Great Ideas of Science
 0395065801, 9780395065808

Citation preview

^^^j^fl

Asimov Great ideas of sc;ience

PUBLIC LIBRARY FORT WAYNE AND ALLEN COUNTY,

IND.

Great Ideas of Science

ISAAC ASIMOV Illustrated hy Lee

Ames

1969

HOUGHTON

MIFFLIN

COMPANY BOSTON

To

Eric Berger

who

has always been cooperative

FIRST PRINTING

COPYRIGHT

©

R

1969 BY ISAAC ASIMOV

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

NO PART OF

WORK MAY ANY FORM BY ANY

THIS

BE REPRODUCED OR TRANSMITTED IN

MEANS, ELECTRONIC OR MECHANICAL, INCLUDING PHOTOCOPYING

AND RECORDING, OR BY ANY INFORMATION STORAGE OR RETRIEVAL SYSTEM, WITHOUT PERMISSION IN WRITING FROM THE PUBLISHER. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD

PRINTED IN THE

U.S.A.

NUMBER

70-82476

^

CONTENTS

1588855

1

Thales and Science

2

Pythagoras and

3

Archimedes and Applied

Itself

Number

1

10

20

Mathematics

4

Galileo and Experimentation

29

5

Democritus and Atoms

36

6

Lavoisier

7

Newton and

8

Faraday and Fields

63

9

Rumford and Heat

71

10

Joule and Energy

80

11

Planck and Quanta

89

12

Hippocrates and Medicine

98

13

Wohler and Organic Chemistry

106

14

Linnaeus and Classification

114

15

Darwin and Evolution

122

16

Russell and Stellar Evolution

129

Index

and Gases Inertia

45 55

13 8

1 Thales and Science

VA^HAT

IS

the universe

About 600 B.C.

composed

the

Itself

of?

Greek thinker Thales

leez) asked himself that important question

with the ivrong answer:

''All things are

Yet

it is

and came up

water."

This statement was not only incorrect, quite original.

(THAY-

it

was not even

one of the most important

state-

Great Ideas of Science

2

ments in the history of science. Without thing Hke

it

— there would be no

The importance

we

it

— or some-

science.

of Thales' answer will

become

clear

how he happened to hit upon it. Not surprisingly, this man who said that all things were water lived in a seaport. The city, Miletus (migh-LEE-tus) lay on the eastern coast of the Aegean Sea, in what is now if

first

examine

,

part of Turkey. Miletus it

no longer

was the most prosperous

exists,

but in 600 B.C.

city in the Greek-speaking

world.

On

Ancient Shores

Perhaps Thales pondered the nature of the universe the seashore, as he gazed at the Aegean.

the

Aegean opened southward

called the Mediterranean,

miles westward.

narrow

strait

into a

still

Strait

rocky prominences the

He knew

that

larger sea,

now

which stretched hundreds of

The Mediterranean

(the

at

of

passed through a

Gibraltar)

Greeks

called

between two the

Pillars

of

Hercules.

Beyond tic),

the Pillars of Hercules lay an ocean (the Atlan-

and the Greeks thought

land on

all sides.

like a disk a

it

surrounded the world's

Thales thought that the land was shaped

few thousand miles

across and that

it

floated

in an endless ocean.

I

Thales and Science

Itself

3

But he knew even the land Rivers crossed

lakes dotted

it,

Water

beneath.

itself

dried

was riddled with water. springs welled

it,

up and disappeared

up from

into the

air,

occasionally turning back into water and falling as rain.

There was water above, water below, water on

Land Made The very

of

Water?

solids of the land, so it

seemed to Thales, were

formed from water. Thales thought he had seen pen with

own

his

Egypt he had seen

eyes in his youth.

was

left

When

sea,

there

Egypt where the Nile River

was an area of deep,

soft soil that

(It

shape, like the letter "delta" of the

Greek

him

Of

was

had

triangular in

alphabet.

For

reason the region was called the Nile Delta.)

Having thought of to

traveling in

behind.

been formed by the flood waters.

this

hap-

the waters receded, fresh fertile

Indeed, in the north of

met the

While

this

the Nile River rise in a flood that spread

out over the land. soil

all sides.

all this,

Thales came to what seemed

to be a logical conclusion: "All things are water."

course, he

was wrong, for not

all

is

not water, and while water vapor

it

does not become

of earth

may

air.

Solid earth

things are water. Air

may

is

mingle with

air,

not water. Particles

be carried by rivers from the mountains to

the plains, but those particles are not

made

of water.

Great Ideas of Science

Thales

vs,

Babylon

Thales' idea was not quite his own.

It

originated in

Babylonia, another country he had visited as a

The

young man.

ancient civiUzation of Babylonia had reached certain

important conclusions about astronomy and mathematics that

must have fascinated

The

Babylonians considered the solid land to be a disk

the land was

But

salt

isn't this

Wasn't Thales

Not

quite!

set

This water rose to the surface here

in a pit of fresh water.

and there to form

a serious thinker such as Thales.

and

springs.

All around

the same picture presented

by Thales?

rivers, lakes,

water.

just repeating

Babylonian theories?

Unlike Thales the Babylonians did not think

of water as water, but as a collection of supernatural beings.

The

fresh water

was the god Apsu, while the

salt

water was the goddess Tiamat. Together they gave birth to a large

Greeks had

number

a similar notion:

ocean, Okeanos,

(The

of other gods and goddesses.

they thought the god of the

was the father of the gods.)

Eventually, according to Babylonian mythology, there

was war between Tiamat and her descendants. After gigantic battle one of the

and

split

her in two.

new gods, Marduk,

With one

half of

killed

a

Tiamat

Tiamat he made

the sky and with the other half, the solid earth.

That was the Babylonian answer

to the question,

"Of

Thales and Science

what

is

Itself

5

the universe composed?"

same answer from

Thales approached the

a different angle.

universe was different because

it

His picture of the

did without gods and

goddesses and without great battles between supernatural beings.

He

simply

said,

Thales had pupils in

"All things are water."

his

own city of Miletus and in neigh-

boring communities on the Aegean shore. Twelve

on

made

this shore

and

his pupils are

The

a region called Ionia.

known

as the

cities

Thus, Thales

"Ionian school."

lonians continued to try to explain the universe

without resorting to gods and goddesses. In established a tradition that has lasted

down

this

way

they

to the present

day.

Importance of the Ionian Tradition

Why was

it

so important to interpret the universe with-

out falling back on

without such

Suppose

a tradition?

a universe

is

made by gods and

them. Then, they can do If is

Could science have developed

deities?

some goddess

is

as

is

in a

angry because the temple

built to her If

some war-

bad spot and prays to

a god, promising to sacri-

may

send a cloud to hide him

fice cattle to

from

by

they wish with the universe.

not large enough, she might send a plague.

rior

controlled

him, that god

his enemies.

One cannot count on

the universe's

Great Ideas of Science

6

behaving in any certain way: Everything depends on the

whim

of some deity.

In the view of Thales and his pupils, however, no deities interfered with the workings of the universe.

verse behaved only in accordance with

The

own

its

uni-

nature.

Plagues arose and clouds appeared only out of certain natural causes.

plague

Only

arise

if

those natural causes existed,

would

a

or a cloud appear. Thus, Thales and his fol-

lowers had arrived at a basic assumption:

The

haves in accordance with certain "laws of

miiverse benature'''

that

cannot be altered or changed. Is

such a universe better than one that behaves according

to the

who

whims

of the gods?

If the deities

do

as

they please,

can foretell what might happen tomorrow? Even the

sun might not something.

rise if

Men who

natural could see

the ^'sun god" were annoyed about

had

no point

ings of the universe.

their

minds fixed on the super-

in trying to figure out the

Instead, they

would

work-

rather devise

methods for pleasing the gods or for soothing them when they grew angry. temples and

altars, to

special prayers, to

Nor

would be more important

work out methods

mold

idols

a

to build

of sacrifice and

and make magic.

could anything prove

Suppose there was ritual.

It

this

system to be wrong.

drought or a plague despite

left

the

men had something out. They

This would mean only that the medicine

done something improper or

all

Thales and Science

Itself

would simply have

7

to try again, sacrifice

more

and

cattle,

pray more carefully.

But right

the basic assumption of Thales and his pupils was

if



if

the universe did

nature that did not change

One

study the universe.

moved, the clouds

One

work according

— then

it

to laws of

was worthwhile

could observe

how

to

the stars

drifted, the rains fell, the plants

grew.

could be certain that those observations would hold

good always and would never change suddenly because

One

of some god.

could then

work out

a set of simple

laws describing the general nature of the observations.

Thus, the

first

assumption of Thales and

led to a second: It

is

possible for

human

his followers

reason to njoork

out the nature of the laws gover?iing the universe.

Idea of Science

These two assumptions, that there and that

man

can work them out by reason, make up the

"idea of science."

Mind you,

these assumptions are just

assumptions; they cannot be proved.

Thales there have always been belief in

The the

fall

are laws of nature

Nevertheless, since

men who

clung firmly to

them.

idea of science nearly faded out in

of the

Roman Empire

— but not

Europe

quite.

after

In the

six-

Great Ideas of Science

8

grow

teenth century the idea suddenly began to

Now,

in the last half of the twentieth century,

strong.

it is

at a

peak of power.

To be sure, the universe is far more complex than Thales could possibly have imagined.

some laws of nature

Still,

can be expressed very simply and

are, as far as

we now

know, unshakable. Perhaps the most important of

these

is

the "law of conservation of energy," which, stated simply,

''The total energy of the universe

is:

is

constant."

The Certain Uncertain Science has learned there are limits to knowledge, too. In the 1920's a

worked out that

German

Werner Heisenberg,

the ''principle of uncertainty."

was impossible

it

physicist,

He

stated

to determine precisely both the posi-

tion and velocity of an object at a particular instant of time.

We can determine one or the other as precisely as we

please,

but not both

at the

same time. Does

the second assumption of science

is

this

mean

that

wrong? That man can-

not gather knowledge with which to reason out the riddle of the universe?

No, not

at

a natural law.

we

all,

for the principle of uncertainty

There

is itself

are limits to the exactness with

which

can measure the universe, yes, but the extent of those

limits

can be worked out by reason.

Indeed, through

Thales and Science

9

Itself

proper understanding of uncertainty, learned about the universe that

much more

can be

would be puzzling without

that understanding. Thus, Thales' great ''idea of science"

holds as well

now

as

it

did

when he advanced

twenty-five hundred years ago.

it

some

ggS^^

'j

x - ".i3^'



Pythagoras and Not

long after

Number

the time that Thales was pondering the

mysteries of the universe, around twenty-five hundred years ago, another

Greek

Like Thales (see Chapter

THAG-oh-ras)

1 )

,

was playing with

strings.

the scholar Pythagoras (pih-

lived in a coastal city

ton, in southern Italy.

ordinary man.

scholar

— the

city of

Cro-

Like Thales, Pythagoras was no

Pythagoras and

And

Number

1

"playthings" were no ordinary strings, but

his

tough cords Uke those used in such musical instruments

as

Pythagoras had prepared cords of different

the lyre.

them

lengths, held

and plucked each one to produce

taut,

a musical note.

Musical Numbers Finally, he

found two cords that sounded notes

octave apart. That

is,

just

one sounded low do (pronounced

"doe"), the other high do.

What

was

low do was exactly twice

long

that the cord producing

of the

He

two cords was tried again

notes that

fascinated Pythagoras

The

one producing high do.

as the

sol.

2 to

as

ratio of lengths

1

and obtained two cords which sounded

made up

and the other

an

a "fifth."

That

is,

one note

w^as

do

This time the cord producing the lower

note was just one and a half times as long as the cord pro-

ducing the higher one. If

The

one cord was one and

a "fourth"

ratio of lengths

fa.

Here the

3

to

2.

a third times as long as another,

was produced. That

the other was

was

is,

one note was do and

ratio of lengths

was 4

to

3.

Certainly, musicians in Greece and in other lands also

knew how and

how

goras,

to

to prepare cords that

make them

however, was the

sounded certain notes

into musical instruments. first

man known

to

Pytha-

ponder not

2

Great Ideas of Science

1

over the music, but ove;: the ratio of lengths that produced the music.

Why 3

to

2,

should these ratios of small numbers

4

to

3

— produce



2

to

especially agreeable sounds?

1,

If

Pythagoras took two cords of more complicated ratios of length, say 23

to

the sound combination

13,

was un-

pleasant.

Perhaps

at this point

Pythagoras snapped his

Numbers were not merely

tools for counting

fingers.

and measur-

they controlled music and perhaps they controlled

ing;

all

the universe. If

numbers were

so important, then

to study

them for

to begin

by thinking

men

or

two

apples or

evenly divided by ber

3

own

their

of the

two

number

stars.

have in

Now

properties

common? What about

The number

2

could be

did all

2; it all

was an odd

even numbers

One

odd numbers?

with the fact that the sum of two even numbers

could

start

or of

two odd numbers

sum

not of two

2 itself,

was an even number. The num-

2; it

what

became important

For example, one had

could not be evenly divided by

number.

the

sake.

it

of an even

is

And

always an even number.

number and an odd number

is

always

an odd number.

Or drew

suppose one drew each number six dots; for 23,

as dots.

For

6,

twenty-three dots, and so on.

one If

one spaced the dots equally, he would find that some

Pythagoras and

numbers,

Number

known

form orderly

13

as triajigular

triangles.

numbers^ could be made to

Others,

known

as

square numbers^

could become neat squares.

Triangular

knew

Pythagoras

could be made to figure.

gular

The

fit

smallest

number

Numbers

that only certain into a triangle,

was one

numbers of dots

which

is

a three-sided

dot, representing the trian-

1.

Larger triangles could be made by placing additional lines of dots parallel to a side of a smaller triangle.

For

example, a three-dot triangle, representing the number

3,

could be made by placing two dots next to a side of the

one-dot triangle. Similarly, a six-dot triangle, representing the

number

6,

was formed by adding three dots

to the

three-dot triangle.

The

next triangles in the series were

made up

of ten dots

(the six-dot triangle plus jour dots), fifteen dots (ten dots

plus five), twenty-one dots (fifteen dots plus six), and so on. Thus, the series of triangular

numbers was

1, 3, 6,

10,

15,21,...

As Pythagoras dots,

built

up the

series of triangles

he became aware of an interesting

from smaller

to large triangles, the

fact.

number

by adding

As he moved of dots that

Great Ideas of Science

14

had to be added kept increasing by one. (You can verify

by looking

this

for the itahcized

words

in the previous

three paragraphs.)

In other words, he could build up the triangles, or angular numbers,

by

tri-

sums of consecutive num-

a series of

= 1; = + 2; 6=1 + 2 + 3; 10=1 + 2 + 3+4; 15 = 1+2 + 3+4+5; 21 = 1+2 + 3+4+5+6; and so on.

bers.

Thus,

1

3

1

Square Numbers Unlike the three-sided

triangle, the square

had four

sides

(and four right, or 90-degree, angles). Therefore, Pythagoras could expect the series of square numbers to turn

out to be quite different from the triangular ever,

one isolated dot would

into a triangle.

the

number

fit

series.

How-

into a square as easily as

Thus, the square

began with

series, too,

1.

Larger squares were built up by placing additional dots

around two adjacent

sides of

dots were spaced along

two

another square.

lines that

formed

The new

a right angle.

For example, three dots were added to the one-dot square to 4.

form

A

a four-dot square,

nine-dot square was

which represented the number

made

similarly,

by

placing five

dots around the four-dot square.

