TheReference

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Anniversaries: Wigner, Néel, Hofstadter

Posted on 12:50 AM by Unknown
On November 17th, I usually dedicated space to the anniversary of the 1989 Velvet Revolution, the beginning of the fall of communism in Czechoslovakia, which occurred on the 50th anniversary of the clash between Czech students and the Nazi regime in 1939, a clash from which the students emerged (in 1,200 cases, in concentration camps) as losers (temporarily).

However, physicists are being born and dying on November 17th, too.

In 1990, Robert Hofstadter died. He was born in 1915 into a family of a salesman, studied or was affiliated with CUNY, General Electric, Princeton, Upenn, and most recently Stanford. He is the grandfather of a fictitious grandson, Leonard Hofstadter, who is famous for being Sheldon Cooper's roommate, and the father of a Pulitzer-winning author Douglas Hofstadter.




Hofstadter got his 1961 Physics Nobel Prize together with Mössbauer for "electron scattering off nuclei". So you may imagine the type of work he has done. Amusingly, he became the father of the units "fermi", 1 fm, in 1956. This is a clever unit because "fm", which is \(10^{-15}\) meters, seems like an acronym for "Fermi" who studied lots of things whose typical distance scale is 1 fm. However, 1 fm may also be read as "one femtometer" where "femto-" is a general prefix representing \(10^{-15}\). The prefix "femto-" has a justification independent of Enrico Fermi: it comes from Danish "femten" for "fifteen". Note that it looks like a mutated "fifteen" or "fünfzehn". ;-) In his late years, Hofstadter got interested in astrophysics and was one of the fathers of the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory.

Louis Néel was born in Lyon, France on November 22nd, 1904, and died on November 17th, 2000. He got his 1970 Physics Nobel Prize for the discovery of antiferromagnetism, ferrimagnetism, and the Néel temperature at which the former magnetic behavior stops. His comments on the magnetism of rocks also made it possible to study the evolution of the geomagnetic field.

Of course, I think that the most important anniversary is the November 17th, 1902 birth of Eugene Wigner (who died in 1995). Note that almost all the cofathers and near-cofathers of quantum mechanics were born in the first years starting with 19**: Pauli *1900, Heisenberg *1901, Dirac *1902, Wigner *1902, von Neumann *1903. Not too shocking that these guys who could be classmates viewed Bohr *1885 as a kind of a father. ;-)

At any rate, Wigner was born in Budapest to a middle-class Jewish family. When he was 11, he was sent to a sanatorium with an apparent tuberculosis. He started to love math problems over there. His family escaped Hungary (to Austria) in 1919 when the country was hijacked by communist assholes. They also converted to Lutheranism, not because of their love to the Christian God but because of their hatred towards communism. ;-) As you can see, "Jewish" doesn't have to be equal to "communist"!

While he studied chemistry in Berlin, he could see folks like Planck, von Laue, Ladenburg, Heisenberg, Nernst, Pauli, and Einstein. Leó Szilárd was Wigner's best friend for quite some time. Wigner began to contribute to quantum mechanics in the 1920s as an assistant to mathematician David Hilbert in Göttingen. He also found a wife for Paul Dirac, namely his own sister. It just happened that Wigner was hired by Princeton before the rise of Hitler, in 1930 (his affiliation with Princeton was interrupted in 1936-1938). He was an important guy behind the scenes of the Einstein-Szilárd "pro-nuclear-bomb letter" to FDR which led to the initiation of the Manhattan Project.

Wigner was a polite guy. When he was cheated by a used car dealer, he kindly advised him to "go to hell, please".

Some of his musings on philosophy of quantum mechanics looked almost spiritual and he got actually involved not only with some "biology as being more fundamental than physics" memes but even with Hinduism. But lots of the important things he has done are completely solid insights – about the angular momentum conservation and its consequences in quantum mechanics; parity conservation law; scattering in quantum mechanics; resonances in quantum mechanics; related distributions and Wigner's general quasi-probabilistic distribution; Wigner's friend as an improvement of Schrödinger's cat. I like this Wikipedia list of things he is famous for:

Law of cnservation of parity
Wigner D-matrix
Wigner–Eckart theorem
Wigner's friend
Wigner semicircle distribution
Wigner's classification
Wigner quasi-probability distribution
Wigner crystal
Wigner effect
Wigner–Seitz cell
Relativistic Breit–Wigner distribution
Modified Wigner distribution function
Wigner–d'Espagnat inequality
Gabor–Wigner transform
Wigner's theorem
Wigner distribution
Jordan–Wigner transformation
Newton–Wigner localization
Wigner–Seitz radius
6-j symbol
9-j symbol

With this list in mind, it's really shocking that he couldn't "believe" when he got his 1963 Physics Nobel Prize (for insights about the nuclei and symmetries in particle physics; the other half went to Maria Goeppert-Mayer and J. Hans Jensen for the nuclear shell model). He thought he could only appear in the newspapers after he would do "something wicked". He died in 1995.

