100 years of Einstein 

Miraculous visions

Dec 29th 2004 
>From The Economist print edition


A century after Einstein's miracle year, most people
still do not understand exactly what it was he did.
Here, we attempt to elucidate

IN THE span of 18 months, Isaac Newton invented
calculus, constructed a theory of optics, explained
how gravity works and discovered his laws of motion.
As a result, 1665 and the early months of 1666 are
termed his annus mirabilis. It was a sustained sprint
of intellectual achievement that no one thought could
ever be equalled. But in a span of a few years just
before 1900, it all began to unravel. One phenomenon
after another was discovered which could not be
explained by the laws of classical physics. The
theories of Newton, and of James Clerk Maxwell who
followed him in the mid-19th century by crafting a
more comprehensive account of electromagnetism, were
in trouble.

Then, in 1905, a young patent clerk named Albert
Einstein found the way forward. In five remarkable
papers, he showed that atoms are real (it was still
controversial at the time), presented his special
theory of relativity, and put quantum theory on its
feet. It was a different achievement from Newton's
year, but Einstein's annus mirabilis was no less
remarkable. He did not, like Newton, have to invent
entirely new forms of mathematics. However, he had to
revise notions of space and time fundamentally. And
unlike Newton, who did not publish his results for
nearly 20 years, so obsessed was he with secrecy and
working out the details, Einstein released his papers
one after another, as a fusillade of ideas.

For Einstein, it was just a beginning—he would go on
to create the general theory of relativity and to
pioneer quantum mechanics. While Newton came up with
one system for explaining the world, Einstein thus
came up with two. Unfortunately, his
discoveries—relativity and quantum theory—contradict
one another. Both cannot be true everywhere, although
both are remarkably accurate in their respective
domains of the very large and the very small. Einstein
would spend the last years of his life attempting to
reconcile the two theories, and failing. But then, no
one else has succeeded in fixing the problems either,
and Einstein was perhaps the one who saw them most
clearly.

A noble prize
When Einstein was awarded a Nobel prize, in 1921, it
was for the first of his papers of 1905, which proved
the existence of photons—particles of light. Up until
that paper, completed on March 17th and published in
Annalen der Physik (as were the other 1905 papers),
light had been supposed to be a wave, since this
explains the interference patterns created when it
passes through a grating. Einstein, however, began
from a different premise, by considering the so-called
“black-body experiment”. 

A black body is a notional heated box that emits
electromagnetic radiation (light, and its cousins such
as radio and X-rays) at all frequencies. One of the
main problems of physics at the turn of the century
was that black-body radiation was predicted to
increase indefinitely at higher frequencies, which was
physically impossible. Five years earlier, Max Planck,
a respected elder statesman of German physics, had
supposed that a black body could emit radiation only
at discrete frequencies. The gaps between these
frequencies are the quantum jumps from which quantum
theory ultimately derives its name. Quantising
radiation in this way gets round the problem of
indefinitely increasing frequencies.

Planck, however, stopped short of making the deduction
that quantising light means that it is made of
particles rather than waves. Einstein, by contrast,
concluded just that. Furthermore, he went on to show
how this assumption explained the photoelectric
effect, another physical mystery of the time.

The photoelectric effect occurs when light shines on
to an electrical conductor. The light knocks electrons
out of their orbits and causes a current to flow. The
paradox was that shining a brighter beam at the
conductor did not increase the voltage, although the
current increased. The light, in other words, was
producing more electrons, but not more energetic
electrons. Turn up the frequency of the light beam,
however, and the voltage goes up. Einstein showed that
this is explained if light is composed of particles
(which only later came to be called photons) whose
energy is proportional to their frequency.
 
Although physics students today are often taught that
it was a quirk of the Nobel committee to give the
prize to Einstein for his quantum work rather than
relativity, the truth is that everyone at the time,
including Einstein, believed it to be the more
surprising result. When, late in 1905, he sent a
friend some reprints of his papers, he said, “I am
sending you some papers which may be of interest. Only
one of them is revolutionary.” He was referring to the
photoelectric paper, rather than anything on
relativity. As he later wrote, “It was as if the
ground had been pulled out from under one's feet, with
no firm foundation to be seen anywhere, upon which one
could have built.” Indeed, the idea that light is made
of particles was not truly accepted until 1923, when
it was found that electrons could hit light and cause
it to gain energy, as well as the reverse.



Local knowledge
Though Einstein's quantum hypothesis eventually became
accepted, it had consequences that not even he had
foreseen. Up until the late 1920s, quantum theory
evolved in an ad hoc fashion. It fell to a younger
generation of physicists, in a burst in the late 1920s
and early 1930s, to codify it into a universal system
now known as quantum mechanics. This shows that light
is actually neither just a particle nor just a wave,
but rather both simultaneously. Similarly, objects
traditionally thought of as particles, such as
electrons, are also, simultaneously, waves.