The

series

continued with squares of sixteen dots (the

Pythagoras and

Number

15

nine-dot square plus seven dots), twenty-five dots (sixteen (twenty-five dots plus

dots plus nine), thirty-six dots eleveii),

and so on. The outcome was the

numbers:

1,

4, 9, 16, 25, 36,

Since the triangles had

.

.

series of

square

.

grown

larger in a regular

way,

Pythagoras was not surprised to see the squares behaving similarly.

The number

of dots added to each

was always an odd number. greater than the

And

number added

it

new

square

was always two dots

to the previous square.

(See the italicized words in the previous paragraphs.)

by

In other words, square numbers could be built up series of

= 1; 25 = + + 5+7 +

sums of consecutive odd numbers. Thus,

4=1 + 3; 9=1 + 3 + 5; 16=1 + 3 + 5+7; 9;

1

1

3

and so on. Squares could also be

triangular numbers:

made by adding two consecutive

4=1 + 3; 9=3+6; 16=6+10;

10+15; ... Or by multiplying

1X1;4=2X2; 9=3X3;. The last method is a

.

the square of is

3.

say that the smaller

by

example, of 16.

itself 3 is



number by

is

5,

itself:

particularly important

9=3X3, we

In the same way, 16

the square of

plied

a

25 1

= =

.

forming square numbers. Since

25

a

and so on.

number



On

that

9,

say that 9

the other hand,

is,

the one

and 4

of is

the square of 4,

is

the square root of

the square root of

way

its is

we

we

multi-

product.

For

the square root

Great Ideas of Science

16

Right Triangles Pythagoras' interest in square numbers led him to consider right triangles

right angle. that

is, if

A



right angle has

one of the

sides

two perpendicular

which runs from one

the other.

This third

A



side of the right angle to

If

sides.

is

sides.

a right triangle at

measured the lengths of the

whole number of

a

right triangle adds a

always longer than either of the other

into a

sides

called the "hypotenuse,"

side,

Suppose Pythagoras drew

is

held perfectly horizontal, the

is

other will be perfectly vertical. third side

which one angle

triangles in

random and

he divided one side

units, the other

two

sides usually

did not consist of whole numbers of the same units.

There were triangle in

exceptions, though. Suppose he had a right

which one

side

was

the other just four units long.

just three units long,

and

turned out that the hy-

It

potenuse would then be exactly five units long.

Why triangle? 2,

should the numbers

The numbers

3,4, nor almost

3, 4,

and

5

make up

a right

1,2,3 did not, nor did the numbers

any other combination.

Suppose Pythagoras considered the squares of the numbers. Instead of 3, 4, 5,

he

now had

thing interesting showed up, for

9, 16, 25.

Now some-

9+16=25. The sum

the squares of the sides of this particular right triangle

equal to the square of the hypotenuse.

of

was

Number

Pythagoras and

1

Pythagoras went further.

He

noticed that the differ-

ence between successive square numbers was always an

odd number:

4-1 = 3; 9-4=5; 16-9=7; 25-16=9;

so on.

Every once

would

itself

same

as

in a while that

be a square,

9+16=25). When

instance, Pythagoras

cessive square

144=25.

It

this

— 16=9

difference

(which

is

the

happened, another right

up from whole numbers.

triangle could be built

For

as in 25

odd-number

and

might have subtracted the suc-

numbers 144 and 169

169—

as follows:

happens that the square roots of these num-

bers are 13, 12, and

5,

since

169=13X13, 144=12X12,

and 25=5X5. Therefore, he could form a right triangle with

sides equal to five

and twelve units and

hypotenuse

a

equal to thirteen units.

Pythagorean Theorem

Pythagoras that

now

had

a large

number

of right triangles

were made up of hypotenuses whose squares were

equal to the

sum

of the squares of the other

he soon proved that

this situation

two

sides.

was true for

all

And right

triangles.

Many

hundreds of years before Pythagoras' time the

Egyptians, the Babylonians, and the Chinese had that such a relationship applied to the fact, the

3, 4, 5

known

triangle.

In

Babylonians and others probably had been sure

8

Great Ideas of Science

1

that

the

it

applied to

first

He

we know

stated:

of the sides

is

known

he prove

of

who

proved

But Pythagoras was

it.

In any right triangle the

sum

of the squares

equal to the square of the hypotenuse. Be-

cause he was the it is

right triangles.

all

first

as the

to succeed in proving this statement,

"Pythagorean theorem." But

how

did

it?

Proof of Deduction

To

answer that question,

who was

thinker Thales,

we must go back

Greek

to the

discussed in Chapter

1.

Tradi-

tion holds that Pythagoras studied under Thales.

Thales had worked out an orderly system of proving the truth of mathematical statements, or theorems,

One began with

reasoning.

From

"axioms."

accepted statements called

these axioms, one could reach a certain

With

conclusion.

this

conclusion accepted, a second con-

clusion could be obtained, and so on.

Thales' system,

known

gorean theorem.

by

And

as

Pythagoras used

"deduction," to prove the Pytha-

deduction has been used ever

since.

Perhaps Thales did not actually invent the system of proof by deduction. Perhaps he learned lonians and the

But even duction,

if

it

name

it

from the Baby-

of the true inventor

is

unknown.

Thales was the inventor of mathematical de-

was Pythagoras who made

it

famous.

Pythagoras and

Number

19

Geometry

Birth of

The Greeks were goras, especially

by

inspired

by

the teachings of Pytha-

his great success in finding a

proof for the Pythagorean theorem.

As

deductive

a result they

went

even further. In the next three hundred years, they built a

complex structure of mathematical proofs that

marily with lines and shapes. This system

is

deal pri-

called

"geom-

etry" (see Chapter 3).

We

have gone far past the Greeks in the thousands of

we moderns have done in mathwe have penetrated its mysteries,

years since. Yet, whatever

ematics and however far all rests

on two foundations. There

is, first,

the study of

the properties of numbers and, second, the use of the

method of deduction. The

first

began with Pythagoras,

and the second was popularized by him. It

was not simply musical notes

plucked out of mathematics.

his cords,

that Pythagoras

had

but the whole vast world of

w

M^ [M

^

l^tfe

Ml m

3 Archimedes and Applied Mathematics You

MIGHT think

that an aristocrat in one of the greatest

and richest of the Greek ter to

do with

crowbars.

his

cities

would have something

time than to study the workings of

Apparently the

aristocrat

thought so too, for

he was embarrassed to have such a "low-bred"

The

aristocrat

bet-

interest.

was Archimedes (ahr-kih-MEE-deez)

of Syracuse, a city on the eastern shore of Sicily. Archi-

Archimedes and Applied Mathematics

medes was born about 287 B.C.

2

He

was the son of

a dis-

tinguished astronomer and was probably a relative of

Hiero

king of Syracuse.

II,

An

Inventor of Gadgets

In Archimedes' day

it

was

felt that

no gentleman should

involve himself with engineering devices.

were

fit

life

But Archimedes

only for slaves and laborers.

couldn't help

it.

Machinery

he worked out

many

Such matters

interested him,

and during

his

gadgets for use in both peace

and war.

He ever.

"low"

didn't give in entirely to these

For

up

instance, he didn't write

mechanical devices

— he was ashamed

tastes,

how-

descriptions of his to.

We

know

of

them only through the inaccurate and perhaps exaggerated tales

of other men.

The one

exception

is

Archimedes' de-

scription of a device that imitated the heavenly motions

of the sun, moon, and planets. But then, that was an in-

strument devoted to the science of astronmy and not to base mechanical labor.

Engineering



or

Math?

Machines were not Archimedes' only

youth he had gone to Alexandria,

in

interest.

In his

Egypt, the home of

Great Ideas of Science

22

the great sity

Museum. The Museum was

where

the learned Greeks

all

came

like a large univer-

and teach.

to study

There Archimedes had studied under Conon (KOH-non) of Samos, a great mathematician. Archimedes himself be-

came an even

greater mathematician; he invented a

form

of calculus two thousand years before modern mathematicians finally

worked out

all

the details.

Thus, Archimedes had an

However,

well as in engineering. fields

had

little

in his time the

as

two

common.

in

true that the

It is

mathematics

interest in

Greek and

earlier engineers,

such

as

the Babylonians and Egyptians, had to use mathematics to

achieve

what they

great pyramids

The

ancient Egyptians had built

which were already ancient

With only

time.

did.

The tures,

raise

them

Archimedes'

the most primitive tools the Egyptians

dragged immense blocks of granite aged to

in

many

then man-

miles,

to great heights.

people of Babylon also had built imposing struc-

and the Greeks themselves had done well.

engineer

A Greek

named Eupahnus (yoo-puh-LIGH-nus)

built a

tunnel on the island of Samos three centuries before Archi-

He

medes' time. sides of a hill,

directed

do

of diggers at opposite

and when they reached the

walls of the tunnel

To

two teams

all this,

met almost

^

how

center, the

exactly.

the engineers of Egypt, Babylonia, and

Greece must have used mathematics. understood

hill's

lines

were

They must

related to each other,

have

and

Archimedes and Applied Mathematics

how

23

the size of one part of a structure determined the

of another.

size

Yet Archimedes was not famihar with

this

mathematics,

but with an abstract kind the Greeks had begun to develop in Eupalinus' time.

Pythagoras had popularized the system of mathematical deduction (see Chapter 2). In a

few simple

this

system one began with

by

notions, readily accepted

men, and

all

reached complicated conclusions by proceeding one step time according to the principles of deduction.

at a

Beautiful

Theorem

Other Greek mathematicians followed Pythagoras and gradually built up a large and beautiful system of theorems

(mathematical statements) about angles, parallel angles, squares, circles,

how

to

show

angle size

out

how

two

that

— or

in

and other figures

figures.

were equal

both area and angle

lines, tri-

They

learned

in area or in

size.

They found

to determine ratios of numbers, size,

and

area.

Although the marvelous structure of Greek mathematics

went

civilizations,

triangles

beyond the mathematics system of

far it

was

entirely theoretical.

were imaginary ones

finitely thin

The

earlier

circles

built of lines that

were

and in-

and perfectly straight or that were curved

with perfect smoothness. to practical use.

The mathematics was

not put

Great Ideas of Science

24

Consider

about the Greek philosopher Plato

this story

(PLAY-toe).

He

founded

Athens

a school in

a

century

before Archimedes was born and taught mathematics at the school.

One day

during a mathematical demonstration

"But master, of what practical use

a student asked Plato, is

this?"

Plato was outraged.

He

the student a small coin so that he

had some use

after

ordered a slave to give

would

find his learning

and then expelled him from the

all,

school.

An

important figure in the development of the Greek

mathematics was the great mathematician EucUd

kHd)

.

One

of EucHd's pupils was

At

medes' teacher.

Conon

of Samos, Archi-

Alexandria, shortly before Archi-

medes' birth, Euclid brought together

made by

(YOO-

He

earUer thinkers.

order, demonstration

all

the deductions

organized them in beautiful

by demonstration. And he began

with a small handful of generally accepted statements, called "axioms."

Axioms were

so obvious, in the

view, that they required no proof. are "a straight

Hne

is

Examples of axioms

the shortest distance between

points" and "the whole

is

equal to the

All Theory,

No

since.

Still,

in

all its

sum

of

its

two

parts."

Practice

EucHd's book was so neatly done that

book ever

Greek

it

has been a text-

marvelous structure there

Archimedes and Applied Mathematics

was no hint

handy

that

any of the conclusions might come

work

in the ordinary

Greeks put

their

25

of mankind.

Indeed, the

mathematics most thoroughly to use in

working out the movements of the planets and theory of harmony. After fit

in

all,

in the

astronomy and music were

occupations for aristocrats.

So Archimedes excelled in two worlds



a practical

world of engineering without the clever mathematics of the Greeks and a world of to

no

His

practical use.

tunity to combine the

do

Greek mathematics

abilities

that

was put

provided a perfect oppor-

two worlds. But how would he

it?

A

Marvelous Device

Consider the crowbar!

Here

but a marvelous one!

vice,

is

a simple

mechanical de-

Without the crowbar

a

huge

boulder can be lifted only by the straining muscles of

many men. But rest

man

it

on

a pivot (such as a smaller rock),

can easily

a single

similar devices are types of levers.

"lever" comes

Anything

and

raise the boulder.

Crowbars and

word

place a crowbar under the boulder and

from

relatively long

a Latin

and

rigid,

or a rod, can be used as a lever. device that even prehistoric

word meaning

men

such

A

used

"to raise."

as a stick, a

lever it.

is

The

board,

such a simple

But they didn't

Great Ideas of Science

26

know how

worked, and neither did the clever Greek

it

The

philosophers.

great Aristotle (AR-is-TOT-1),

had been a pupil of

Plato's,

down and

lever pushed

traced out circles in the

noted that

as

one

who

side of the

the other pulled up, both ends

air.

He

decided that the lever had

wonderful properties because the

had

circle

a

wonderful

shape.

Archimedes had experimented with that Aristotle's explanation

was

ments Archimedes had rested as to

balance

it.

If

the lever, that end

by

a

levers,

incorrect.

and he knew

In his experi-

long lever on a pivot so

he placed a weight on only one end of

went down.

He

could balance the lever

placing weights on both sides of the pivot.

If the

weights were equal, he could balance the lever by placing

them

in certain positions. If the weights

were unequal, the

balance came in other positions.

Language of Math Archimedes found that larity.

ity? tion,

Why

levers

behaved with great regu-

not use mathematics to explain

According

this regular-

to the principles of mathematical deduc-

he would have to begin with an axiom, that

is,

something to be accepted without argument.

The axiom

he used was based on the chief result of

experiments with levers.

It

went: Equal weights

his

at equal

Archimedes and Applied Mathematics

from the pivot

distances

27

will balance the lever.

If equal

weights are at unequal distances from the pivot, the side

with the weight

at the greater distance will

Archimedes then went on

to use mathematical

tion to reach conclusions based

showed

clusions

that the

down on

Suppose

a lever

it is

and

on

this

deduc-

axiom. These con-

most important factors

workings of any lever are the pressing

go down.

size of the

their distances

in the

weights or forces

from the

pivot.

balanced by unequal weights on oppo-

of the pivot. According to Archimedes' findings

site sides

those unequal weights will have to be at different distances

from the

The

pivot.

greater in order to

distance of the small weight will be

make up

for

its

smaller force.

For ex-

ample, a ten-pound weight twenty feet from the pivot will balance a

one hundred-pound weight two feet from

the pivot.

The ten-pound weight

distance

ten times greater.

is

how

This explains a lever.

When

one

man

can

is

ten times lighter, so

lift

a

its

huge boulder with

he places the pivot very near the boulder,

his small force at a great distance

from the pivot

will bal-

ance the boulder's great weight at a small distance from the pivot.

Archimedes saw that

if

a

man's force were applied

at

an

extremely great distance from the pivot, an extremely huge

weight could be is

lifted.

reported to have

But

his

work on

"Give me

said, ''and I

a place to stand on,"

he

can move the world."

the lever had already

moved

the world.

Great Ideas of Science

28

Archimedes was the

practical engineering. In

plied mathematics

He

thus

lit

to apply

first

Greek mathematics

to

one stroke he had pioneered ap-

and founded the science of mechanics.

the fuse of a scientific revolution that was to

explode eighteen centuries

later.

...,:*',',«

4 Galileo and Experimentation

A YOUNG MAN of Seventeen was attending

services at the

Cathedral of Pisa one Sunday in the year 1581.

He

was

devoutly religious and no doubt tried to concentrate on his prayers.

