard Casimir (1909-2000) was a Dutch physicist who became l i t well-known for his important model for superconductivity (with Cor Gorter, y of Science 1934), the Casimir effect (with Dirk Polder, 1948) and the Casimir-operator in quantum mechanics. The Amsterdam Academic Archive is an initiative of Amsterdam University with a new preface by Press. The series consists of scholarly titles which were no longer available, but frans saris which are still in demand in the Netherlands and abroad. Relevant sections of these publications can also be found in the repository of Amsterdam University Press: www.aup.nl/repository. 3 a Amsterdam University Press 3 a Amsterdam Academic Archive 9 789089 642004 voorwerk Casimir AAA:voorwerk Crombag AAA 28-05-2010 15:05 Pagina i haphazard reality voorwerk Casimir AAA:voorwerk Crombag AAA 28-05-2010 15:05 Pagina ii The Amsterdam Academic Archive is an initiative of Amsterdam University Press. The series consists of scholarly titles which were no longer available, but which are still in demand in the Netherlands and abroad. Relevant sections of these publications can also be found in the repository of Amsterdam University Press: www.aup.nl/repository. At the back of this book there is a list of all AAA titles published so far. voorwerk Casimir AAA:voorwerk Crombag AAA 28-05-2010 15:06 Pagina iii H.B.G. Casimir Haphazard Reality Half a Century of Science with a new preface by frans saris 3 a Amsterdam Academic Archive voorwerk Casimir AAA:voorwerk Crombag AAA 28-05-2010 15:06 Pagina iv Haphazard Reality. Half a Century of Scienceby H.B.G. Casimir was first published [in English] in 1983 by Harper & Row Publishers, New York (isbn0-06-015028-9). Cover design: René Staelenberg, Amsterdam isbn978 90 8964 200 4 nur911 © 2010 Heirs H.B.G. Casimir / Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the written permission of both the copyright owner and the author of the book. voorwerk Casimir AAA:voorwerk Crombag AAA 28-05-2010 15:06 Pagina v in the science technology spiral Hendrik Casimir was famous for his speeches; he loved to tell witty anecdotes about the many people he knew, to make his audience laugh or at least smile. But Casimir did not like to pose for photographers, he did not even smile. In the picture on the back cover of his memoirs, Haphazard Reality,he looks away from the lens with a cau- tious expression, shy perhaps, friendly yes, but not pleased. His memoirs are worthwhile for at least three reasons: he was born into the age of physics, and he liked to tell hilarious stories about his fellow scientists and friends; he presents an original view of the interaction between science and technology; but most striking is his serious somberness about our future. He had an angel watching over him. On his first birthday in 1910, his father gave him a philosophy book as a present with the dedication: “This book will be old by the time you can read / but the searching of the mind is eternal indeed”. His father, a schoolteacher and later a professor in pedagogy at Leiden University, was the founder of the first ‘Nederlandsch Lyceum’and already a famous figure in the Netherlands. When Hendrik started studying physics at Leiden in 1926, helped by no one less than Ehrenfest and Lorentz, friends of his father’s, the spectacular developments in his subject had already begun. With Ehrenfest he also met Einstein for the first time: “Whenever I heard him speak and met him at colloquia, I was of course always duly impressed.” Hendrik got to know more famous physicists, such as the Nobel prize winners Paul Dirac, Max Planck and Wolfgang Pauli, who also shaped his career. After he graduated, Ehrenfest took him along to Copenhagen, to the institute of Niels Bohr. “In the life of a young physicist, this is the most important event ever,” Ehrenfest said, and he introduced him to Bohr with: “Er kann schon etwas, aber er braucht noch Prügel.” His father wondered if the man his son was going to work for was really as famous as he had said, so he mailed him a letter addressed to: ‘Casimir, c/o Niels Bohr, Denmark’. Only after the letter had arrived without delay he was con- vinced. The institute of Bohr was an important meeting place for physicists who started their career shortly after quantum mechanics was conceived. There were frequent conferences and other meetings, colloquia and lectures, and ultimately, the institute produced what is now known as the ‘Copenhagen’ interpretation of quantum mechanics. Physicists came from all over the world. Landau worked there for quite some time, as did Dirac, Wilson, Pauli and Gamov. Some stayed only for a short while but returned. “Those were the days,” Casimir remembers, “when every morning brought a noble chance, and every chance brought out a noble knight.” The index of his memoirs contains almost all Nobel prize winners in the middle of the past cen- tury. Casimir was22 when he was awarded his doctorate, and at 30 he was a professor at Leiden University, but he did not think he belonged to the very top. Although the voorwerk Casimir AAA:voorwerk Crombag AAA 28-05-2010 15:06 Pagina vi Casimir effect and Casimir operator are well known in theoretical physics, he used to say: “I have sometimes found a few new things, but I am not such a great physicist that I have added new ways of thinking nor introduced completely new physical ideas....A man like Einstein with his relativity theory or someone like Bohr with his quantized atoms have introduced completely new ideas to physics.” Here Casimir was too modest, I think, for the effect that bears his name is concerned with a new interpretation of the vacuum, which is still so productive that if he were with us today, he would have received the Nobel prize. After Copenhagen and Zürich, where he worked with Wolfgang Pauli, Casimir receiveda call from Leiden. His teacher, Ehrenfest, had taken his own life. But Leiden had become too small for Casimir, and when the Second World War broke out, he made an exceptional move to the Philips Research Laboratories in Eindhoven. “Of course Philips offered many advantages, certainly financially. The universities during and after the war were very poor, whereas at Philips in principle anything was possi- ble. You had a staff of experienced people, you could travel to university labs all over the world almost as much as you liked, and all international journals arrived month- ly on your desk.” In 1943 Heisenberg visited Holland and went for a brisk walk together with Casimir, who still remembered exactly what Heisenberg then said: “da wäre viel- leicht doch ein Europa unter deutscher Führung das kleinere Uebel”. The similarity with