Two consequences followed. The first was that chance
plays a fundamental role in the interactions of
elementary particles, and therefore in the way the
world works. Physics, up to that point in history, had
been “deterministic”. Consequence followed cause with
no room for uncertainty. But uncertainty is at the
core of quantum mechanics. It is there in the form of
Werner Heisenberg's famous “uncertainty principle”
that it is impossible to measure both the speed and
the location of an object with precision. And it is
there in the form of Erwin Schrödinger's equally
famous cat, which is simultaneously dead and alive
because its fate depends on the quantum properties of
an object whose state is indeterminate (rather than
merely unknown) until it is measured.

The second consequence is that the world is
“non-local”. That is to say, quantum interactions
occur instantaneously over arbitrarily long distances.
What is more, there is no mechanism in quantum
mechanics which explains how particles “communicate”
to match up their quantum properties in this way. For
example, if one particle is spinning in one direction,
its partner must spin in the opposite. However, the
first particle does not have a definite direction
until it is measured (Schrödinger's cat again), so the
second particle cannot “know” how to point until a
measurement is performed on the first particle, by
which time the second particle may be millions of
kilometres away. Einstein termed this “spooky
action-at-a-distance”.

Einstein was profoundly uncomfortable with both
uncertainty and non-locality. From that time until the
end of his life in 1955 (making 2005 also the 50th
anniversary of his death) he worked to eliminate them
from physics. But despite the fame of Einstein's
statement that “God does not play dice”, he did not
believe that quantum mechanics was fundamentally
incorrect. Indeed, he was the first to propose
Schrödinger and Heisenberg—whose reputations were not
established at the time—for Nobel prizes. Rather, he
believed it was incomplete.

The best analogy here is to temperature. Temperature
does not really exist. When something is said to be
hot or cold, what is actually being described is the
average speed of the molecules of which that something
is made. If the molecules are moving quickly, it is
hot, and if slowly, then cold. Temperature is merely a
succinct encapsulation of this average. Similarly,
Einstein believed that quantum mechanics was
describing some sort of statistical average of an
underlying phenomenon that was deterministic. 

In 1935, Einstein, along with two young collaborators,
Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen, proposed an
experiment that would test this idea by probing
action-at-a-distance. It was not, however, performed
until 1982. And when Alain Aspect and his colleagues
at the University of Paris did carry out the
measurement, they found that it was Einstein, not
quantum theory, which was wrong. Action-at-a-distance,
spooky though he thought it, does occur. However, this
episode is an excellent illustration of Einstein's
contribution to quantum mechanics. By constantly
trying to poke holes in the theory, he made it both
stronger and clearer. 



As clear as daylight
Abraham Pais, a physicist who wrote what is generally
regarded as the definitive scientific biography of
Einstein, said of his subject that there are two
things at which he was “better than anyone before or
after him; he knew how to invent invariance principles
and how to make use of statistical fluctuations.”
Invariance principles play a central role in the
theory of relativity. Indeed, Einstein had wanted to
call relativity the “theory of invariants”.

The idea of an invariant, which, largely because of
Einstein, became central to physics in the 20th
century, is something that stays constant under
various transformations. A circle is invariant under
rotation, because it looks the same no matter how it
spins. A square, on the other hand, is invariant only
under rotations of 90°. Rotate it through a right
angle, or a multiple of a right angle, and it is
indistinguishable from its unrotated self. Rotate it
by any other angle, and it will appear different.

Einstein's insight in the special theory was that the
speed of light is such an invariant. It is constant,
no matter what speed the observer is travelling at.
Add to this the condition, first codified by Galileo,
that the laws of physics should look the same so long
as the observer is in steady motion, and the special
theory of relativity follows. But why did Einstein
think the speed of light had to be invariant?

He was not a particularly adroit experimenter or
mathematician. His power lay in thinking more clearly
about the physical consequences of experimental
results than any of his contemporaries, or, indeed,
than anyone since.

The experiment in question here is called the
Michelson-Morley experiment, after Albert Michelson
and Edward Morley, who first performed it in 1887.
Even though Newton had explained in the 17th century
how light behaved, no one knew what it was until the
1860s, when Maxwell showed that it consists of
oscillating electric and magnetic fields. This
immediately raised the question of what the fields
were oscillating in. At that time, no one could
conceive of waves which were not vibrations in some
medium. The ocean had waves in water, and sound waves
travelled through air; it seemed nonsense to imagine
that waves could just “be”.

For this reason, physicists postulated the existence
of the aether—a substance, otherwise undetectable,
through which light travelled. But if the Earth was
orbiting the sun, and so moving through space, it must
be moving through the aether, too. Measure the speed
of light in the direction of the Earth's motion, and
perpendicular to it, and you would get different
answers, the line of reasoning went. This is what
Michelson and Morley did. But they found that the two
speeds were, in fact, precisely the same. 