But he was

hung nearby. and

set it

As

it

An

air

distracted

by

a chandelier that

current had caught the chandelier

swinging.

moved with

the current, swinging gently at times

Great Ideas of Science

30

and through

wider arc

swung through

it

Wasn't

that strange!

through

a

At

at others, the

The chandeher seemed

something.

whether

a

young man noticed

to keep steady time

wide arc or

a

Shouldn't

a

narrow one.

take longer to pass

it

wide arc?

this point the

young man, whose name was GaUleo

(gal-ih-LEE-oh), must have forgotten the service com-

His eyes fastened on the swinging chandeher and

pletely.

the fingers of his right hand stole to his left wrist.

While

the organ music swelled about him, he counted his pulse

So many for one swing, so many for the next, and

beats.

The number

so on.

of pulse beats

was always the same,

whether the swing was narrow or wide. In other words, the chandelier took just as long to swing through a narrow arc as through a wide one.

Galileo could hardly wait for the service to end. it

did,

he rushed

Timing from

a

home and hung weights from

their swings, he

found that

a

long string took a longer time to

when

strings.

weight suspended

move back and

forth than a weight suspended from a short string. ever,

When

How-

he studied each weight singly, he found

it

always took the same time to complete one swing, whether the swing was narrow or wide. Galileo had discovered the principle of the pendulum!

But he had done more than self in a

that.

He

had involved him-

problem that had puzzled scholars for two thou-

sand years



the problem of

moving

objects.

Galileo and Experimentation

3

Ancient Theories The

ancients had observed that living things could

themselves and could also

move

nonliving objects.

other hand, nonHving things usually could not

moved them. But

a living being

many all

exceptions

— the

moved without

tion that did not

sea,

On

move

the

unless

the ancients had observed

the wind, the sun, the

the help of living things.

depend on the

move

living

moon

Another mo-

was the motion of

falling bodies.

The Greek tion

philosopher Aristotle

was natural for

all

heavy

felt that a falling

things. It

the heavier the falling object was, the

A

pebble

fell faster

than a

leaf,

and

mo-

seemed to him that

more rapidly

it fell.

a large pebble faster

than a small one.

A

century

later

Archimedes applied mathematics

to

physical situations, but only to motionless ones (see Chapter 3).

He

applied

The problem

it

to a lever in balance, for example.

of rapid motion was beyond even his great

mind. For the next eighten centuries no one challenged Aristotle's ideas of motion,

and physics was

at a standstill.

Slowing Falling Objects By 1589

Galileo had finished his university training and

was already famous for

his

work in mechanics. Like Archi-

Great Ideas of Science

32

medes he had appHed mathematics

However, he longed If

to motionless situations.

back to the problem of motion.

to get

only there were some sure way, he thought, to slow

down falling bodies so and study

their

entist sets

up

that he

motion

might experiment with them (In an experiment a sci-

in detail.

him

special conditions that will help

to study

and observe phenomena more simply than he could

in

nature.)

Galileo

remembered

pended from starts falling. it

from

is

down.

a freely falling

fall in a straight line.

tions.

How

weight

string attached to

— and slowly enough

Unlike

If a

sus-

pulled to one side and released,

However, the

falling straight

slantwise

not

a string

pendulum.

his

could Galileo

Instead, the so that

body

a

it

it

it

prevents

weight

falls

can be timed.

pendulum weight does

This fact introduced complicaset

up an experiment

he could make a body move slantwise in

in

which

a straight line?

Of course! Simply prepare a wooden board with a long, straight polished groove. Set balls rolling down that groove, and they will move in a straight line. And if the board

is

slanted nearly horizontal, the balls will roll quite

slowly and one can study their motion in

detail.

Galileo set balls of different weights rolling

down

the

groove and timed them by counting the drops of water falling

from

bottom.

He

a water-filled vessel

with a small hole in the

found that except for very

light objects.

Galileo and Experimentation

3 3

weight made no difference

at

All solid balls covered

all.

the length of the groove in the same time.

Aristotle Left Behind

All objects, Galileo decided, had to push the the

way

with

as

they

difficulty

fell.

Very

light objects could

air

out of

do so only

and were slowed by the resistance of the

Heavier objects could do so

easily

and were not slowed.

In a vacuum, where there was no feathers and snowflakes

air.

air resistance

would drop

as

quickly

at

all,

as pellets

of lead. Aristotle had stated that the speed of falling objects de-

pended on

only for exceptional

And

cases, that

only because of

Aristotle

Galileo proved that this was true

their weight.

is,

for very light objects.

air resistance.

He

was

right,

and

was wrong.

Next, Galileo marked off divisions of equal length.

He

his

long groove into small

found that any

covered each successive division in to cover the one before.

accelerated as

it fell.

It

was

less

rolling ball

time than

it

took

clear than an object

In other words

it

moved

faster

with

each unit of time. Galileo was able to tionships

work out

which he used

simple mathematical rela-

to calculate the acceleration of a

Great Ideas of Science

34

Thus, he apphed mathematics to moving

body.

falling

bodies as Archimedes had once apphed

to motionless

it

ones.

With gained

appHcation and with the knowledge he had

this

in

his

experiments with rolling

achieved astonishing

how

exactly

For

results.

instance, he

would move

a cannonball

Galileo

balls,

worked out

after

it

left

the

cannon. Galileo

was not the

first

to experiment, but his dramatic

with the problem of

results

falling bodies

made

mentation more popular in the world of science.

were

scientists

stead,

experi-

No longer

content merely to reason from axioms. In-

they began to design experiments and make measure-

They

ments.

could use experiments to check their reason-

ing and to serve as starting points for 1589, then,

we

date the beginnings of experimental science.

For experimental science

to succeed, however, accurate

measurements of change had to be the passage of time

Even

new reasoning. From

itself

Most of

possible.

all,

had to be measured accurately.

in very ancient times

mankind had learned

to

measure large units of time by means of astronomical changes.

The

steady march of the seasons marked off the

year, the steady shift of the

moon's phases marked

month, the steady rotation of the earth marked

For

units of time smaller than the day,

turn to

less

accurate methods.

the mechanical clock had

off the

off the day.

mankind had

to

During the Middle Ages

come

into use.

Hands were

1000oll>0

Galileo and Experimentation

moved around

a dial

by suspended

trolled

35

by geared wheels which were conweights.

As

the weights slowly

fell,

they turned the wheels.

But

it

make

was hard

to regulate the fall of the weights and

the wheels turn smoothly and evenly.

such clocks always ran so

fast

Therefore,

or slow that none could be

trusted to give the time closer than to the nearest hour.

Timekeeping Revolutionized What was would

needed was some very steady motion that

regulate the turning wheels.

years after Galileo's death) the

Dutch

Huygens (HIGH-genz) thought

The pendulum

beat out

its

In 1656

(fourteen

scientist Christian

of the pendulum.

swing

in regular intervals.

Suppose, then, that a pendulum was attached to a clock so that

gears

it

controlled the gears.

would then become

The movement

as regular as the

of the

swing of the

pendulum.

Huygens managed

to invent such a

grandfather's clock, as ciple discovered

was mankind's

by first

experimental science.

it is

the

pendulum

clock, or

often called. Based on a prin-

young

Galileo,

Huygens' clock

accurate timepiece and a

boon

to

Democritus and Atoms They called him the

"Laughing Philosopher" because he

always seemed to be laughing bitterly

at the foolishness of

mankind.

His name was Democritus (dee-MOK-rih-tus) and he

was born about 470 B.C. fellow citizens

may

in the

Greek

have thought

city of Abdera.

His

his laughter the result of

Democritus and Atoms

madness

— one

37

tradition says they considered

him

a lunatic

and called in doctors to try to cure him.

To tions.

be sure, Democritus did seem to have peculiar no-

For

instance, he worried about

You

water could be divided.

so small that

it

were too small

Did you eventually get

a limit?

far a

drop of

could produce smaller and

smaller drops of water until they

was there

how

a

to see, but

drop of water

could be divided no more?

An End

to Splitting ?

Democritus' teacher, Leucippus (lyoo-SIP-us), had suspected there was a limit to division. Democritus continued thinking along these lines and finally announced his conviction that

no

further.

all

substances could be divided only so far and

The

smallest bit, or particle, of

substance was indivisible.

He

called that smallest particle

atomoSj a Greek

word meaning

said the universe

was made up of such tiny

cles.

the

There was nothing

"indivisible."

Democritus

invisible parti-

in the universe but particles

and

empty space between them.

According

to Democritus, there

these particles.

They combined

and each arrangement formed substance iron rusted



any kind of

it

was because

that

different types of

in various arrangements,

a specific substance.

is,

If

became the substance

the rust

different kinds of particles in iron rear-

ranged themselves.

wood burned and



were

If

ore turned to copper, the same. If

turned to ash, again the same.

3

Great Ideas of Science

8

Most Greek philosophers laughed

A

could anything be indivisible? didn't take

up

space. If

it

at

Democritus.

particle either did or

took up space, then

capable of being broken in two, with each

taking up

up no

less

How

it

had to be

new

particle

space than the original. If the particle took

space, then

it

was

indivisible.

But

a particle taking

up no space was nothing, and how could substances be built

from nothing?

Either way, the philosophers decided, the notion of

No wonder people looked at Democ-

atomos was nonsense. ritus suspiciously

and wondered

didn't even think

it

if

he was sane.

They

worthwhile to make many copies of

Democritus wrote more than seventy books,

his books.

but not one has survived.

To

be sure, some philosophers did pick up the idea of

indivisible particles.

Democritus

In 306 B.C., nearly a century after

died, a philosopher

KYOO-rus) founded lar teacher

was

named Epicurus (EP-ih-

a school in Athens.

and had many

called Epicureanism,

pupils.

and

it

His

He was a popu-

style of

philosophy

remained important for

centuries. Part of this philosophy consisted of the particle

theories of Democritus.

Nevertheless, even Epicurus couldn't convince his contemporaries, and his followers found themselves in a minority. Like the

works of Democritus, none of the many

books written by Epicurus has survived.

About 60 B.C. something fortunate happened.

A Roman

Democritus and Atoms

39

poet named Lucretius (loo-CREE-shus) became interested in the

He

Epicurean philosophy.

the Nature of Things^ in

a

On

long poem,

which he described the universe

composed of Democritus'

as

wrote

indivisible

particles.

The

book proved very popular and enough copies were made so that

it

one book the world learned in

this

Through

survived ancient and medieval times. detail of

Democritus'

views.

In ancient times, books were hand-copied and expensive.

As

a result,

only a few volumes of even the greatest works

could be made and only the wealthy could afford to buy

A great change occurred about

them.

1450 A.D. with the

invention of the printing press, which could turn out expensive books to be printed

by

the thousands.

was Lucretius'

On

One

the

of the

Nature of

first

less

works

Thijigs.

Gassendi to Boyle Thus, even the poorest scholars of early modern times could read the views of Democritus.

who

Some

did so were greatly impressed.

A

of the scientists

seventeenth-cen-

tury French philosopher, Pierre Gassendi (ga-san-DEE),

became

a

confirmed Epicurean.

He

argued strongly in

favor of the theory of tiny indivisible particles.

One

of Gassendi's pupils

was an Englishman named

Robert Boyle. In 1660 Boyle was studying

air

and won-

40

Great Ideas of Science

dered

and

why

it

could be compressed, or made to take up

less

less space.

He

supposed that

air

was made up of tiny

would mean pushing the

made

tact.

particles

more

air

closely together.

empty space between

particles.^i

That

sense.

On the that

less

with

between them. Compressing the

a great deal of space

There would be

particles

were

other hand, water might be

made up

close together, so close that they

For that reason,

it

were pulled

water vapor, a thin

So Boyle

also

were

in con-

seemed to Boyle, liquid water

could not be compressed any further. particles

of particles

far apart, the

However,

if

the

water would become

air-like substance.

became

a follower of Democritus.

Thus, for two thousand years there was an unbroken chain of believers in a theory of indivisible particles: Democritus, Epicurus, Lucretius, Gassendi, and Boyle. ertheless, their

"What! cles?

Nev-

views were never accepted by the majority.

A particle that can't be broken into smaller parti-

Nonsense!"

Weight Watchers However,

in the eighteenth century, chemists

way in which chemical compounds were They knew that other substances combined to

reconsider the

formed.

began to

Democritus and Atoms

form

these

41

compounds. For example, copper, oxygen, and

carbon combined to form the compound copper carbonate.

For the

first

time, however, they

began to measure the

weights of the combining substances.

relative

Toward the end

(PROOST), went

Louis Proust in great detail. per, oxygen,

of the century a French chemist, Joseph

He found,

into such measurements

for instance, that

whenever cop-

and carbon formed copper carbonate, they

always combined in the same proportion by weight.

The

proportion, or ratio, was five units of copper to four units

of oxygen to one unit of carbon. In other words,

used up

would

five,

if

Proust

ounces of copper to form the compound, he

have to use up four ounces of oxygen and one

also

ounce of carbon. It

wasn't as though he were baking a cake, where he

could increase the flour a the milk.

There was no way

copper carbonate.

was always

He

5 to

4 to

1

recipe.

of these results

law" or "the law of

"Odd!" thought

change the

By

down on

''recipe" for

did, the proportion

and never anything

else.

and he found the same

1799 he announced

effect

his results.

as "Proust's

definite proportions."

the English chemist results.

Dalton thought of the if

to

came what we now know

Proust announced his

What

he chose, or cut

Whatever Proust

tried other substances

— always one Out

bit, if

John Dalton when

"Why should this be?"

possibility of indivisible particles.

an oxygen particle always weighed four times

as

42

Great Ideas of Science

much

carbon particle and a copper particle always

as a

weighed

much

five times as

as a

carbon particle? Then,

you made copper carbonate by combining cle,

an oxygen

have the ratio If

4 to

5 to

you wanted

slightly,

and

particle,

a

carbon

a

copper

particle,

if

parti-

you would

1.

to alter the ratio of copper carbonate

you would have

to chip a piece off one of the

three particles.

Since Proust and other chemists were

showing that the

ratio of a

it

meant the

they were

compound

couldn't be changed,

particles couldn't be chipped.

indivisible, just as

Democritus had thought.

Dalton searched for more evidence.

compounds

He

found different

were made up of the same

that

However, the proportion of

pound was

Dalton decided

substances.

the substances in each

For example, carbon dioxide was

different.

composed of carbon and oxygen

in the ratio

by weight

the ratio of

3

also

made up

of carbon and oxygen, but in

to 4.

This was interesting. units

of

Carbon

three units of carbon to eight units of oxygen.

monoxide was

com-

was the same

in

monoxide and three might be one carbon

The number

both

ratios

of carbon weight

— three

units in carbon

units in carbon dioxide. particle

So there

weighing three units in each

compound.

At the same

time, the eight units of

oxygen

in the

carbon

dioxide ratio exactly doubled the four units in the carbon

monoxide

ratio.

If

an oxygen particle weighed four

units.

Democritus and Atoms

43

Dalton thought, then perhaps carbon monoxide was partly

composed of one oxygen

and carbon dioxide of

particle

two.

Then Dalton may have remembered the copper carbonate. The weight ratio of carbon to oxygen had been 1 to 4 (which

is

the same ratio as

plained

if

you assumed

to

3

1

2)

.

This

ratio

that copper carbonate

of one carbon and three oxygen particles.

could cles

work out

a

was made up

Always you

system whereby whole numbers of parti-

were involved, never

By

could be ex-

fractions.

1803 Dalton had announced his theory of indivisible

particles.

This time, however, the statement differed from

those previously proclaimed.

merely a

belief.

