This two-volume book is on the genesis of quantum mechanics.
The first volume covers the key developments in the period 1900-1923, which provided the scaffold on which the arch of modern quantum mechanics was built. This volume traces the early contributions by Planck, Einstein, and Bohr to the theories of black-body radiation, specific heats, and spectroscopy, all showing the need for drastic changes to the physics of their day. It examines the efforts by Sommerfeld and others to provide a new theory, now known as the old quantum theory. After some striking initial successes (explaining the fine structure of hydrogen, X-ray spectra, and the Stark effect), the old quantum theory ran into serious difficulties (failing to provide consistent models for helium and the Zeeman effect) and eventually gave way to matrix and wave mechanics.
The second volume provides detailed analysis of the classic papers by Heisenberg, Born, Jordan, Dirac, De Broglie, Einstein, Schrödinger, von Neumann and other authors. Drawing on the correspondence of these and other physicists, their later reminiscences and the extensive secondary literature on the "quantum revolution," this volume places these papers in the context of the discussions out of which modern quantum mechanics emerged. It argues that the genesis of modern quantum mechanics can be seen as the construction of an arch on a scaffold provided by the old quantum theory, discarded once the arch could support itself.
Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 9780198887034
Number of pages: 1136
Weight: 2900 g
Dimensions: 252 x 174 x 71 mm
An excellent work which innovatively combines conceptual clarity with penetrating analysis of relevant theory. - Helge Kragh, Annals of Science
Engineers and scientists from across the board will get a kick out of being able to read about the origins of their everyday toolkits - this is lucid historical reasoning about one of the great accomplishments of modern science. After seeing the author's track the launch of the old quantum theory, I'm looking forward to their account of full-blown quantum mechanics to come in volume 2! - Peter Galison, Harvard University
Clearly written, by highly competent authors, giving full reasoning and calculations for all important developments. - Olivier Darrigol, CNRS, France
This will be a widely read book and used in many physics and history of physics courses at the undergraduate college-university level. It will be greeted most enthusiastically by scholars and teachers alike. - Roger H. Stuewer, University of Minnesota
Indeed a very important and valuable contribution to the history of quantum mechanics. - Michael Eckert, Deutsches Museum, Muenchen
What seemed a good piece of work at the start is magisterial. This is the book I have been waiting to see for a long time. - Steven N. Shore, University of Pisa
This book will very likely become a new point of reference for everyone working on the history of quantum physics. - Christian Joas, Niels Bohr Archive
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