The experiment was explained by Henrich Lorentz, a
Dutch physicist, who came up with the mathematics
required for the answer—that there was a contraction
in the direction of the Earth's movement, just enough
to make the two speeds seem the same. Lorentz could
not explain how this contraction occurred, though. He
speculated that perhaps forces were at work inside
molecules, which were, at the time, still hypothetical
entities.

What Einstein realised, without adding any new
mathematics, but in a profoundly new way nonetheless,
was that there was no seem about it. Space really was
contracting, and time was slowing down. It is just
this that Pais was referring to when he said that
Einstein was good at picking invariance principles.
Everyone had thought that time was invariant. It is
not. No one thought the speed of light was. It is.

Ultimately, it was the same skill in discernment that
led Einstein to the general theory of relativity. One
of the consequences of the speed of light being
invariant is that nothing can travel faster than it.
Einstein realised this in his first relativity paper
of 1905. He did not immediately see another
consequence, that the invariant also implied that mass
and energy are interchangeable, the rate of exchange
being defined by the speed of light and governed by
the one equation in physics that most people have
heard of: E=mc2, in which “E” represents energy, “m”
mass and “c” the speed of light. This equation, whose
consequences were played out in Hiroshima and Nagasaki
in 1945, occurred to him a few weeks later, and he
published it in another paper, which he wrote up in
November 1905.

The speed restriction was a problem for Newton's
theory of gravity. That is because, according to
Newton, gravity travels instantaneously—which,
according to Einstein, is an impossibility. This set
Einstein to thinking about exactly what mass is. 

In 1907, he realised that the feeling a person gets
when being pulled to the Earth by gravity is identical
in nature to that which he gets while
accelerating—being pushed, for instance, against the
seatback of an aeroplane when it is taking off. Both
of these are related to that person's mass, but
classical physics assumed they were different
mass-related phenomena. Einstein, however, concluded
that because gravity and acceleration seem the same,
they are the same. 

He dubbed this conjecture the principle of
equivalence. However, unlike the case of special
relativity, for which Lorentz had worked out the maths
beforehand, in this case there was nothing around to
which to apply this insight into the way that gravity
works. It took Einstein a further nine years, and the
help of a mathematician friend named Marcel Grossman,
to work out the maths behind the general theory of
relativity which, at its heart, is no more than an
embodiment of this insight. By incisively and
insightfully choosing what had to remain invariant in
his theory (based, of course, on the real world),
Einstein varied the established conception of what
space and time are. 



Damn truths and statistics
The second half of Pais's dictum, that Einstein was a
great statistician, was shown by work that tends to
get lost in the quantum and relativistic brouhaha.
Among the things he did in 1905 were to prove that
molecules (and thus, by extension, the atoms of which
they are composed) actually exist, and to infer their
size. This required the use of statistics, because of
the large number of molecules involved. 

One paper, which also served as his doctoral thesis,
inferred the size of molecules from the speed with
which sugar dissolves in water. For many years this
was his most cited study. A second paper addressed the
question of Brownian motion. This is the random motion
of small particles, such as dust or pollen, suspended
in solution. It had been seen some years before under
a microscope, but no one could explain it. Einstein,
in a brief and beautifully written paper, explained
how the motion was caused by molecules hitting the
particles, thus proving that molecules are, indeed,
real.

Einstein's use of statistics was also central to the
paper about light quantisation and the photoelectric
effect. Indeed, he continued applying statistics to
quantum theory even before it had been fully developed
by Heisenberg, Schrödinger and their contemporaries.
In 1922, he received a paper from Satyendra Nath Bose,
an unknown Indian physicist. Bose had worked out the
statistics of how a large number of photons would
behave. Because photons are identical particles which
do not interfere with one another, their behaviour is
different from anything anyone had seen before.
Indeed, Einstein realised that Bose had made a few
small mistakes. He also realised that atoms, if cooled
to close to absolute zero, would exhibit the same
behaviour as photons. In fact, they would act like one
giant atom. This prediction was thought outlandish at
the time—and it was not until 1995 that the first
so-called Bose-Einstein condensate was made in a
laboratory. Investigating these condensates is now one
of the most active fields of experimental physics.

This is but one more example of Einstein's prescience,
seeing things no one else saw at the time. As he said
in 1932, “the real goal of my research has always been
the simplification and unification of the system of
theoretical physics.” He never succeeded in unifying
physics, but he did, much as it may seem paradoxical
to the layman, succeed in simplifying it. Once one
learns the complex mathematical language required to
express his ideas, Einstein's theories are the
simplest and most obvious of any in physics.



 
 
The Economist 


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