No

longer was the theory

Dalton had a whole century's worth of

chemical experimentation to back him up.

Atoms by Experiment The change its

worth

(see

in science

brought about by Galileo proved

Chapter 4).

Argument

convinced mankind of the existence of

alone had never

indivisible particles,

but argument plus experimental results did so almost

at

once.

Dalton recognized that

his

view dated back to the

Laughing Philosopher, and he humbly made use of Democritus'

word atomos

to

show

this recognition.

In En-

44

Great Ideas of Science

glish the

word became -atom." Dalton had

estabhshed the

atomic theory. All of chemistry was revolutionized as a result. In 1900, physicists used

methods no one had previously dreamed of

to discover that the cles,

atom was made up of

still

smaller parti-

and the science of physics was revolutionized. Then,

when energy was drawn from

within the atom to produce

atomic power, the course of

human

revolutionized.

history began to be

Lavoisier and Gases

It's see it

hard it

to believe that air

is

and normally you don't

moves quickly enough,

wreck

ships

and blow

it

really something. feel

it,

becomes

down

trees.

and yet a

storm

Its

You

it's

can't

there.

blast that

If

can

presence can't be

denied. Is air

the only substance that can't be seen?

The alchem-

46

Great Ideas of Science

ists

of the Middle Ages seemed to think

so.

When

their

concoctions gave off colorless bubbles or vapors, they re-

corded that they had formed

''an air."

If alchemists existed today,

their findings seriously.

science that

was more

After

some

all,

not take

alchemy was

knowledge of matter.

In this way, they

contributed to

made important

About

with the notion that ''airs"

For

worked

discoveries that

of these talented alchemists was Jan Baptista van

in alchemy.

didn't

How-

Able Alchemist

Helmont. Actually, he was

The

a false

modern chemistry.

An One

of

able alchemists observed and studied the be-

havior of the metals and other substances they with.

many

interested in converting other metals

to gold than in adding to our ever,

we would

a physician

Helmont

1630, van all

colorless vapors

he found bubbling out of

seem to be instance,

and only dabbled felt dissatisfied

were

his

really air.

mixtures just

air at all.

when

he placed

bits

of silver into a strong

chemical called nitric acid, the silver dissolved and a red

vapor bubbled up and curled into the space above the surface of the liquid.

red

air?

Was

this air?

Who

had ever heard of

Who had ever heard of air that could be seen?

Then, when van Helmont added limestone

to vinegar.

Lavoisier and Gases

47

bubbles rose to the top of the Hquid again. These at

were

colorless

and looked

But

just like air bubbles.

least if

he

held a lighted candle above the liquid's surface, the flame

went

out.

What kind of air was it in which a candle would The same

not burn?

flame-quenching vapors rose from

fermenting fruit juice and from smoldering wood. So, the so-called airs that van

Helmont and

chemists produced were not really

much

like air that

example of a group of

He

al-

But they were

they fooled everyone

one but van Helmont.

decided that



that

air

is,

was

so

every-

just

one

airlike substances.

These substances were harder materials,

air.

other

which could

easily

to study than ordinary

be seen and

Ordinary

felt.

substances had definite shapes and took up definite amounts

of room.

They came

in pieces

sugar, half a glass of water.

They seemed no

and quantities

The



a

lump of

airlike substances did not.

to spread out thinly

everywhere and

to have

structure.

From

A

new group

mont knew

the

''Chaos'' to ''Gas"

Van

of substances needed a name.

Greek myth

that the universe

Hel-

began with

thin matter without structure that spread out everywhere.

The Greeks a

called that original matter chaos.

good word! But van Helmont was Flemish

There was



that

is,

he

48

Great Ideas of Science

lived in

old

what

now Belgium

is

Greek word

he pronounced

in

it,

— and he pronounced the

good Flemish

fashion.

and the word became

He

spelled

it

as

"gas.''

Van Helmont was the first to realize that air was but one kind of gas and that there also were other kinds of

Nowadays, we

call his

gas.

red gas nitrogen dioxide and his

flame-quenching gas carbon dioxide.

Van Helmont found

I

,

it

difficult to

study the gases be-

cause as soon as they formed, they mixed with air and

faded away. However, about one hundred years later an '

English minister, Stephen Hales, thought of a

way

to pre-

vent that diffusion. I

Hales

the gas bubbles

let

opening was the

mouth

a bent pipe.

form

The

in a vessel

whose only

pipe led under water, into

The

of an upside-down water-filled bottle.

bubbles traveled through the pipe and up into the bottle, forcing out the water, giving Hales a bottle full of some particular gas, with

which he could then experiment.

Priestley's

New Drmk

Unfortunately, some gases could not be collected in a water-filled bottle because they dissolve in water.

How-

ever, about 1770, another English minister, Joseph Priestley, substituted

in

mercury, so

mercury for water. Gases did not it

could be used to collect any

gas.

dissolve

Lavoisier and Gases

49

Priestley collected

mercury.

He was particularly interested in carbon dioxide.

Once he had some

van Helmont's two gases by using

in water

collected the gas over mercury, he dissolved

and found that

a pleasant drink resulted.

He

had invented soda water. Priestley also collected the gases chloride,

ammonia, hydrogen

and sulfur dioxide and he discovered oxygen.

Obviously, there were dozens of different gases.

A About

Burning Issue

the same time that Priestley

gases, in the 1770's, the

Lavoisier

was discovering

French chemist Antoine-Laurent

(lah-vwah-ZYAY) was wrapped up

lem of combustion. Combustion rusting of substances in air



— was

that

is,

in the prob-

the burning or

a process that

nobody

really understood.

Of tion.

course, Lavoisier wasn't the

first

But he had an advantage over

to study

combus-

his predecessors:

He

firmly believed that accurate measurements were important in an experiment.

surements was not new.

The It

idea of

making

careful

had been introduced two hun-

dred years before by Galileo (see Chapter 4) it

mea-

was Lavoisier who extended the idea

.

However,

to chemistry.

Therefore, Lavoisier didn't just watch substances burning and examine the ash that was left behind.

And

he

50

Great Ideas of Science

didn't just is,

rust, that

the dull or crumbly substance that formed on their sur-

Before a substance burned or rusted, he carefully

face.

measured it

watch metals rusting and examine the

its

And

weight.

combustion he weighed

after

again.

At

first

Wood

these measurements brought only confusion.

burned and the ash

A

than the original wood. altogether; nothing at

some

friends

also burned.

much

was

That vanished, all

of

its

left

behind.

Lavoisier and

Did burning

too.

was heavier than the

tional solid material

it

until

it

a material

substance?

when

metals

original metal.

Addi-

the other hand, Lavoisier found that

rusted, the rust

lighter

candle burned and was gone

bought a small diamond and heated

destroy part or

On

all

behind was

it left

seemed to come from nowhere.

Why

should rusting add matter, while burning seemed to destroy

it?

A

Weighty Problem

Earlier chemists had not worried very

much

about such

things because they weren't acustomed to weighing their chemicals.

Lighter?

Heavier?

What

difference did

it

make? But Lavoisier worried about

it.

Did burned material

vanish into thin air? Ah, perhaps that was

formed

gases

when they

it.

If substances

burned, wouldn't those gases do

Lavoisier and Gases just that?

into

5

Wouldn't they mix with the

and vanish

air

it?

Van Helmont had shown

that burning

wood produced

carbon dioxide. Lavoisier had obtained the same gas from his

burning diamond. Thus,

could produce it

enough

to

gas.

But

make up

it

was

certain that combustion

how much

gas

was formed?

Was

for the loss of weight?

Lavoisier thought that might be the case.

About

twenty-

years earlier a Scottish chemist, Joseph Black, had heated

limestone (calcium carbonate) and found that

The

carbon dioxide.

it

released

limestone lost weight, but the weight

of the gas produced equaled that lost weight.

"Well then," Lavoisier thought, "suppose substance loses weight because

about metals?

it

releases a gas.

a

burning

Then what

Did they gain weight when they

rust be-

cause they combine with a gas?" Black's

work

He

again provided a clue.

had bubbled

carbon dioxide gas through limewater (a solution of

cal-

cium hydroxide), and the gas and calcium hydroxide combined to form powdered limestone.

If

calcium hydroxide

could combine with a gas to form another substance, Lavoisier thought, then perhaps metals did the same.

Locking Air Out Thus, Lavoisier had good reason to suspect that gases

were behind the weight changes

that resulted

from com-

Great Ideas of Science

52

But

bustion.

how would

he prove

Weigh-

his suspicion?

ing ashes and rusts was not enough; he also would have to

weigh the

gases.

However, the wide blanket of created a problem.

How

air that encircles

could he weigh gases that

caped from burning objects into the hand,

how

The

its

the other

air

left

would rush

place?

all

but a definite amount of

both by conducting

gases,

when more

es-

answer, Lavoisier realized, was to lock in the gases

and lock out

tainer.

On

air?

could he determine the amount of gas that

the air to combine with a metal, in to take

the earth

Then,

if

his

He

air.

chemical reactions in a sealed con-

a substance inside

it

burned and released

they would be captured in the container.

stance rusted and

only from the

combined with

air inside

with the

by

solid substance

the enclosed substance

gases,

If a

sub-

they would come

the container.

Weighing Lavoisier began

could do

the Evidence

carefully weighing the container

and

air sealed inside

He

on

heated

it

with a

by building a fire under it.

When

by focusing

large magnifying glass or

it.

sunlight

the substance had burned or rusted, he again weighed the

container with

He

its

contents.

repeated the process with a

number of

different sub-

Lavoisier and Gases

stances. In

every

53

case, regardless of

what

it

was

that

burned

or rusted, the sealed container showed no change in weight.

Suppose, for example, a piece of

which of course weighed of the gas released

by

less

the

wood burned

to an ash,

than the wood.

The weight

wood made up

the missing

weight. Therefore, the weight of the container remained the same.

Suppose

a piece of iron

absorbed gas from the

The

container and changed into rust.

by

the

the

was heavier

However, the weight gained was exactly

than the iron. offset

rust

air in

air's loss

of weight. Again, the weight of the

container did not change.

and measurements had

a great

on the development of chemistry. They

laid the

Lavoisier's experiments

influence

groundwork for terpretation

him

we

his interpretation of still

use today.

The

combustion, the inexperiments also led

to conclude that matter could be neither created nor

destroyed;

it

could only change from one form to another

(for example,

This

is

from soHd substance

to gas)

the famous "law of conservation of matter."

This idea that matter

is

indestructible

made

it

easier to ac-

cept, thirty years later, the theory that matter

is

made up

of indestructible atoms (see Chapter 5).

Both the law of conservation of matter and the atomic theory have been improved and slightly changed in the twentieth century. the

strong

and

On

sturdy

the whole, however, they

platform

on

which

form

modern

Great Ideas of Science

54

:j

chemistry stands. For Lavoisier

is

chemistry."

hi$ part in building this platform,

commonly

called

the

''father

of

modern

Newton and It's

only

two

parts

natural to think that the universe

— the heavens and the

Greek philosopher ate in

Inertia

Aristotle the

earth.

two

And

parts

is

made up

of

to the ancient

seemed

to oper-

completely different ways.

Aristotle observed that everything

decayed

— men

grew old and

on earth changed or

died, buildings aged

and

crumbled, the sea became stormy then calm, winds blew

56

Great Ideas of Science

clouds here and there,

blazed up and

fires

went

out, the

very land shivered with earthquakes. In the sky, however, there seemed to be only serenity

and changelessness. The sun rose and flame never brighter or dimmer.

on schedule,

set

its

The moon went through

phases in regular order, and the stars shone without

its

ceasing.

Aristotle decided that the

two

parts of the universe oper-

ated under different sets of rules or "natural laws." There

one natural law for objects on earth and another for

\\'as

objects in the heavens.

These

different natural laws also

Aristotle considered the if

a stone

was held

On

straight

down.

Left to

itself, all

way

seemed to apply when

objects

in the air

and

a windless day,

moved. For example, released,

smoke

it

dropped

rose straight up.

earthly motion seemed to be either

up or

down.

Not fall

so in the sky.

The sun and moon and

toward the earth or

totle

rise

away from

stars didn't

Instead, Aris-

it.

thought they moved in smoth, steady

circles

around

the earth.

One more

difference.

ally stopped.

A

moving

objects eventu-

A falling rock hit the earth and came to rest.

falling ball

came

On earth,

to rest.

kicked pebble

might bounce

a

few

times, but

A shding block of wood,



all

came

eventually tired and stood

to rest. still.

soon

a rolling

Even

a

it

also

wagon,

a

running horse

Newton and Thus, things

Inertia

57

seemed to Aristotle that the natural

it

on earth was

rest.

Anything

in

motion returned to

that natural state of rest as soon as possible.

however, the sun, moon, and

moving forever

at the

same

stars

Aristotle's notions about the

years.

human mind had

Then

Where

Newton way objects move were

to offer for nearly

Galileo began to

the

two thousand

come up with

Aristotle had thought that

more rapidly than jects fell at the

better ones

They were with

They

would

fall as

quickly

About forty

as a

fell

more slowly,

all

ob-

it

was

they were slowed down.

push through the

In a vacuum, he

no longer be slowed by

entist Isaac

why

so light, they could

difficulty.

that

fell

same speed. However, Aristotle was right

But Galileo explained

true.

heavy objects

showed

light ones, Galileo

about very light objects.

ject

never stopped, but kept

Chapter 4)

(see

ject

In the sky,

stately speed.

Galileo to

best the

state of

said,

lump of

even the

air

only

lightest ob-

lead because

it

would

air resistance.

years after Galileo's death the English sci-

Newton examined

could be affected by

the idea that a

air resistance.

He

moving ob-

could think of

other ways in which motion was interfered with.

For example, when

a falling object hit the earth, its

mo-

Great Ideas of Science

58

ground got

tion stopped because the

rock skidded across

was

a

rock moved along

Along

a stretch of ice

What would ject

and

less friction

moved

it

happen,

no

barriers,

still

Newton

words, what

if

friction,

its

its

own surface.

farther before stopping. farther.

thought,

made no contact with anything

were no

got in

a

smooth paved road, there

a

moved

it

still

When

between the un-

friction

even surface of the road and rough spots on

When

way.

its

ground

a dirt road, the

way. The rock was stopped by

in

no

the object were

if

at all?

a

moving ob-

What

air resistance?

if

there

In other

moving through

a vast

vacuum? In that case, there would be nothing to stop or swerve

would

just

it

from

its

path

keep moving

natural state of an object

He

at the

part of

Newton

itself will

remain

slow

The

it,

object

in the

same

decided that the necessarily rest.

it.

Any move

statement which can be

object at rest left entirely to

at rest forever.

entirely to itself will

all.

on earth was not

set forth his conclusions in a

expressed as follows:

at

same speed and

Therefore,

direction forever.

That was only

— nothing

it,

Any

at the

object in motion left

same speed

in the

same

straight line forever.

This statement

called

Newton's

first

law of motion.

Newton,

objects tended to stay at rest or

They seemed

almost too "idle" or "lazy" to

According in motion.

is

to

Newton and Inertia change their

motion ertia" If

is

59

For

state.

comes from

a

Greek word meaning

you can

it,

inertia,

Suppose you want to

beach

touch and off

set a

it sails.

If

ease

so, it

ball

you want to it

as

are

moving, there

quickly moving beach ball by batting

A

it

cannonball

is

motion than

much more

inertia.

object was the

it

cannonball as

you can

You can stop a down with your

would knock your hand

and scarcely be affected

fully to one side

state of

hard

much more is

a

beach

Newton

amount of the

pain-

itself.

reluctant to change

ball.

