The
Quantum and the Cosmos
"Of all the communities available to us there is not
one I would want to devote myself to, except for the society
of the true searchers, which has very few living members at
any time."
In 1916 Einstein devised an improved
fundamental statistical theory of heat, embracing the quantum
of energy. His theory predicted that as light passed through
a substance it could stimulate the emission of more light.
This effect is at the heart of the modern laser (Light Amplification
by Stimulated Emission of Radiation).
This theory was further developed by
the Indian physicist S.N. Bose. He sent a draft paper to Einstein,
who was inspired to develop a still more general approach.
The terms stimulation and cooperative phenomena, used in laser
physics, could describe the discovery process as well.
By the 1920s most physicists had realized
that their familiar mechanics, developed over centuries by
Newton and many others, could not fully describe the world
of atoms. Physics had to be rebuilt to take into account the
fundamental discreteness of energy that was first pointed
out by Planck and Einstein. Einstein himself contributed a
number of key ideas to the developing quantum theory. But
through the early 1920s much in quantum theory remained obscure.
Beginning in 1925 a bold new quantum
theory emerged, the creation of a whole generation of theoretical
physicists from many nations. Soon scientists were vigorously
debating how to interpret the new quantum mechanics. Einstein
took an active part in these discussions. Heisenberg, Bohr,
and other creators of the theory insisted that it left no
meaningful way open to discuss certain details of an atom's
behavior. For example, one could never predict the precise
moment when an atom would emit a quantum of light. Einstein
could not accept this lack of certainty and he raised one
objection after another. At the Solvay Conferences of 1927
and 1930 the debate between Bohr and Einstein went on day
and night, neither man conceding defeat.
"Quantum mechanics is certainly
imposing. But an inner voice tells me that it is not yet the
real thing. The theory says a lot, but does not really bring
us closer to the secret of the 'Old One.' I, at any rate,
am convinced that He is not playing at dice."
By the mid 1930s, Einstein had accepted
quantum mechanics as a consistent theory for the statistics
of the behavior of atoms. He recognized that it was "the
most successful physical theory of our time." This theory,
which he had helped to create, could explain nearly all the
physical phenomena of the everyday world. Eventually the applications
would include transistors, lasers, a new chemistry, and more.
Yet Einstein could not accept quantum mechanics as a completed
theory, for its mathematics did not describe individual events.
Einstein felt that a more basic theory, one that could completely
describe how each individual atom behaved, might yet be found.
By following the approach of his own general theory of relativity,
he hoped to dig deeper than quantum mechanics. The search
for a deeper theory was to occupy much of rest of his life. |