- . . . Gay-Lussac23.1
- As you might guess, the details of
the history of these discoveries also tend to vary with
the nationality of the Historian!
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- . . .
Alchemists23.2
- The Alchemists were already pretty certain
of many of these, of course; but they were accustomed to
keeping their mouths shut.
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- . . . rays.23.3
- Such a device
(for measuring the charge-to-mass ratio of electrically
charged particles) is known as a MAGNETIC SPECTROMETER.
Thomson's version was pretty crude by today's standards,
but this is still the most accurate method for measuring
the
ratio of particles (and hence, if we know
their charge by some other means, their mass).
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- . . . come.23.4
- This
is really the original prototype example of a QUANTIZED
property. Many others were to follow, as we shall see.
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- . . . charge.23.5
- Naturally, sometimes he got two
or three electrons on a drop; but this was simple enough
to take into account: sometimes he got a result of e,
sometimes he got a result of 2e,
sometimes he got a result of 3e,
but he never got a result of
,
for instance,
so it was clear which result was the true charge quantum.
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- . . . charge.23.6
- This
is truly an unavoidable conclusion if we accept the theory of
classical electrodynamics at face value; it was not just a
misinterpretation. You may be sure that hordes of Physicists
looked high and low for a way out of this and found none.
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- . . . nucleus.23.7
- This humourous
name for the size of a target may have marked the start
of a trend toward "cute" nomenclature in Particle Physics,
which manifested itself later in strangeness, quarks
and (most recently) truth and beauty as
particle properties - the latter pair now being retracted
in favour of top and bottom, which I regard as
a failure of nerve and will on the part of Particle Physicists.
But that is yet another story . . . .
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