The

cannonball has

Thus,

object's inertia.

a

can-

ball.

A cannonball also has more weight than a beach ball. heavy objects have considerable mass while

objects have as mass.

sixth as

little

mass.

its

suggested that the mass of an

nonball has more mass than a beach

general,

it

cannonball moving at the same speed had better

not be interfered with, for

The

set a

give

a difference in the

is

with which they can be stopped.

hand.

You

moving.

moves but slowly.

two

the

"idleness.")

or resistance to change.

moving, however, you have to push

Once

law of

see that different objects

have different amounts of

and even

first

sometimes called the principle of "inertia." ("In-

you think about

a light

Newton's

this reason,

However, weight

is

In

light

not the same

On the moon, for instance, any object is only oneheavy

as

The movement

it is

on

earth, but

its

of a canonball on the

mass

is

unchanged.

moon would

be as

60

Great Ideas of Science

hard to

start

and

as

dangerous to stop

as

on

cannonball would seem surprisingly light ing

you were hold-

it.

To make on

aside is

if

earth. Yet, the

its

move

an object

faster,

you must push or

path,

The

called a "force."

quicken or slow

its

rate at

slow down, or turn

pull

wich

motion or to turn

it.

a

A push or a pull body

aside

made

is

is its

to

"accelera-

tion."

Newton

may

also

be stated

put forth a second law of motion, which

as follows:

The

acceleration of a?iy

body

is

equal to the force applied to that body divided by the

body^s mass. In other words, pushing or pulling an object tends to speed

it

up, slow

greater the force, the

or direction. is,

the

tion.

much

amount of

more the object

inertia

a

faster because

its

down, or turn will

it

it

has



change

its

has

much more

little

speed



that

acts against this accelera-

hard push will make a beach it

The

aside.

the other hand, the object's mass

For example,

applied to the affect

On

it

mass.

ball

go

But the same force

massive cannonball will hardly

movement.

From Apple

to

Moon

Newton then went on to propose a third law of motion, which may be stated: If a body exerts a force on a second body, then that second body exerts an equal force,

in the

Newton and Inertia

61

Opposite direction, on the

book

presses

down on

body. In other words,

a table, the table

the

stays in place, neither sinking through the table

nor

on

the motions and forces

much

The

earth.

not in a straight

Can they

line.

move through

The moon,

also explain

first

law?

No, because

"left entirely to itself." it is

It

doesn't

a

vacuum, but

for instance, follows a

curved path around the earth. Does

because

to explain almost

different motions in the heavens?

objects in the heavens

Newton's

is

air.

Those three laws of motion can be used

the

a

must be pressing up

an equal amount. That

just

bounding into the

all

if

why

on the book by

book

first

this fact contradict

the

moon

move

is

not being

in a straight line

always being pulled to one side



in the direc-

tion of the earth.

In order for the

moon

to be pulled to one side like that,

Newton's second law required the plied to the

moon,

a force

existence of a force ap-

always exerted in the direction

of the earth.

The ies.

It

earth does, of course, exert a force

makes apples

fall

downward, for Could

the jorce of gravitation.

moon? Newton

if

that

its

one supposed that

of gravitation in the same

What's more,

instance.

This

is

this force also affect the

applied his three laws of motion to the

moon and showed nicely

on earthly bod-

movements could be explained it is

way

affected as

by

the earth's force

an apple.

a force of gravitation

is

set

up by every

62

Great Ideas of Science

object in the universe.

It is

the gravitation of the sun, for

instance, that keeps the earth

moving around

that large,

glowing body.

Newton was able to use his three laws of motion to show that the size of the force of gravitation

between any two

bodies in the universe depended on the masses of the bodies

and on the distance between them. The greater the masses,

The

the greater the gravitational force.

greater the dis-

tance between the bodies, the smaller the gravitational force.

Newton had worked

out the law of universal gravi-

tation.

Two it

great things

were accomplished by

this law.

explained the motions of the heavenly bodies

almost the finest

detail.

bled very slowly on

It

its axis.

explain

how

from us

circled each other.

pairs of stars

Even more Aristotle sets

explained

Eventually

many

important, perhaps,

was wrong

why it

First,

down

to

our earth wobalso

was used

away

trillions of miles

Newton showed

in concluding that there

to

that

were two

of natural laws, one for the heavens and one for the

earth.

The

three laws of motion explained falling apples

and bouncing

balls, as

Newton proved

well as the circling moon.

that the heavens and the earth

of the same universe.

Thus,

were

parts

8 Faraday and Fields Imagine an iron rod standing on about

it

near the top.

Certainly

you

almost

all

it.

cases a force

end, with a string tied

Can you knock

can. Just push

the string and pull

its

it

The push is

it

over?

with your finger or or the pull

delivered only

is

when

seize

a force.

the

In

two ob-

jects touch.

When

you push

the rod, your finger touches

it.

When

64

Great Ideas of Science

you

pull

it,

your

You might knock

touches the rod.

seeming to touch then you push they touch

it

air

and the string

fingers hold the string

it,

the rod over without

by blowing

just

in

direction.

its

But

molecules in the direction of the rod, and

and push

it.

Newton's three laws of motion explained the behavior of such forces (see Chapter 7).

The

laws could be used to

explain the principles underlying machines in pulleys,

which

levers,

and gears acted by pushing and pulling. In such

machines, objects exerted forces on other objects by making contact.

"Mechanicar' Universe In the 1700's, scientists believed the whole universe ran

by such contact

forces.

This was the mechanical view of

the universe.

Could there be forces without contact?

One was

could.

the force of gravitation,

himself had explained.

kept

it

in

its

orbit,

The

Indeed there

which Newton

earth pulled at the

but the earth did not touch the moon.

There was absolutely nothing between the two even

air;

moon and bodies, not

yet there was a considerable force of gravitation

between them.

We

can observe another kind of force without contact

if

wt

is

a small

return to our iron rod standing on end. All

we need

magnet. Bring that magnet close to the top of the

Faraday and Fields

65

rod and the rod will lean toward the magnet and

magnet doesn't have

to

touch the rod; nor

The

fall.

the air in-

is

volved, for the magnet will pull at the rod in a vacuum.

long magnet

If a thin,

is

allowed to swing in any direc-

end up pointing north and south.

tion, it will

words, the magnet will become

a simple

In other

compass.

With

such compasses, European navigators began to explore the oceans about 1350.

The end

of the magnet that points north

north pole; the other end of one magnet

is

is

come

together.

south and south a strong

between the magnets and they

If like poles



are



that

is,

Even Thales

it

(see

brought near one another, there

Chapter

how

else

1)

called ''action at

first

black ore attracted iron at

a certain

life in it!"

he exclaimed.

It

was only ordinary loadstone. But

scientists

going to explain the mysterious

of course.

were

apart.

was taken aback when he

"This ore must have

It didn't,

is

is

puzzled scientists from the beginning.

observed that lumps of a distance.

will

north and north or

This kind of force-wichout-touching

and

its

south pole. If the north pole

push and the magnets will move

a distance"

called

brought near the south pole of another,

a strong pull

there

is its

is

force of a magnet, a force

which could

attract

and topple

an iron rod without touching

it?

The

was even more mysterious.

Its

magnetic needle always

pointed north and south because distant polar regions of the earth.

it

action of a compass

was

attracted

by

Here was action

the at a

Great Ideas of Science

(i(i

very great distance!

Here was

a force that could find a

magnetic needle in a haystack! In 1831 the English scientist Michael Faraday attacked

He

the problem of these mysterious forces.

magnets on

a

wooden

table,

with the north pole of one

facing the south pole of the other.

enough

to

The magnets were

to pull at each other, but not close

together.

At

overcome

this distance their force

their friction

two

placed

with the

the force was there, however, for

if

enough

close

come

to

wasn't strong enough table.

Faraday knew

he dropped iron

filings

between the magnets, they moved up to the magnets and clung there.

Faraday decided to vary the experiment. of sturdy paper over the filings

on the paper. The

He laid a piece

two magnets, then dropped

the

friction of the filings against the

paper held them in place and kept them from moving to-

ward the magnets.

Magnetic "Line-up" Then Faraday ings

move

a bit.

tapped the paper lightly to make the

Promptly they twisted

like tiny

fil-

compass

needles and pointed toward one magnet or the other.

Indeed, the filings seemed to take up a position in lines that extended

the other.

from the pole of one magnet

Faraday considered

exactly between the

two

poles

to the pole of

this carefully.

were

straight.

The

A

lines

little

to

Faraday and Fields

one

67

between the magnets the fiHngs

side of the space

lined up, but

were

filings

now they traced out a

to

one

curve.

The

still

farther the

the farther outward was the curve

side,

they traced.

Faraday snapped magnetic

lilies

He

his fingers.

of force passing

had

There were

it!

from the north pole of

a

other

own south pole or to the south pole of anmagnet. And these lines of force could move out-

ward

great distances

magnet

to

its

from the

poles.

This meant that the magnet didn't work by action distance at

object

when

magnet pushed or pulled

Instead, a

all.

its lines

of force approached

lines of force either lines of force that

it.

The

at

at a

some

magnet's

touched the object or approached

came from the object

itself.

Later scientists came to suspect that the same thing probably happened in other kinds of action at a distance. There

had to be gravitational the earth and

moon.

lines of force, for instance,

It

was these touching

lines of force

that enable the

two bodies

too, electrically

charged bodies pushed and pulled

jects, so

there

were

around

to attract each other.

Then, at

ob-

also electrical lilies of force.

New

Generators

Faraday was quickly able to show that when objects

moved

across magnetic lines of force, an electric current

was

up

set

in the

moving

object.

68

Great Ideas of Science

Until then, electric currents could be obtained only

from

which

batteries,

are containers of reacting chemicals.

With

Battery electricity was quite expensive.

new

discovery, electricity could be generated

engine,

which could move objects

force.

Electricity obtained

Thus,

it

by

from such steam

was magnetic

a

steam

across magnetic lines of

was very cheap and could be produced tities.

Faraday's

in

gejierators

enormous quan-

lines of force that electrified

the world in the twentieth century.

Faraday was

a self-taught genius.

He

school past the earliest grades, and he matics.

of

how

He

He

could not

work out

could only trace them with 1860, however,

name

of James Clerk

Maxwell worked out described

how

mathematical description

Scottish

mathematician by

Maxwell tackled the problem.

a set of

mathematical equations which

away from

The force surrounding any magnet

rapidly grows

a

his iron filings.

the strength of force changed as one

farther and farther

field of

knew no mathe-

the lines of force were distributed about a magnet.

About the

a

had not been to

weak

fills

a

a

magnet

magnet

is

any

in

direction.

called a "field."

the entire universe.

as distance increases, so

it

went

The

However,

it

can be meas-

ured only quite close to the magnet. Maxwell showed that a

hne could be drawn through

a particular strength.

The

all

result

parts of the field that

would be one of the

had

lines

of force that Faraday spoke of. Maxwell's equations thus

Faraday and Fields

made

it

69

possible to deal exactly with Faraday's lines of

force.

Maxwell fields

showed

also

that magnetic fields and electric

always existed together. Thus, one could speak only

of an electromag7ietic

field.

"waves" spread out

set of

of such a

field.

in

Under all

certain conditions a

directions

from the center

This was electromagnetic radiation. Such

radiation had to travel at the speed of Hght, according to

Maxwell's mathematics. Thus,

was an electromagnetic

New

seemed that

light itself

radiation.

Years after Maxwell died, rect.

it

his theories

were proved cor-

kinds of electromagnetic radiation, such as

radio waves and

X

were discovered. Maxwell had

rays,

predicted these kinds of radiation, but he did not live to see their existence

proved by experiment.

In 1905 the German-Swiss scientist Albert Einstein be-

gan to revamp man's view of the universe. the mechanical view,

He

abandoned

which had begun with Newton's laws

of motion, and explained the universe in terms of

The two

fields that

gravitational field

were known

at the

and the electromagnetic

fields.

time were the field.

Einstein

tried to find a single set of mathematical equations that

would ever,

describe both

two new

fields,

fields

failed.

Since his time,

how-

have been discovered which apply

to the tiny particles that

the atom. These are

but

make up

known

the nucleus, or core, of

as "nuclear fields."

70

Great Ideas of Science

Electromagnet Push-Pull

Everything that used to be considered is

now

viewed

a push-pull force

as the interaction of fields.

atoms consist of electrons.

When

each other, the electromagnetic electrons push one another.

The

rims of

two atoms approach

fields

surrounding these

The atoms

themselves

move

apart without having actually touched.

Therefore,

when we push

a

rod or pull a

not really making contact with anything

we

are

We

are

string,

solid.

just taking

advantage of these tiny electromagnetic

The moon

circles the earth

and the earth

because of the gravitational

fields

Atomic bombs explode because nuclear

fields.

circles the

sun

about these bodies.

of things that happen to

fields.

The new

field

make advances

view of the universe has helped

that

would have been impossible

of the mechanical view.

in the days

Yet, the field view traces right

back to Faraday's idea that magnetic push or pull an object.

scientists

lines of force

could

^ i m 'i VsNiffll

aH

H ttDDtok31 [Z^ii^^-ffl

Rumford and Heat It

is

difficult to have

Thompson.

He

was

a

much sympathy

for Benjamin

shrewd person whose

concern was for himself.

When

first

and

last

he was only nineteen, for

instance, he escaped the poverty of his childhood

by mar-

widow nearly twice his age. Thompson was born in Woburn, Massachusetts,

rying a rich

in

pnI

Great Ideas of Science

72

In those days, Massachusetts and the other original

1753.

American

states

were

still

Thompson was

after

British colonies.

He

as to

which

attached himself to the British

and served

as a

few years

married, the American Revolution

broke out and he guessed wrong win.

A

spy against the colonial

side

army

in

would Boston

patriots.

When the British left Boston, they took Thompson with them.

He

left his

wife and child behind with no apparent

misgivings and never returned.

In Europe, he served any government that would pay his price

— and got

in trouble

with one after another be-

cause he took bribes, sold secrets, and in general was an

immoral and dishonest man.

Thompson

In 1790, tinent.

He

left

England for the European con-

entered the service of Bavaria

Germany, but then an independent varian ruler granted called himself inal

name

married

him

of Concord,

is

New

had

is

now known

Thompson the orig-

Rumford

that

Benjamin

in history.

one thing to be

a strong

of count.

Hampshire, where he had

It is as

Scientific

There

title

part of

nation), and the Ba-

Count Rumford, "Rumford" being

his first wife.

Thompson

the

(now

Mmd

said in

Rumford's favor:

yearning for knowledge.

From boyhood,

He he

Rumford and Heat

showed an

active

73

and shrewd mind that could pierce to the

core of a problem.

In the course of his teresting experiments

life,

Rumford conducted many

and came to many important conclu-

But the most important of

sions.

in-

all

took place in Bavaria,

after

he had been placed in charge of manufacturing can-

nons.

A cannon was made by casting metal in the proper The

shape.

metal then was hollowed out to form

solid

the interior of the cannon.

was used

Of

and gouge out the

to scrape

course, the

A rapidly turning boring tool interior.

cannon and the boring

tool

grew

hot.

Streams of cold water had to be sprayed on them constantly.

Rumford watched

mind began Just

to

the heat develop and his active

work.

what was heat anyway?

Scientists of the time, including the great ist

Lavoisier, felt that heat

called caloric.

