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John Stewart Bell and Twentieth Century Physics: Vision and Integrity

Autor Andrew Whitaker
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 ian 2020
This book gives a readable non-mathematical account of the upbringing, education and academic achievement of John Stewart Bell, the celebrated physicist from Belfast, who was born in 1928.Bell has become famous for what he described as his 'hobby', analysing the fundamental aspects of quantum theory, where he clarified a long-standing debate between the two most important figures of twentieth century physics, Albert Einstein and Niels Bohr, and showed that, contrary to belief over the previous thirty years, quantum theory could be supplemented with extra 'hidden variables'. His crucial 'Bell's Theorem' or 'Bell's Inequalities' demonstrated a contradiction between quantum theory and local causality. This relation has been tested with increasing rigour over the next years, and quantum theory has triumphed. His ideas were also important in the development of quantum information theory, which covers quantum computation, quantum cryptography and quantum teleportation.The book covers his earlier work at Harwell, where he worked on the design of accelerators, making extremely important contributions to the physics of strong focussing. He later moved to CERN in Geneva where he carried out highly significant work in the fields of elementary particles and quantum field theory. It also covers some details of Bell's personal life, including his marriage while he was at Harwell to Mary Ross, who also worked in the physics of accelerators, and also describes his career decade by decade, and sums up his importance to twentieth-century physics.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780198861263
ISBN-10: 0198861265
Pagini: 480
Dimensiuni: 139 x 210 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Recenzii

The presentation is rather fascinating and non-mathematical in nature, and some effort is made to provide a thorough but comprehensible account of any area of Bell's work, not limited to quantum theory... [the author] unveils a number of extremely valuable works on the study of accelerators, nuclear physics and the physics of elementary particles, which we now recognize to be widely neglected.
Andrew Whitaker's account of Bell's life and work is a superb testament to a truly great physicist. His honesty and clarity, as well as his modesty, indeed ring like a bell throughout!
Bell's biography reminds us of the obstacles encountered in the making of physics. Whitaker's book, with its vivid biographical depiction and wealth of technical detail, fills a lacuna felt by many historians, philosophers, and physicists.
It is nicely illustrated with many pictures of John, his wife Mary and others such as Michael Horne, Daniel Greenberger and Artur Ekert. This is not a book to learn about physics, but to get to know a bit about the man who made one of the most profound, if not the most profound, discoveries of the 20th century.
Andrew Whitaker's account of Bellâs life and work is a superb testament to a truly great physicist. His honesty and clarity, as well as his modesty, indeed ring like a bell throughout! As a physicist himself, working on the fundamental aspects of quantum theory, the author is ideally suited to providing the explanations necessary for non-physicists to appreciate Bellâs work. He also knows the way in which personal interactions contribute to and affect research, so there are many charming accounts and thumbnail sketches of those whom Bell encountered. Nor has he neglected Bellâs domestic life and origins, having interviewed the family and those who taught him. There really cannot be much more to be said about him so this must be the definitive biography. It was a delight to read.
The work of John Bell is integral to modern quantum theory through his famous theorem which sparked a new age of foundational and experimental research; but very little is known about Bell's background and private life. Here Andrew Whitaker has given us a superbly written and insightful biography, free of technicalities and rich in historical detail. Essential reading for physicists and philosophers of physics.
This book beautifully chronicles the life story of one of the 20th century's most brilliant, charismatic, and influential geniuses. No, not Richard Feynman, but John Stewart Bell -- the man whose epochal discovery arose not from his day job but from his hobby, the universally-admired sage whose views remain widely misunderstood even by those who praise him, and the mild-mannered vegetarian whose penetrating insights will be remembered, centuries from now, for ruthlessly slaying the orthodox quantum philosophy.
Whitakers book is the first comprehensive book on John Bells outstanding work and life. As an active researcher in the field of quantum physics, experienced science writer and aided by direct information from the Bell family, Whitaker is the best person for writing such an account. The result is a fascinating book on most important parts of quantum physics and on the people who were involved in it. I can strongly recommend Whitakers book to students, teachers, and researchers as well, in fact, to anybody who is interested in these exciting topics of quantum physics.
Andrew Whitaker has written a beautiful, compelling, and utterly readable biography of one of the most important physicists of the last century. The ramifications of Bell's theorem continue to be felt in ways John Stewart Bell could not have anticipated in our present century. It is fascinating to read his story starting with upbringing in Belfast (Whitaker's home city) and continuing in Harwell, Birmingham and Geneva.
Andrew Whitakers biography gives an excellent account of his numerous achievements during his long tenure at CERN

Notă biografică

Andrew Whitaker was awarded a BA in Theoretical Physics from the University of Oxford in 1967 and a PhD in the theory of nuclear magnetic resonance from the University of Nottingham in 1971. He lectured and carried out research at the University of Ulster until 1988, and since then at Queen's University Belfast, where he became a Professor in 1999. Much of his work over the last thirty years has been in the fundamental aspects of quantum theory, in particular the quantum Zeno effect and aspects of Bell's Theorem. He also has an interest in the history of science and has co-edited volumes on Kelvin, Maxwell and physicists of Ireland.