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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Physics 1944
Isidor Isaac Rabi
Award Ceremony Speech
The following account of Stern's and Rabi's works is by Professor E. Hulthén, Stockholm (Broadcast lecture, 10th December, 1944)
There is a certain relation between
electric and magnetic phenomena in that the magnetic field can
generally be ascribed to the presence of electric currents. It
was in this way that the famous Ampère sought to trace
magnetism back to rotary currents of electricity in the particles
of matter, the atoms and molecules. This hypothesis has in fact
been confirmed, inter alia by spectroscopical
investigations into light sources placed in very strong magnetic
fields. However, certain difficulties arose when it came to
accounting in detail for the influence of the magnetic field on
the movement of electrons, which here represents the electric
currents in the interior of the atom. For the electrons proved
disinclined to obey the electrodynamic laws which have otherwise
so brilliantly demonstrated their validity in, for instance, the
field of electrotechnics. Inter alia, it seemed as if the
small, freely moving atomic magnet in the source of light was
only capable of assuming certain discrete local positions in
relation to the direction of the applied field. I shall start,
then, with a reference to an experiment which for the first time
revealed this remarkable so-called directional or
space-quantization effect.
The experiment was carried out in Frankfurt in 1920 by Otto Stern
and Walter Gerlach, and was arranged as follows: In a small
electrically heated furnace, was bored a tiny hole, through which
the vapour flowed into a high vacuum so as to form thereby an
extremely thin beam of vapour. The molecules in this so-called
atomic or molecular beam all fly forwards in the same direction
without any appreciable collisions with one another, and they
were registered by means of a detector, the design of which there
is unfortunately no time to describe here. On its way between the
furnace and the detector the beam is affected by a
non-homogeneous magnetic field, so that the atoms - if they
really are magnetic - become unlinked in one direction or
another, according to the position which their magnetic axles may
assume in relation to the field. The classical conception was
that the thin and clear-cut beam would consequently expand into a
diffuse beam, but in actual fact the opposite proved to be the
case. The two experimenters found that the beam divided up into a
number of relatively still sharply defined beams, each
corresponding to one of the just mentioned discrete positional
directions of the atoms in relation to the field. This confirmed
the space-quantization hypothesis. Moreover, the experiment
rendered it possible to estimate the magnetic factors of the
electron, which proved to be in close accord with the universal
magnetic unit, the so-called "Bohr's magneton".
When Stern had, so to speak, become his own master, having been
appointed Head of the Physical
Laboratory at Hamburg in 1923, he was able to devote all his
energies to perfecting the molecular beam method. Among many
other problems investigated there was a particular one which
excited considerable interest.
It had already been realized when studying the fine structure of
the spectral lines that the actual nucleus of the atom, like the
electron, possesses a rotation of its ovn, a so-called "spin".
Owing to the minute size of the nuclear magnet, estimated to be a
couple of thousand times smaller than that of the electron, the
spectroscopists could only determine its size by devious ways -
and that too only very approximately. The immense interest
attaching in this connection to a determination of the magnetic
factors of the hydrogen nucleus, the so-called proton, was due to
the fact that the proton, together with the recently discovered
neutron, forms the basic constituent of all the elements of
matter; and if these two kinds of particles were to be regarded,
like the electron, as true elementary particles, indivisible and
uncompounded, then as far as the proton is concerned, its
magnetic factor would be as many times smaller than the
electron's as its mass is greater than the electron's, implying
that the magnetic factor of the proton must be, in round figures,
1,850 times smaller than the electron's. Naturally then, it
aroused great interest when, in 1933, Stern and his colleagues
made this determination according to the molecular beam method,
it being found that the proton factor was about
21/2 times greater than had theoretically
been anticipated.
Let us now for a moment touch upon Rabi's achievements in this
field. Returning to the essential point of the problem, let us
put the question: How does the atom react to the magnetic field?
According to a theorem stated by the English mathematician
Larmor, this influence may be ascribed to a relatively slow
precession movement on the part of the electron and the atomic
nucleus around the field direction - a gyromagnetic effect most
closely recalling the gyroscopic movement performed by a top when
it spins around the vertical line. If the strength of the
magnetic field is known, the magnetic factor of the electron and
of the atomic nucleus can also be estimated by this means,
provided that we can observe and measure these precessional
frequencies. Rabi solved the problem in a manner as simple as it
was brilliant. Within the magnetic field was inserted a loop of
wire, attached to an oscillating circuit the frequency of which
could be varied in the same manner as we tune in our radio
receiving set to a given wavelength. Now, when the atomic beam
passes through the magnetic field, the atoms are only influenced
on condition that they precess in time with the electric current
in the oscillating circuit. This influence might perhaps be
described graphically: the nucleus performs a vault (salto) - the
technical term for which is a "quantum jump" - thereby landing in
another positional direction to the field. But this means that
the atom has lost all chance of reaching the detector and of
being registered by it. The effect of these quantum jumps is
observable by the fact that the detector registers a marked
resonance minimum, the frequency position of the registration
being determined with the extraordinary precision achievable with
the radio frequency gauge. By this method Rabi has literally
established radio relations with the most subtile particles of
matter, with the world of the electron and of the atomic
nucleus.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1944
MLA style: "Nobelprize.org". Nobelprize.org. 19 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1944/press.html