As more

stance, that substance

was

caloric

a weightless fluid

was squeezed

grew hotter and

feel the

at quite a distance.

could be

warmth from

The warmth

felt at a distance

they

into a sub-

hotter. Eventually,

the caloric overflowed and streamed out in

Thus, you could

French chem-

all

directions.

a red-hot object

of the sun, for example,

of 93,000,000 miles.

If a

hot

object was placed in contact with a cold one, caloric

flowed out of the hot object and into the cold. caused the hot object to cool to

warm

up.

down and

The

flow

the cold object

74

Great Ideas of Science

The

theory worked quite well and very few

questioned caloric

it.

But Rumford

did.

He wondered why

was breaking the metal

it

was because the boring cannon

inside the

caloric contained in the metal therefore like

the

was pouring out of the cannon. People who be-

lieved in the caloric theory said tool

scientists

The

to bits.

came pouring out

water from a broken jug.

Rumford looked over

Indeed?

the boring tools and

found one that was completely blunted and worn down.

The workers

''Use that one," he said.

used up, but

Rumford

objected that

repeated his order

was

it

more sharply and

they scurried to their labors.

The blunt borer turned uselessly. the metal at

new

borer.

all,

but

it

It

did not cut through

developed even more heat than a

The workers must

have wondered

why

the

count looked so pleased.

Rumford saw

that caloric

break-up of the metal. In at all?

The

have held

was not

fact,

did

it

released through the

come from

metal was cold to begin with, so

much

caloric.

Yet

caloric

it

the metal

couldn't

seemed to flow out in

unlimited quantities.

Rumford measured

the caloric flowing out of the can-

non by noting how much the water was heated up cooled the boring tool and cannon.

If all that caloric

as

it

were

put back into the cannon, he concluded, the cannon would melt.

Rumford and Heat

75

Particles in

Rumford decided

that heat

Motion

was not

form of motion. As the borer ground

a fluid at

all,

but a

against the metal,

its

motion was converted into quick, tiny motions of the

making up the

particles

metal.

It

didn't matter

whether

the borer cut or did not cut through the metal.

It

was

those quick, tiny particle-motions that resulted in heat.

Naturally, heat

would continue

the boring tool turned.

do with any

For

caloric that

as

Heat production had nothing

to

might or might not be

fifty years afterward,

Scientists

as

in the metal.

Rumford's work was ignored.

were content to deal with

out theories explaining

produced

long

to be

how

it

caloric,

and to work

flowed from one body to

another.

Why?

Part of the reason was that they hesitated to ac-

cept the idea of tiny particles undergoing a quick, tiny

motion that no one could

About ten

see.

years after Rumford's work, however, John

Dalton advanced the atom theory

by

little,

Wasn't ticles

it

scientists

(see

Chapter

5).

Little

were accepting the existence of atoms.

possible, then, that

Rumford's small moving par-

were atoms or molecules (groups of atoms)?

Perhaps. trillions

But

upon

how was

trillions

one to imagine the motion of

of invisible molecules? Did they

all

76

Great Ideas of Science

move

Did some move one way and some an-

together?

some neat pattern? Or did they un-

other, according to

dergo random motion^ each one moving in any direction

and

at

any speed, with no way of telHng the direction and

speed of any particular molecule? If the

molecules did engage in random movement,

how

could one possibly make sense out of such a condition? In the middle 1700's, a

few decades before Rumford's

work, a Swiss mathematician named Daniel Bernoulli had tried to handle the

problem of random motion of

This attempt was well before

in gases.

scientists

particles

accepted

an atomic theory, and Bernoulli's mathematics wasn't quite detailed enough.

Still, it

was

a

good

try.

In the 1860's, James Clerk Maxwell came on the scene (see

Chapter

making up

8).

gases

Maxwell assumed

were engaged

keen mathematical

analysis,

movement provided

in

that the molecules

random movement. By

he showed

how random move-

a neat explanation of the

behavior of

gases.

Maxwell showed how

particles of gas

moving

at

random

could create a pressure against the walls of a vessel that held them.

Furthermore, that pressure would change

the particles

were forced together or

to spread apart. is

known

from

a

if

if

they were allowed

This explanation of the behavior of gases

as the kinetic

theory of

Greek word meaning

Maxwell usually

gases.

("Kinetic" comes

''motion.")

shares the credit for the theory with

Rumford and Heat

77

the Austrian physicist

worked

it

Ludwig Boltzmann. The two men

out independently at about the same time.

Maxwell's Solution One a gas

of the important laws of gas behavior states that

expands

as

temperature goes up and contracts

as

tem-

perature goes down. According to the caloric theory, the

As

explanation for this behavior was simple. up, caloric pours into so the gas expands.

it.

As

More

caloric needs

a gas heats

more room,

a gas cools, caloric leaves

and the

gas contracts.

What

did

Maxwell have

periment must have been in motion. faster

As

a gas

is

heated,

his its

mind. Heat

molecules

and nudge each other farther

expands.

When

Rumford's ex-

to say to that?

is

move

apart.

a

form of

faster

Thus

and

the gas

the temperature drops, the reverse hap-

pens and the gas contracts.

Maxwell worked out an equation which showed the range of speed that gas molecules would have temperature.

at

any given

Some molecules moved slowly and some

quickly, but most

moved

at

an intermediate speed.

these various speeds, one particular speed able at a given temperature.

As

Among

was most prob-

the temperature rose, this

most probable speed increased. This kinetic theory of heat could apply to liquids and

Great Ideas of Science

78 solids, as

well as gases. In a solid, for instance, molecules

might not stead,

fly

about

like bullets, as

they did in

The

they might vibrate about one spot.

this variation

followed Maxwell's equation,

gases.

In-

speed of

as did the

speed

of the bulletlike molecules in gases.

A

Better Explanation

All the properties of heat could be explained just as well

by

the kinetic theory as

by

the caloric theory. Indeed, the

kinetic theory easily accounted for as those described

had

by Rumford)

some properties (such

w^hich the caloric theory

failed to explain adequately.

The

caloric theory

flow of caloric from

a

had described heat transfer

as the

hot object into a cold one. Accord-

ing to the kinetic theory, heat transfer resulted from the

movement

When

of molecules.

contact with a cold one,

its

a hot

body was placed

fast-moving molecules collided

with the slow ones of the cold body. As molecules slowed

down

a bit

up. Thus, heat "flowed"

The

in

a result, the fast

and the slow ones speeded

from the hot body

understanding of heat

as a

to the cold.

form of motion

is

one

of the great ideas of science. Maxwell enlarged this great idea into an even greater one.

He showed how random

motion could be used to explain certain

definite laws of

nature whose effect was totally predictable, not at

all.

random

Rumford and Heat

79

Maxwell's idea has been expanded very century.

dom

Scientists

now

take

it

much

in the past

for granted that the ran-

behavior of atoms and molecules can bring about the

most amazing

results.

Even

life

itself

may

have been

created from the nonliving matter in the oceans through the

random movements

of atoms and molecules.

10 Joule and Energy

From prehistoric times, man has realized that motion can accomplish tasks and do work. Place a rock on a nut and

nothing will happen. But bringing larly,

it

down on

set the

rock in motion by quickly

the nut, and the nut will crack. Simi-

an arrow in rapid

flight

the thick hide of an animal.

can force

And many

its

way through

of us have seen

Joule and Energy

81

wreckers shatter a brick wall by swinging a ponderous steel ball against

The

it.

do work

ability to

is

A

called "energy."

moving

object possesses energy of motion, or "kinetic energy."

When Newton

stated his laws of

motion

in the 1680's,

he maintained that any object in motion would continue

moving

same velocity unless acted on by an outside

at the

moving

force (see Chapter 7). In other words, a kinetic energy

But

would always remain

object's

the same.

in the real world, outside forces are always operating

against

moving

A

appear.

ball rolling

A

to a halt.

objects and kinetic energy seems to dis-

A meteorite

along the ground slows and comes

bouncing marble flashes

through the

finally dribbles to a stop. air

and

is

stopped by the

earth.

What

happens to the kinetic energy in

Some, but not

all,

of

it

may

and

still

their kinetic

these cases?

be converted to work. In

the bouncing marble and rolling ball all

all

fact,

may do no work

at

energy will disappear.

The Answer: Heat The heat as that

it

meteorite offers a hint. it

passes

through the atmosphere

glows white hot.

Heat!

It creates a



great deal of so

much

heat

Great Ideas of Science

82

Enter

(JOWL)

an

English

James

scientist,

Prescott

Joule

A rather sickly childhood had left Joule unable

.

to lead an active

life,

world of books

so he retired to the

and became intrigued with science. Fortunately, he was the son of a wealthy brewer the best tutors to his son.

who

could afford to bring

Joule eventually inherited the

brewery, but he always remained more interested in science than in the world of business. Joule's interest centered

tion

between energy and

Rumford's

on the problem of the connec-

heat.

belief that heat

He must have known about

was

a

form of motion. Ac-

cording to Rumford, heat consisted of the rapid motion of tiny particles of matter (see Chapter 9). If this

appear at

were all.

true. Joule saw, kinetic

The motion

tion against the heat.

ground

it

energy did not

dis-

of a rolling ball produced fricFriction produced

rolled on.

Thus, the motion of the rolling

ball

was slowly con-

verted to the motion of myriad particles of the ball and those of the ground

it

— the

particles

touched.

Heat would then be another form of the energy of motion. Joule thought.

Ordinary kinetic energy would be

turned into heat energy, with no

true of other forms of energy, too. sense.

Electricity and

Perhaps

loss.

It

this

was

seemed to make

magnetism could do work, and so

could reactions between chemicals.

Thus

there

were

electrical energy,

magnetic energy,

and chemical energy. All could be turned into

heat.

For

Joule and Energy

instance,

83

magnetism could produce an

would heat

a wire.

And when

electric current that

coal burned, the chemical

reaction of the coal and air could produce a great deal of heat.

Heat was

just

another form of these other kinds of

energy. Joule reasoned.

Therefore, a given quantity of

energy always ought to produce a given quantity of In 1840, as a

make very

heat.

young man of twenty-two, he began

to

careful and accurate measurements to test this

possibility.

Joule stirred water or mercury with paddle wheels and

measured the energy of the moving paddle wheels and the temperature rise in the liquid.

He

compressed

air,

then

measured the energy that had gone into the compression

and the heat that developed through narrow tubes.

He

in the

air.

produced an

a coil of

wire by rotating the

magnet.

He

coil

also passed a current

He

forced water

electric current in

between the poles of

a

through the wire with-

out the help of a magnet. In each case. Joule measured the

energy that was used up and the heat that appeared.

Even on

his

honeymoon he

couldn't resist taking time

out to measure the temperature at the top and bottom of a waterfall, to see

how much

heat had been produced

by

the energy of the f alHng water.

By

1847, Joule

was

satisfied that a

given amount of

energy of any sort always produced a given amount of heat.

(Energy can be measured

in units called ergs,

and

84

Great Ideas of Science

heat

is

measured

orie of heat

in calories.)

was produced whenever about 41,800,000

ergs of energy of any kind

between energy and heat

were used up. This

is

established in Joule's honor.

we

relationship

called the "mechanical equiva-

Later, a unit of energy called a joule

lent of heat."

ergs;

Joule showed that one cal-

A joule

is

was

equal to 10,000,000

can then say that one calorie equals 4.18

joules.

Reluctant Listeners

Joule had trouble announcing his discovery, for he was neither a professor nor a

He

was

not

listen.

in

and the

just a brewer,

few months

later,

They would

except that a young

make

son, rose to

tific

a

Manchester news-

he managed to make the same scientists,

but they listened

have dismissed the whole subject,

man

in the audience,

points in

comments were

so

William

sympathy with

shrewd and clever

Joule.

Thomson became one Thus,

He it

is

was

better

ThomThom-

that the scien-

audience could not help but take notice.

century.

day would

his lecture in full.

speech before an audience of

son's

scientists of the

— and then convinced

paper to publish

coldly.

of any learned society.

Finally, Joule decided to give a public lecture

Manchester

A

member

(In later

life

of the great scientists of the 19th

known by

established that

the

title

Lord Kelvin.)

any form of energy could

Joule and Energy

85

be turned into only a fixed amount of heat. But heat

was

a

form of energy. Might

it

itself

not be that energy could

never be destroyed or created? Might

it

not be that energy

could only be converted from one form to another?

Misplaced Credit In 1842, this idea occurred to a Julius

German

scientist

named

Robert Mayer. At that time, however. Joule's work

had not been heard of and Mayer himself had made very

few measurements. Mayer's plucked out of thin

air,

belief

seemed

like

something

and no one would pay any atten-

tion to him.

Another German

Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand

scientist,

von Helmholtz made the same statement parently without

ready to

It is

1847, ap-

of Mayer's prior work.

work had been

time Joule's last

knowing

in

published.

Scientists

By

this

were

at

furthermore, to be impressed.

listen and,

Helmholtz, therefore,

who

is

usually given credit

known as "the law of conservation of energy." The simplest way of stating this law is as follows: The total for

what

is

energy of the universe

Mayer

tried to

same thing

is

constant.

remind the world that he had

in 1842, but

said the

everyone had forgotten or had

never heard. Poor Mayer was accused of trying to credit.

He was in such

despair that he tried to

kill

steal

himself

86

Great Ideas of Science

by jumping out

window.

of a

more

lived in obscurity for thirty

the end of his

life

He

survived, however, and

years. It

was only toward

that Julius Mayer's importance

was

realized.

The law first

of conservation of energy

is

often called "the

law of thermodynamics." Ever since the early part

of the nineteenth century, scientists had been investigating the jflow of heat called

from one object

to another. This study

is

"thermodynamics" (from Greek words meaning

"motion of heat"). Once the law of conservation of energy was accepted, studies of

it

had to be taken into account in

all

thermodynamics.

Carnot's Engine

At

the time that the law of conservation of energy was

established, students of

thermodynamics already

realized

that energy could not always be completely turned into

work. Some of

it

always dribbled away

how they tried to stop it. The first to show this by a

young French

physicist,

as heat,

no matter

careful scientific analysis

was

Nicholas Leonard Sadi Carnot.

In 1824, he published a small book on the steam engine. In

it

he presented arguments to show that the heat energy

turned out by a steam engine could not produce more than a certain

amount of work. The amount of work depended

Joule and Energy

on the

87

difference in temperature

between the

of the steam engine and the coldest. it

— no matter how much heat

built up.

it

the entire steam

If

engine were at one temperature,

hottest part

would produce no work

Once Helmholtz had announced

the law of conserva-

tion of energy, scientists turned back to Carnot's proofs

of the limited

Why

work they could

was the work usually

so

get out of a steam engine.

much

less

than the energy

produced by the engine? Temperature differences affected the

work

that this

obtained, yes

was

so

— Carnot

had shown

brilliantly

— but why? Clausius' Ratio

In 1850, the Clausius

German

physicist

Rudolf

(KLOW-zee-oos) worked out

of the phenomenon.

He

did that

Julius

Emmanuel

the mathematics

by means

of the concept

of absolute temperature^ or the temperature above absolute zero.

No

heat

is

present at absolute zero, that

degrees Fahrenheit or Clausius found that

of a system

by

its

—273 if

he divided the total heat energy

any natural process

was the burning of

The more

—460

degrees centigrade.

— whether

coal in a steam-engine sys-

tem or hydrogen and helium exploding tem."

at

absolute temperature, he obtained a ratio

that always increased in

the process

is,

in the sun's "sys-

rapidly that ratio increased, the

less

work

88

Great Ideas of Science

could be obtained from heat. this ratio

1865 Clausius had named

"entropy."

Does entropy For example,

when

By

increase in every natural process? It does.

it

increases

hot objects cool,

iron rusts,

when meat

when

warm up, downhill, when

cold objects

when water

pours

decays, and so on.

fact that entropy always increases

is

Nowadays

the

called "the second

law of thermodynamics." This law can be expressed more simply

as follows:

The

total

entropy of the universe

is

always increasing.

The

first

and second laws of thermodynamics are per-

haps the most fundamental statements yet made by scientists.

No

ever will.

one has ever found exceptions; perhaps no one

As

nearly as

entire universe,

we

from the

can

tell,

the laws apply to the

largest collections of stars to the

smallest subatomic particles

known.

Despite the revolutions that scientific thinking has un-

dergone in the have held firm.

last

century, the laws of thermodynamics

They remain

of physical science.

a secure foundation for all

KIICMHGI'I

11 Planck and Quanta

In the mid-nineteenth century light

science discovered that

provided each chemical element with a "set of finger-

prints."

How

could light be used to distinguish one

ele-

ment from another? If

an element

will be

is

heated until

made up of waves

it

glows, the light

of various lengths.

it

emits

The group

90

Great Ideas of Science

wave

of

from

lengths the element produces will be different

any other element.

that of

Each

individual

on the eye and

is

wave length produces

thus seen as a different color. Suppose

from

that the light

lengths should then

But

up

how

element

a given

The

various waves.

a different effect

is

separated into

element's unique group

show up

as a

of

its

wave

unique pattern of colors.

can the light from a glowing element be broken

into individual waves?

One answer

is

to pass

it

through a

slit

a triangular piece of glass called a prism.

and then through

The

prism bends

each wave by a different amount, according to In this way, the prism forms images of the

slit

its

length.

in the par-

ticular colors associated

with the element's wave lengths.

The

(plural, spectra) of colored lines

result:

spectrum

a

whose pattern

is

different

from

that of

This procedure was worked out in

German hof).

physicist,

He

detail in

Gustav Robert Kirchhoff

1859 by a

(KIRKH-

and the German chemist Robert Wilhelm von

Bunsen invented the spectroscope scribed above

elements.

any other element.

— and used

They

— the

instrument de-

it

to study the spectra of various

discovered

two new elements when they

found patterns unlike the spectrum of any known element. Later, other scientists

found the patterns of earthly

ments in the spectra of the sun and the

stars.

On the

ele-

other

hand, the element helium was discovered in the sun in 1868,

many

years before

it

was detected on

earth.

These

Planck and Quanta

91

spectra studies finally demonstrated that the same matter

made up

all

the universe.

Kirchhoff' s most important finding was

given element was heated until

this:

When

gave off light of certain

it

wave

lengths, the element tended to absorb those

wave

lengths of light

when

Black

If

appear black.

was

same

a bit cooler.

Body Concept

an object absorbed

would be none

it

a

all

the light that

For

left to reflect.

fell

on

this reason,

Such an object could be

it,

it

there

\\'ould

called a "black

body."

What ought to happen when such a black body is heated until

it

glows? According to Kirchhoff's finding

give off light of every possible

absorbed them

all.

It

wave

it

should

length, since

it

has

happens that there are far more wave

lengths in the invisible ultraviolet end of the electromagnetic spectrum (the system of

energy) than in

all

possible

all

of the visible spectrum

lengths that produce visible light).

seem that lengths,

if a

black

most of the

ultraviolet

In the

wave lengths of

body could light

It

(the

wave

\\-ould therefore

radiate light of

would come from

all

wave

the violet and

end of the spectrum. 1890's

an English physicist. Lord Raylcigh,

worked out an equation based on

the

way

light

was then

92

Great Ideas of Science

His

thought to behave. shorter the

The

wave

shortest

ultraviolet

come

But not?



light should be emitted.

lengths of light were in the violet and

end of the spectrum.

off a black

ultraviolet

more

length, the

wave

seemed to show that the

results

body

Thus, the

one quick

in

light should

flash of violet

and

a "violet catastrophe."

had never been observed.

a violet catastrophe

Why

Perhaps because no ordinary object truly absorbs

the light that

on

falls

no object can be

If so,

it.

true black body, although physicists in theory. Perhaps

if

a true black

all

called a

work with such bodies

body

really existed, the

violet catastrophe could be observed.

About worked

the same time

German

the

out,

equation was

that Rayleigh's

physicist

Wilhelm

Wien

(VEEN) thought he knew a way to produce a black body. He used a chamber with a small hole in it. Light of any wave length entering

the hole, he thought,

would be ab-

sorbed by the rough inner wall of the chamber. the light

was

reflected,

it

would

If part of

strike another portion of

the inner wall and be absorbed there.

Once again

the light entered,

from the

hole.

it

The

and would therefore act

should not survive to emerge

hole

would be

as a true

ber was then heated until

its

a total absorber

black body. If the cham-

interior glowed, the light

that radiated out of the hole should be black

Did the

body radiation.

light radiate as a violet catastrophe?

Unfortunately,

it

didn't.

Wien

studied the radiation

Planck and Quanta that did

wave

93

emerge and found that

it

grew more

intense as the

lengths shortened (just as Rayleigh's equation pre-

There was always some

dicted).

where

was most

radiation

intense.

would

tensity of radiation

But

The

after that, the in-

although the wave

decline,

lengths continued to shorten.

hotter

wave length

the chamber, the shorter the

wave length

particular

Wien

after

decline of radiation intensity began, but there

heated

which the

was never

a

violet catastrophe.

Wien

tried to

work out an

the short and long his "black

wave

lengths of light were radiated

body," but the

were

results

Max

German

Planck. Perhaps light was radiated only in

fixed amounts, he supposed.

He

didn't

those amounts might be, so he called lar,

by

unsatisfactory.

In 1899 the problem was tackled by another physicist.

how

equation that described

quantwn), from

Up until then,

all

a Latin

know how

them quanta

large

(singu-

word meaning "how much?"

forms of energy, including

light,

were

believed to exist in quantities as small as could be imagined.

But Planck was suggesting that

this

was not

so.

He

sug-

gested instead that energy, like matter, existed only as particles

of certain

size.

There could not be smaller

quantities

of energy than those he called quanta. Thus, quanta were

"packets" of energy, just as atoms and molecules were "packets" of matter.

Planck supposed that in size according to the

a

quantum of energy would vary

wave length

of the light

— the

94

Great Ideas of Science

shorter the

wave

plied this idea to the

them It

to

would be easy for

small quanta.

a short

for a black

body

it.

It

enough energy

could easily radiate

radiated unless large

would be much more

It

difficult

to gather these large quanta.

at

in a large store

would be easy for you

But you would have

impossible to carry so

and were told

provided you paid cash in

all,

to

buy

a ten-cent

a great deal of trouble

a thousand-dollar item because it

it

wave length could not be

you could buy anything coin for

to gather

which required smaller quanta.

though you were

It is as

body

Therefore,

light,

quanta were gathered.

item.

waves in the form of quanta.

a black

long wave lengths of

But

ap-

problem of black bodies and supposed

to be radiating light

make

He

length, the larger the quantum.

many

buying

you probably would

find

coins.

Planck succeeded in working out an equation to describe

body

black

radiation in terms of quanta.

The

equation

backed up Wien's observation that there w^s some length at which radiation would be most intense.

wave

lengths shorter than that, the black

difficulty in

But,

if

producing the larger quanta

the black

temperatures, shorter

more

wave

lengths

would be

made up of

For

body would have necessar\'.

body chamber were heated energ>'

\v2LVt

available.

to higher

Therefore,

larger quanta could be

produced.

However, was too

there

short,

would always be

even for

a

a \\'ave length that

strongly heated black body. It

Planck and Quanta

95

would then be impossible

Therefore, there could never be

required.

In

trophe.

to emit the very large quanta

much

the same way, there

a violet catas-

would always be

something too expensive for the amount of coins you could carry.

Planck's it

did not

cists

"quantum theory" was announced

make much

were already

of a splash at

first.

in 1900,

but

However, physi-

setting the stage for such a ''splash" as

they began to study the peculiar behavior of particles smaller than atoms (subatomic particles).

Some existing

of this behavior could not be explained \\ith

knowledge. For instance,

tain metals,

why

fell

on

cer-

did tiny subatomic particles, called "elec-

way

The

was

able to

from atoms on the surface of the

metals.

wave

lengths

trons," behave the eject electrons

when hght

they did?

But these electrons were ejected only

if

light

the

of light falling on the metals were shorter than a certain value.

How

That value depended on were

which was

the nature of the metal.

physicists going to explain this

phenomenon,

called the ''photoelectric effect"?

In 1905 Albert Einstein came up with the answer.

He

used the quantum theory to explain the photoelectric effect.

When

long wave lengths of light

metal, the quanta of these to

knock out any

as the

wave

lengths

large

grew

on

a

would be too

electrons, Einstein suggested.

lengths

would become

wave

fell

given small

However,

shorter and shorter, the quanta

enough

to eject electrons.

96

Great Ideas of Science

why

Thus, Einstein explain^ed until the

wave length

was shorter than

The answer

electrons weren't ejected

of the light shining

a certain critical

on the metal

amount.

to the puzzle of the photoelectric effect

a great victory for the

was

quantum theory, and both Planck

and Einstein eventually were awarded Nobel prizes for their

work.

The quantum

theory again proved

on the structure of the atom. the

atom consisted of

its

value in research

Physicists had decided that

a relatively massive central nucleus

around which one or more electrons moved in circular paths, or orbits.

time,

According

to the physical theories of the

the electrons should have radiated light as they

and collapsed into the nucleus of the

circled, lost energy,

atom. But electrons kept on circling the nucleus and did

not collapse into

it.

It

was obvious

that the older theories

could not explain the motion of electrons. In 1913, however, the Danish physicist Niels Bohr

(BAWR) Bohr

applied the

said that

amounts, that

quantum theory

to atomic structure.

an electron could emit energy only in fixed is,

in

emitted, the electron

whole quanta.

would

the nucleus of the atom.

take up a

As

the energy

new

orbit closer to

Correspondingly, the electron

could absorb only whole quanta, taking up a farther

new

from the nucleus. The electron could never

lapse into the nucleus, for

the closest orbit permitted

was

it

orbit col-

could never come closer than

by

its

energy

state.

Planck and Quanta

97

Answers and Understanding By

considering the different orbits allowable, physicists

were

able to understand w^hy each element radiated only

certain

wave

lengths of Hght, and

was always the same Kirchhoff 's

Then in

rule,

why

the Hght absorbed

In

as the light emitted.

which

started

it all,

was

this

way

finally explained.

1927 the Austrian physicist Erwin Schrodinger

(SHROI-ding-er) worked out the mathematics of the

atom according

to

quantum mechanics.

Schrodinger's

explanation took in practically every aspect of the study of the atom, and his

In fact, even the

way

work in

is

crucial to atomic research.

which the atom

stores

and

energy couldn't possibly be understood without

Quantum mechanics physics

is

is

now

it.

modern

considered to date only from Planck's announce-

ment of the quantum theory is

so important that

releases

called classical physics.

in 1900. Physics before 1900

Planck's relatively simple idea

succeeded in changing completely the direction of the science of matter and motion.

Hippocrates and Medicine How WONDERFUL the miraclc of life Hving things complicated,

are!

The

more

is,

and

how amazing

smallest plant or animal seems

intriguing,

more

than the largest mass of

nonliving matter imaginable.

NonHving

matter, after

most of the time. Or a

if it

all,

seems to do nothing

does do something,

mechanical and rather uninteresting way.

it

at all

does so in

Consider a

Hippocrates and Medicine

99

rock lying in the road. lie

there forever.

stop.

Kick

throw

it

you kick

If

harder and

it

up

nothing disturbs

If

in the

air, it

will

it

will

move

shape and

come down. And

hammer,

will break.

With will

it

a little experience

happen to

You

a

rock

it

it,

will just

farther.

you

If

in a curve of a particular

you

if

it

move and then

will

move

it,

hit

it

with a sledge

you can predict exactly what

when any

given thing

is

done

to

it.

can describe what happens in terms of cause and

effect.

If a particular thing

happen

particular thing will

The

effect).

is

belief that the

done to

a

rock (a cause),

a

to the rock as a result (an

same cause will bring about

the same effect every time leads to a view of the universe, called

the

"mechanical

view,"

or

"mechanism"

(see

Chapter 8).

Predictable Universe

Even something

as

remarkable

mechanically every morning and evening.

If

dict exactly

you watch

when

as well as exactly

ancients

it

it

as the set

carefully,

will rise

and

set

you can

rules to predict the

were never broken.

learn to pre-

every day of the year,

and the other heavenly bodies, and the lated

rise

mechanically every

what part of the sky

worked out

sun seems to

it

will cross.

The

motion of the sun rules they

formu-

100

Great Ideas of Science

About 600 B.C.

Qreek philosopher Thales and

the

his

followers stated their belief that the "natural law" of cause

was

and

effect

(see

Chapter

suppose that

But could

Weren't

1 )

all .

was needed

that

Such natural law made

spirits

this natural

fail

it

unnecessary to

or demons ruled the universe.

law be applied to

to follow the

living things?

unto themselves, and didn't

living things a rule

they often

to understand nature

law of cause and

effect?

Uncertain Result

Suppose you push

a friend.

might manage to keep

his balance.

him he might laugh or turn

He

call

at all or

and try to get back thing

may

at

respond to

fall

down

or he

After you had pushed

you names, or push you

— or he might angrily try

even do nothing

might

to strike you.

He

in re-

might

he might do nothing for a while

you

later.

In other words, a living

a particular cause

with any number

of eif ects. This belief that living creatures don't obey the rules that

Then,

Why

govern the nonliving universe too, consider that

is it

that one

another cannot?

is

called "vitalism."

some men have unusual

man can

Why

is

abilities.

write beautiful poetry while

one

man

a clever leader, or

an

inspiring speaker, or a brave warrior, while others are not?

On

the other hand,

all

men seem

to be basically alike.

Hippocrates and Medicine

All have arms and

101

legs, ears

Then what makes

and eyes, hearts and

brains.

the difference between an unusual and

an ordinary man?

To

man might

the ancients, a

favored by some personal

Greeks

be unusual because he was or guardian angel.

spirit

called such spirit a daimon^

We

word "demon."

great deal seems to be "possessed

word

Similarly, the

great

meaning "possessed by

work

is

said to

word meaning self

an

invisible spirit.

And

Latin version of the Greek Naturally, these

work

evil for

man

ancients said he

comes from

spirits

the

that

is,

a

Greek

A man who

a god."



a

which means "un-

be "inspired," which

"to breathe in"

who works

by demons."

"enthusiastic,"

usually interested in something," pression

and that became our

say that someone

still

The

to

is

from

draw

word "genius"

is

ex-

does

a Latin

into one-

from the

word davmon. and demons were expected to

as well as

good.

man became ill, the evil spirit. The belief

If a

was possessed by an

seemed most valid when a man began to say and do foolish things.

No man

would

willingly act foolish, so people

blamed "the demon within him." Therefore, societies the

and

respect.

mentally

ill

in primitive

were sometimes treated with awe

The madman was

considered to have been

touched by the finger of some supernatural being (and

we still use the word who seems not quite in

"touched" to described someone his right

mind).

102

Great Ideas of Science

The "Sacred The

disease epilepsy,

Disease"

which we now know

to be a dis-

order of the brain, also seemed to be caused by a

spirit.

