|
1901 2011
Prize category:
|
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1954
Max Born, Walther Bothe
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by Professor I. Waller, member of the Nobel Committee for Physics
Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses,
Ladies and Gentlemen.
Research into the laws valid for the movement of the electrons
around the nucleus in the centre of the atom has been a central
problem for physics during this century. Niels Bohr made a start on the solution
to the problem in 1913. But his theory was of a provisional
nature. Professor Max Born took an active part in striving to
improve it, as did the many followers who gathered round him in
Göttingen. During the twenties of this century,
Göttingen, together with Copenhagen and Munich, was a place
of pilgrimage for researchers in the field of atomic theory. When
the young Heisenberg, formerly a
pupil of Sommerfeld in Munich and of Bohr in Copenhagen,
published his epoch-making preliminary work on the exact laws for
atomic phenomena in 1925, he was Born's assistant in
Göttingen. His work was immediately continued by Born, who
gave logical mathematical form to the Heisenberg theory. Owing to
this progress, Born, in collaboration with his pupil Jordan and
later with Heisenberg also, was able to expand the latter's
original results into a comprehensive theory for atomic
phenomena. This theory was called quantum mechanics.
The following year Born got a new result of fundamental
significance. Schrödinger had
just then found a new formulation for quantum mechanics.
Schrödinger's work expanded the earlier ideas of De Broglie which imply
that atomic phenomena are connected with a wave undulation.
However, Schrödinger had not solved the problem of how it is
possible to make statements about the positions and velocities of
particles if one knows the wave corresponding to the
particle.
Born provided the solution to the problem. He found that the
waves determine the probability of the measuring results. For
this reason, according to Born, quantum mechanics gives only a
statistical description. This can be illustrated by a simple
example. When you shoot at a target it is possible in principle -
according to the older conception - to aim the shot from the
start so that it is certain to hit the target in the middle.
Quantum mechanics teaches us to the contrary - that in principle
we cannot predict where a single shot will hit the target. But we
can achieve this much, that from a large number of shots the
average point of impact will lie in the middle of the target. In
contradiction to the deterministic predictions of the older
mechanics, quantum mechanics accordingly poses laws which are of
a statistical character, and as regards single phenomena will
only determine the probabilities that one or another of various
possibilities will occur. For material bodies of ordinary
dimensions the uncertainty of the predictions of quantum
mechanics is practically of no significance. But in atomic
phenomena, on the other hand, it is fundamental. Such a radical
break with older ideas could not of course prevail without
opposition. But Born's conception is now generally accepted by
physicists, with a few exceptions.
In addition to these achievements, which have been rewarded with
the Nobel Prize, Born has made fundamental contributions to many
fields of physics. In the first place he dedicated his interest
to the theory of crystals and has been one of the great pioneers
in that field.
After Born had left Göttingen in 1933 he continued his
famous researches in Britain, especially as a Professor at
Edinburgh.
Professor Walther Bothe, who shares this year's Nobel Prize with Professor Born, began his scientific activity as a theoretical physicist.
The work for which he has now been rewarded
with the Nobel Prize was carried out by him in Berlin actually as
an experimental physicist. These labours were based on a new use
of counter tubes. A counter tube has the property of transmitting
an electric current when a charged particle, e.g. an electron,
passes through it; and also, with special contrivances, when a
light particle collides with it. Bothe's idea was to use two
counter tubes in such a manner that the two tubes would only
register simultaneous collisions. Such coincidences can only come
from two particles emitted in the same elemental process, or from
a particle which has travelled through both tubes at high
velocity so that the time it takes for the particle's passing
from one tube to the other can be neglected.
Bothe used this coincidence method in 1925 and also with improved
apparatus about ten years later in order to decide whether the
energy rule as well as its complement, the so-called impulse
rule, is valid for every collision between a light particle and
an electron - as Einstein and Compton assumed - or
whether those rules are valid only on average for a large number
of collisions - as Bohr and his collaborators had inferred. By
investigating light particles and electrons by the coincidence
method, Bothe and his co-workers were able to show convincingly
that the rules mentioned are valid for every individual
collision. This result was of great significance in principle.
The coincidence method has been widely used in the study of
cosmic radiation and is one of the most important experimental
aids in the investigation of cosmic radiation. This method was
first used in this way by Bothe when he was working with
Kolhörster who had already given important contributions in
the field of cosmic radiation. Bothe and Kolhörster used the
coincidence method to pick out those particles in the cosmic
radiation which had travelled through two counter tubes. The
absorption of cosmic radiation into various materials was
determined by placing layers of these substances between the
tubes and studying the corresponding reduction in the number of
coincidences. It was found that these particles are absorbed at
about the same extent as the total cosmic radiation. From the
experiments the particularly important result was obtained, that
at sea level, cosmic radiation consists in the main of particles
of very high penetration.
Bothe and other researchers later improved the coincidence method
and extended its field of application. This method has now become
one of the most important aids in the study of both nuclear
reactions and cosmic radiation.
By many other discoveries and penetrating investigations also,
Bothe has enriched our knowledge in these fields in very great
measure and has provided an important stimulus to other
researchers.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1954
MLA style: "Nobel Prize in Physics 1954 - Presentation Speech". Nobelprize.org. 24 May 2012 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/1954/press.html