Dozens of TRF articles have mentioned Wigner.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in science and society | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Ostragene: realtime evolution in a dirty city
    Ostrava , an industrial hub in the Northeast of the Czech Republic, is the country's third largest city (300,000). It's full of coal...
  • Likely: latest Atlantic hurricane-free date at least since 1941
    Originally posted on September 4th. Now, 5 days later, it seems that no currently active systems will grow to a hurricane so the records wi...
  • Origin of the name Motl
    When I was a baby, my father would often say that we come a French aristocratic dynasty de Motl – for some time, I tended to buy it ;-). Muc...
  • Papers on the ER-EPR correspondence
    This new, standardized, elegant enough name of the Maldacena-Susskind proposal that I used in the title already exceeds the price of this b...
  • Bernhard Riemann: an anniversary
    Georg Friedrich Bernhard Riemann was born in a village in the Kingdom of Hanover on September 17th, 1826 and died in Selasca (Verbania), No...
  • New iPhone likely to have a fingerprint scanner
    One year ago, Apple bought AuthenTec , a Prague-based security company ( 7 Husinecká Street ), for $356 million. One may now check the Czech...
  • Prediction isn't the right method to learn about the past
    Happy New Year 2013 = 33 * 61! The last day of the year is a natural moment for a blog entry about time. At various moments, I wanted to wri...
  • Lubošification of Scott Aaronson is underway
    In 2006, quantum computing guy Scott Aaronson declared that he was ready to write and defend any piece of nonsensical claim about quantum gr...
  • A slower speed of light: MIT relativistic action game
    In the past, this blog focused on relativistic optical effects and visualizations of Einstein's theory: special relativity (download Re...
  • Eric Weinstein's invisible theory of nothing
    On Friday, I received an irritated message from Mel B. who had read articles in the Guardian claiming that Eric Weinstein found a theory of ...

Categories

  • alternative physics (7)
  • astronomy (49)
  • biology (19)
  • cars (2)
  • climate (93)
  • colloquium (1)
  • computers (18)
  • Czechoslovakia (57)
  • Denmark (1)
  • education (7)
  • Europe (33)
  • everyday life (16)
  • experiments (83)
  • France (5)
  • freedom vs PC (11)
  • fusion (3)
  • games (2)
  • geology (5)
  • guest (6)
  • heliophysics (2)
  • IQ (1)
  • Kyoto (5)
  • landscape (9)
  • LHC (40)
  • markets (40)
  • mathematics (37)
  • Middle East (12)
  • missile (9)
  • murders (4)
  • music (3)
  • philosophy of science (73)
  • politics (98)
  • religion (10)
  • Russia (5)
  • science and society (217)
  • sports (5)
  • string vacua and phenomenology (114)
  • stringy quantum gravity (90)
  • TBBT (5)
  • textbooks (2)
  • TV (8)
  • video (22)
  • weather records (30)

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (341)
    • ►  September (14)
    • ►  August (42)
    • ►  July (36)
    • ►  June (39)
    • ►  May (38)
    • ►  April (41)
    • ►  March (44)
    • ►  February (41)
    • ►  January (46)
  • ▼  2012 (159)
    • ►  December (37)
    • ▼  November (50)
      • Does the Bigfoot exist?
      • Firewalls vs analytic continuation
      • Dark matter discovery: behind the corner?
      • Palestinian statehood and the U.N.
      • David Ian Olive: 1937-2012
      • Five greatest physicists' sex scandals
      • It's wrong to worry about the "fiscal cliff"
      • Martin Rees' center studies 4 worst threats for ma...
      • Many worlds vs positivism and symmetries
      • December 3rd: ITU, U.N. could end the free Internet
      • The 234-bit gene that turns an ape into a man
      • Lost City Raiders, a B movie
      • Climate propaganda in Australia
      • Clashes over EU budget
      • SUSY exists because the number 3/2 can't be missing
      • Stuart Freedman: RIP
      • Rumors at NPR: almost life found on Mars
      • Papers refuting black hole firewalls spread
      • Leonard Susskind on Higgs boson
      • Polish Breivik Wannabe: Dr Brunon Kwiecień, a chemist
      • BaBar directly measures time reversal violation
      • Finite SUSY GUT theories
      • World Bank abuses AGW lies to grow its bureaucracy
      • Davis Cup + Fed Cup + Hopman Cup = Czechia
      • Albert Einstein destroyed 37 Hitler's submarines
      • Anniversaries: Wigner, Néel, Hofstadter
      • Do nation states belong to the 19th century? Is it...
      • Music star Al Gore plans a virtual reality drop
      • There are no hospitals for theories
      • ATLAS 1 lepton, 7 jets: a 4-sigma excess
      • Anthony Watts' television channel
      • Journey towards idiocracy may have begun 2,000 yea...
      • BBC's 30 "experts" who decided in 2006 that balanc...
      • Superstringy compactifications compatible with the...
      • NASA, BAS agree that the Antarctic ice growth cont...
      • Obama and Earth-Moon L2 Lagrange point base
      • Fermi may be seeing a 6 GeV WIMP, too
      • The \(125.7\GeV\) Higgs could have lighter siblings
      • A slower speed of light: MIT relativistic action game
      • When truths don't commute. Inconsistent histories.
      • Cosmic GDP drops 97% since peak star
      • RSS AMSU: 2012 seems to be 11th warmest on record
      • Obama-Romney: TRF poll
      • Why subjective quantum mechanics allows objective ...
      • Steven Weinberg defends linear collider, science
      • Quantum casino: less than zero chance
      • Supersymmetric Lagrangians
      • All Souls' Day
      • Paul Frampton: from prison to house arrest
      • Edward Teller's great H-day: 60 years ago
    • ►  October (53)
    • ►  September (19)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile