On the Trail of Blackbody Radiation: Max Planck and the Physics of His Era
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Description
An account of Max Planck's construction of his theory of blackbody radiation, summarizing the established physics on which he drew. In the last year of the nineteenth century, Max Planck constructed a theory of blackbody radiation--the radiation emitted and absorbed by nonreflective bodies in thermal equilibrium with one another--and his work ushered in the quantum revolution in physics. In this book, three physicists trace Planck's discovery. They follow the trail of Planck's thinking by constructing a textbook of sorts that summarizes the established physics on which he drew. By offering this account, the authors explore not only how Planck deployed his considerable knowledge of the physics of his era but also how Einstein and others used and interpreted Planck's work. Planck did not set out to lay the foundation for the quantum revolution but to study a universal phenomenon for which empirical evidence had been accumulating since the late 1850s. The authors explain the nineteenth-century concepts that informed Planck's discovery, including electromagnetism, thermodynamics, and statistical mechanics. In addition, the book offers the first translations of important papers by Ludwig Boltzmann and Wilhelm Wien on which Planck's work depended.
Product Details
Price
$36.00
Publisher
MIT Press
Publish Date
September 20, 2022
Pages
224
Dimensions
5.56 X 8.33 X 0.89 inches | 0.74 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780262047043
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Don S. Lemons is Professor of Physics Emeritus at Bethel College in North Newton, Kansas and the author of Drawing Physics: 2,600 Years of Discovery from Thales to Higgs and Thermodynamic Weirdness: From Fahrenheit to Clausius (both published by the MIT Press). William R. Shanahan, now retired, was a scientific staff member at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Louis Buchholtz is Professor of Physics Emeritus at California State University, Chico.
Reviews
"Black-body radiation -- emitted and absorbed by non-reflective bodies in thermal equilibrium -- was named by Gustav Kirchhoff in 1862. But he and others were perplexed by calculations suggesting it should be infinite at high frequencies. This unavoidably mathematical history by three physicists follows the trail from Kirchhoff to Max Planck -- who in 1900 explained that the radiation could change its energy only in minimal increments proportional to the wave's frequency -- and Albert Einstein's quantum theory of radiation in 1917."
--Nature
--Nature