Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editor’s acknowledgements
- Introduction: The new physics for the Twenty-First Century
- I Matter and the Universe
- 1 Cosmology
- 2 Gravity
- 3 The new astronomy
- 4 Particles and the Standard Model
- 5 Superstring theory
- II Quantum matter
- III Quanta in action
- IV Calculation and computation
- V Science in action
- Index
- References
4 - Particles and the Standard Model
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editor’s acknowledgements
- Introduction: The new physics for the Twenty-First Century
- I Matter and the Universe
- 1 Cosmology
- 2 Gravity
- 3 The new astronomy
- 4 Particles and the Standard Model
- 5 Superstring theory
- II Quantum matter
- III Quanta in action
- IV Calculation and computation
- V Science in action
- Index
- References
Summary
Origins of particle physics
Within the lifetime of my grandparents, there lived distinguished scientists who did not believe in atoms. Within the lifetime of my children, there lived distinguished scientists who did not believe in quarks. Although we can trace the notion of fundamental constituents of matter – minimal parts – to the ancients, the experimental reality of the atom is a profoundly modern achievement. The experimental reality of the quark is more modern still.
Through the end of the nineteenth century, controversy seethed over whether atoms were real material bodies or merely convenient computational fictions. The law of multiple proportions, the indivisibility of the elements, and the kinetic theory of gases supported the notion of real atoms, but a reasonable person could resist because no one had ever seen an atom. One of the founders of physical chemistry, Wilhelm Ostwald, wrote influential chemistry textbooks that made no use of atoms. The physicist, philosopher, and psychologist Ernst Mach likened “artificial and hypothetical atoms and molecules” to algebraic symbols – tokens, devoid of physical reality – that could be manipulated to answer questions about Nature.
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- Information
- The New PhysicsFor the Twenty-First Century, pp. 86 - 118Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
References
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