Heisenberg’s visit to Bohr in 1942 is astonishing. Casimir was also shocked, but typical of his wisdom, he attributed the statement to his visitor being a genius unable to imagine the effect of his words on others. A mild reaction compared to the accusations by Bohr, or the drama by Michael Frayn in his play Copenhagen. After the war Casimir did not return to the university; the old rooms, the old library were still as before, without any sign of growth or renewal, no money for equipment or travel, no possibilities to receive guest scientists from abroad. At Philips in 1946, Casimir was promoted to Director of the Research Lab, and in 1956 he became a member of the Board. Under his guidance until his retirement in 1972, Philips Research was one of the best research centers in the world. Casimir devoted two chapters of his memoirs to explaining his policy of academic freedom in the industrial research environment. He belonged to those research managers who believed in academic freedom in industry as well, and when asked how to manage science in industry, he categorically answered: “Don’t even try.” Of course, it helped that in those days Philips earned its leading position with technological innovations such as the television tube and micro-electronics. “In my personal affairs, I was throughout my life an equally bad executive. Fortu- nately, my wife is far more competent than I in financial and other practical matters, so at home I left such things to her. This was well known in the laboratory....” Casimir writes, “Once a technician had asked for a form and was waiting while I was writing it out. ‘What is the date?’ I asked, and he said, ‘Twenty-second’ – and added, voorwerk Casimir AAA:voorwerk Crombag AAA 28-05-2010 15:06 Pagina vii to tease me about not knowing the date, ‘February 1938’. By that time I had arrived at the signature, and reacting to his teasing, I asked, ‘And what is the name, please?’ The answer came promptly, ‘Mr Jonker’ – my wife’s maiden name.” Reflecting on industry and science after the war, Casimir takes sides in the discus- sions on the contradictions between fundamental and applied research, and he comes up with an original synthesis. First, he distinguishes three models: 1) science and technology develop completely independently; 2) although scientists don’t care about technology, they still contribute; 3) progress in technology and science is in the hands of the military-industrial complex. Next, he dismisses all three, for it is undeniable that technology uses scientific results, even though it may take a consid- erable amount of time; and progress in science depends on technology, and since the invention of the computer, this is no longer limited to experimental work. Scientists are usually eager to use new technology; by definition, they are ‘first movers’. Thus, Casimir introduces the ‘science and technology spiral’: technology makes use of sci- entific results, albeit with a time lag; science makes use of technology without any time lag. Consistent with his own management philosophy, this science and tech- nology spiral is not managed by anybody or anything. “I might have ended my book here,” Casimir writes in his memoirs. If he had done so, his book would still have been worthwhile, but in that case it would have drawn nowhere near the publicity and attention it got from the scientific community and beyond. “As a scientist and industrial research manager, I have good reason to be proud of the achievements of science and technology,” Casimir writes, “but as a citizen of my country, as a citizen of the world, as a human being, I am profoundly worried rather than pleased.” Many colleagues were astonished by these words from such a great sci- entist, some were upset or even hurt. How could a leading scientist, Philips director, and also president of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences and of the Euro- pean Physical Society betray his profession so openly? This was 1983, however, the cold war was still raging, and an enormous number of nuclear weapons and cruise missiles hung above our heads like the sword of Damo- cles. One mistake could set the whole world on fire and finish off all life on earth. At the spring meeting of the Dutch Physical Society, Casimir said in connection with the energy crisis: “Our society is not civilized enough for nuclear energy.” And in a special issue for the 150thanniversary of the Dutch literary journal De Gids, of which he was an editor, he wrote about a brave archeologist who would dare to start dig- ging in the “radioactive remains of our society” in a hundred years’time. Casimir signed petitions against the Star Wars plans of the USA, and many concerned scien- tists followed. He opened our eyes to the uncontrolled industrial developments and warned about the long-term effects on climate change. This was the start of the ques- tioning of the unlimited consumption in Western society, and to his dismay Casimir saw a new numb generation hanging in front of the Philips TV. voorwerk Casimir AAA:voorwerk Crombag AAA 28-05-2010 15:06 Pagina viii Science and technology were blamed for all evil. No wonder Casimir was worried, he was convinced that the science and technology spiral had its own dynamics and was not managed by anybody! In his eyes, we were prisoners of the science and tech- nology spiral. The last lines of his book read thus: “We should not let science and technology become our masters instead of our tools.” The cold war is over, the hydrogen bomb has not been used in contrast to all expectations, and the first cruise missiles have already been dismantled, but for Casimir that would not have been enough to look more pleased on the cover of the reprint of his masterpiece. Frans W. Saris 28 February 2010 Contents Preface to the Series ix Author's Preface xi Introduction 1 1. Family Background and Schooldays 4 Family Background 4 The Origin of Our Family Name 17 Schooldays 18 Hendrik Antoon Lorentz 22 2. Development of Physics 26 Introduction 26 Nineteenth-Century Physics 27 Atomic Physics Before 1900 33 The Reality of Atoms 39 Inadequacy of Classical Theory 46 Quantum Mechanics 51 3. Early Years at Leiden 57 Ehrenfest and Pauli 82 4. Copenhagen 88 Niels Bohr 88 Bohr and Genetics 99

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Casimir, himself a famous physician, studied and worked with three great physicists of the twentieth century: Niels Bohr, Wolfgang Pauli and Paul Ehrenfest. In his autobiography, the brilliant theoretician lets the reader witness the revolution that led to quantum physics, whose influence on modern
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