Occasionally, a person with this disorder loses control of his

body

reason,

for a

the

few minutes.

disease

was

thrash about, and so on. little

of

He

called

might the

fall

down

"falling

(for this

sickness"),

Afterward, he remembers very

what happened. People watching such an occur-

rence in ancient times were sure they saw a

body and throw

the stricken person's

Greeks therefore referred t6 epilepsy

demon

enter

about.

The

it

"sacred dis-

as the

ease."

As long the

as illness

method of

tific.

was looked on

treating

it

in this unscientific

was bound

way,

to be just as unscien-

To coax or frighten away the demons was considered

the proper

method of treatment. Primitive

"witch doctors" to cast supposed to make the

spells

tribes

and perform

still

rites that are

evil spirits leave a sick person.

people believe that the sick person will get well as the evil spirits

have

as

The soon

have been cast out.

The Greeks had

a

god of medicine,

called Asklepios

(as-KLEP-ee-os), and the priests of Asklepios were doctors.

On the

Greek

island of Kos, in the

off the western coast of

Aegean Sea

(just

modern Turkey), stood an im-

portant temple of Asklepios.

About 400 B.C.

the greatest

Hippocrates and Medicine

103

doctor on the island of Kos was a

man named Hippocrates

(hih-POK-ruh-teez). Hippocrates' view point was

new

to the Greeks, for he

beHeved in treating the patient rather than worrying about the

do

demon

The

so.

have had is

inside him.

many

work

name

that

not the

in history to

first

old civiUzations in Babylonia and

a legend that

the

He was

doctors

who

took

Egypt must

this attitude,

and there

But

Hippocrates studied in Egypt.

of Hippocrates that has survived and is

it

it

is

is

his

remembered.

A

Sensible School

Hippocrates established a school that continued for centuries.

The

doctor of his school used

treating patients.

They

didn't have

common

modern

equipment, or theories. But they did have

and the

sense in

medicines,

common

sense

ability to observe things keenly.

Hippocrates' followers believed that doctors should keep their patients

— and

themselves

the sick should have fresh

air,



clean.

They thought

comfortable and restful sur-

roundings, and a balanced diet of simple food.

worked out

They

sensible rules for stopping bleeding, for clean-

ing and treating wounds, for setting broken bones, and so on.

All extremes were avoided, and

were ignored.

all

magical

rites

104

Great Ideas of Science

The

Hippocratic school are

writings of the' entire

lumped

together, and

it is

impossible to

wrote a particular part or when

known

as

medical practice,

it is still

''Hippocratic oath''

The

200 A.D.,

six centuries after

best guess

he prepared to enter

it

when they

his

are graduated.

is

that

it

came

Hippocrates

into use about lived.

any Hippocratic writing that we can

to Hippocrates himself?

There

oldest of these writings that

by Hippocrates. deals

an oath taken by

was not written by Hippocrates,

however.

it

is

used as a guide for physicians.

Medical school students recite

there

who

Because the oath upholds the highest ideals of

profession.

Is

exactly

was written. The best

of these Hippocratic writings

each doctor of the school

The

it

tell

It is called

is

one

treatise

attribute

among

the

may well have been written "On the Sacred Disease" and

with epilepsy.

Demons Dismissed This

treatise

strongly maintains that

blame demons for cause,

and

the cause

Every

disease has

is

useless

to

some natural it.

Once

known, the cure may be found. And

this is

it is is

disease.

it

the task of the doctor to discover

true, the treatise states,

ening disease epilepsy. a sickness like

even of that mysterious and frightIt is

any other.

not a sacred disease

at

all,

but

Hippocrates and iMedicine

What and

105

the treatise says, in effect,

is

that the idea of cause

effect apphes to living things, including

living things are so complicated,

and

trace cause

and must

effect relations.

it

may

But

man. Because

not be simple to

in the

end

can

it



— be done.

Medicine had to struggle for against the

common

belief in

many more

demons and

against the use of magical rites

and

centuries

evil spirits,

spells as cures.

and

But the

views of Hippocrates were never entirely forgotten. Because of Hippocrates' ideas on the treatment of the often called the "father of medicine." Actually,

sick,

he

he

even more than

is

is

that.

He applied the notion of natural

law to living things and thus took the

Once

vitalism.

natural law

could begin to study therefore

he

may

made

also

it

first

was applied

systematically.

great step against to

life,

scientists

Hippocrates' view

a science of life (biology) possible,

be considered the "father of biology."

and

TWO

AW^INO ACI

MOLECULES

ALANINE NlTROOEM

I.

CARBON

MVOROGCM

OKY6CK

13 Wohler and Organic Chemistry In 1828 A YOUNG German

chemist, Friedrich

(VOL-ler), knew exactly where

his

Wohler

interests lay



in

studying metals and minerals. Such substances belonged to the field of inorganic chemistry,

which

dealt with sub-

stances that supposedly had nothing to do with

was

also organic chemistry,

formed

life.

There

deahng with chemicals that

in the tissues of living plants

and animals.

C

1

Wohler and Organic Chemistry

107

Wohler's teacher, the Swedish chemist Jons

J.

Berzelius

(ber-ZEE-lee-us), had divided chemistry into these two

BerzeHus

classifications.

further

insisted

that

organic

chemicals couldn't be formed from inorganic chemicals in the laboratory.

They

could be formed only in living

tissue

because they required some "vital force."

Vitalist Berzelius

was

Chapter 12).

View

a vitalist, a believer in "vitalism"

He believed that living matter followed laws by nonliving

of nature different from those followed

More than two thousand

matter.

(see

years earlier, Hippocrates

had suggested that the same laws of nature held for both.

But that was

hard to believe, since living

still

so complicated

and

its

tissue

was

functions so hard to understand.

Many chemists were therefore sure that the simple methods of the laboratory stances

found

would never do

for the complex sub-

in living organisms.

So Wohler worked with inorganic chemicals, never dreaming he was about to revolutionize the

field

of organic

began with an inorganic chemical called

chemistry.

It all

ammonium

cyanate.

When Wohler

heated

it, it

changed

into another substance. In order to identify the substance,

Wohler

studied

its

properties.

As

factor after factor

checked out, he grew increasingly astonished.

1

Great Ideas of Science

08

To

play

safe,

it

he repeated the experiment again and

again, but the result

Ammonium

was always the same.

cyanate, an inorganic substance, had turned into urea, a

well-known organic compound. Wohler had done something Berzelius considered impossible:

He

had formed an

organic substance from an inorganic one simply

ing

by

heat-

it!

Wohler's pioneering discovery was a revelation, and other chemists tried to inorganic ones.

make organic compounds out

One French

chemist, Pierre E. Berthelot

(behr-teh-LOH), made dozens of such compounds 1850's.

At

of

in the

the same time an English chemist, William

H.

Perkin, was forming a substance that resembled organic

compounds where

in

its

was not

properties, but

in the realm of

life.

formed only also

make

compounds followed.

tissues

now make compounds

in living tissue.

additional

found any-

Thousands and tens of thou-

sands of such synthetic organic

Chemists could

to be

that

nature

Furthermore, they could

compounds of

the same sort that living

could not produce!

However, planations.

these facts did not

vitalistic

ex-

Chemists might be able to produce the same

compounds made by manner, the

wipe out

living tissue, but hardly in the

vitalists said.

Living

tissue

produced

its

same sub-

stances under conditions of mild temperature and with

only the most gentle substances.

The

chemist had to use

considerable heat, or pressure, or strong chemicals.

Wohler and Organic Chemistry

how

But chemists did know at

room temperature

The

with heat.

trick

mixed with

it

to cause certain reactions

that ordinarily

platinum, for instance,

flame as

109

was

would take

Powdered

to use a catalyst.

would cause hydrogen

Without

air.

place only

to burst into

the platinum, heat

was

required to bring on the reaction.

Catalysts of Life

therefore seemed clear that living tissue had to contain

It

catalysts,

but catalysts of no kind

catalysts of living tissue

were extremely

amount would bring about also

known

to man.

efficient.

The

A tiny

They were

a large reaction.

extremely selective. Their presence would cause par-

ticular substances to

substances

Then, action.

undergo changes, while very

would not be

similar

affected.

too, the catalysts of life

were

easily

put out of

Heat, strong chemicals, or small quantities of cer-

tain metals or other substances

would stop

their action,

usually for good.

These

catalysts of life

were

called "ferments."

The

best-known examples were the ferments in the tiny yeast cells.

Since the

dawn

of history,

ments to make wine from puffy breads from

flat

In 1752 a French

man had

fruit juices

used these fer-

and to make

soft,

cakes of dough. scientist,

Rene A.

F. de

Reaumur

Great Ideas of Science

1 1

(ray-oh-MYOOR),

hawk and showed how? The

obtained some stomach juices from a

that the juices could dissolve meat.

juice itself

was not

living.

The answer seemed

Chemists shrugged.

But

easy enough.

There were two kinds of ferments. One kind worked out-

Those were "unor-

side the living cells to digest food.

ganized" ferments.

Then

ments, which could

work only

there were "organized" fer-

ferments in yeast, which broke to

form wine or

inside living cells.

down

The

sugars and starches

were examples of organized

raise bread,

ferments.

By

the middle 1800's the old vitalism had been dis-

credited, thanks to the

But

a

new form

work

of

Wohler and

of vitalism had taken

vitalists said living

its

his successors.

place.

processes could take place only as a

result of the action of organized ferments, exist

only inside living

ments were in fact the In 1876 a

The new

German

cells.

They

which could

said the organized fer-

"life force."

chemist,

Wilhelm Kiihne

(KYOO-

nuh), insisted that the digestive juices not be called unorganized ferments.

with

life, it

The word "ferment" was

might give the impression that

was taking place

outside the

cells.

so associated

a living process

Instead, Kiihne sug-

gested that the digestive juices be said to contain enzymes.

The word "enzyme," from

a

Greek expression meaning

"in yeast," seemed appropriate because the digestive juices

behaved somewhat hke the ferments in

yeast.

Wohler and Organic Chemistry

1 1

Exit Vitalism The new

vitalism

only in living

had to be

If

ferments worked

then anything that killed the

cells,

destroy the ferment. killed,

tested.

To

be sure,

when

cell

should

yeast cells

were

they stopped fermenting. But perhaps they weren't

killed in the right

by strong

heat or

way.

Usually, they were killed

by

Could something

be

chemicals.

else

substituted? It

occurred to a

German

yeast cells might be killed

chemist,

Eduard Buchner,

by grinding them with

The

fine,

cells

and destroy them. But the ferments

that

sand.

hard particles of sand would rupture the tiny

be exposed to heat or to chemicals.

inside

Would

would not

they be de-

stroyed anyway? In

1896 Buchner ground yeast and

filtered

it.

He

studied the juices under the microscope and was certain that not one living yeast cell

"dead"

juice.

He

was present

in

it.

It

was

just

then added a solution of sugar. Bubbles

of carbon dioxide began to

come

off at once,

and the sugar

slowly turned to alcohol.

Chemists

now knew

that "dead" juice could carry out

a process

which they had thought impossible without

liv-

ing

This time vitalism was really smashed. All

fer-

cells.

ments, inside and outside the

cell,

were

alike.

word "enzyme," which he had used only

Klihne's

for ferments

2

Great Ideas of Science

1 1

outside

the

came- to be used for

cell,

all

ferments.

Therefore, by the twentieth century most chemists had

decided that there were no mysterious forces inside living cells.

Whatever

processes took place in tissues were per-

formed by means of ordinary chemicals. Such chemicals could be worked with in

test

tubes

enough laboratory methods were

Isolating an

However, chemicals

scientists

made up

In

delicate

and gentle

used.

Enzyme

had yet to determine exactly what

the enzymes. But

in such small traces that they isolate

if

enzymes were present

were almost impossible

to

and identify. 1926 the American biochemist James B. Sumner

He was working with an enzyme present mashed jack beans. When crystals formed

showed the way. in the juice of in the juice,

duced

a

Sumner

isolated them.

In solution, they pro-

very active enzyme reaction. Anything that de-

stroyed the molecular structure of the crystals destroyed the

enzyme

zyme

action

action.

Nor

from the

Sumner had

could Sumner separate the en-

crystals.

to conclude that the crystals

enzyme. For the

first

time an enzyme had been obtained

in a clearly visible form. Further testing tals to consist

were the

of proteifi. Since then,

proved the crys-

many enzymes have

Wohler and Organic Chemistry

been

113

and without exception they have proved

crystallized,

to be proteins.

A

String of Acids

Proteins have a molecular structure that

understood.

found to

named "amino Fischer,

now

twenty different kinds of smaller

acids."

German

In 1907 a

showed how amino

well

century proteins were

In the nineteenth

consist of

is

units

chemist, Emil

were strung together

acids

in

a protein molecule.

In the 1950's and 1960's a larly

number

an Englishman named Frederick Sanger, succeeded

in pulling protein molecules apart.

able to determine exactly

artificially

formed

In this

which amino

in the molecule. In addition,

were

of chemists, particu-

way

acid

they were

went where

some simple protein molecules

in the laboratory.

Hippocrates' nonvitalistic view has thus been supported

by more than

a

century and a half of painstaking

scientific

work. This careful search for truth has uncovered the processes of a cell and has

shown

that cell

only chemicals, not "ferments" or other

Thus, from Wohler to Sanger,

scientists

life

components are vitalistic forces.

have proved that

the natural laws of the universe govern living, as well as

nonliving, matter.

^f

•^•••^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Pp»P»P^"^i"i^pPWP^^^^^

ARISTOTLE

LINNAEUS

14 Linnaeus and Classification

Perhaps the most influential

scientific

of the world was that of the

Greek philosopher

mind

in the history

Aristotle

(384 B.C. to 322 B.C.). Aristotle

Academy

was probably the

in Athens.

A

best

known

few years

pupil at Plato's

after Plato's death in

347 B.C., Aristotle went to the kingdom of Macedon, in

Linnaeus and Classification

115

northern Greece, where

There he spent

cian.

his father

had been court physi-

several years as tutor to the

Macedonian prince Alexander, who was

to

young

become Alex-

ander the Great.

When Alexander left on his carer of conquest,

Aristotle

returned to Athens and established a school of his own.

His teachings were collected into what was almost

man

encyclopedia of ancient thought and knowledge.

Many last

one-

a

of these books survived and were considered the

word

in scientific thinking for nearly

two thousand

years.

Influential

The



but

influence of Aristotle's ideas

considerable, particularly his views universe,

on the movement of

Wrong on

later scientists

was

on the nature of the and so on

objects,

(see

Chapters 4 and 7). In the area of physical science, however, he

\V2LS

usually wTong.

Aristotle's views ential,

on

biological subjects

but he was actually strongest in

science

was

his favorite subject,

ing the animals of the Aristotle

was not

less influ-

this area.

Natural

and he spent years study-

sea.

satisfied

simply to look

With

his clear

he went further and

classified

describe them.

were

mind and

at animals

and

his love of order,

animals into groups.

Such

6

Great Ideas of Science

1 1

classification

is

now called

"taxonomy," which comes from

Greek words meaning "a system of arrangement."

We can see

All of us have a tendency to classify things. that lions

and

tigers closely

resemble each other, that sheep

resemble goats, that houseflies resemble Aristotle

was not content with such

He listed more than five hundred and carefully grouped

all

more, he arranged these

But

casual observations.

different kinds of animals

them

of

horseflies.

What's

into classes.

from the very

classes in order,

simplest to the most complex.

He

noted that some animals did not belong to the

which they seemed everybody took It lived in

totle

it

to resemble most.

For

instance, almost

for granted that the dolphin was a

the water and was shaped like a

observed that the dolphin breathed

forth living young, and that

it

class

air,

fish.

But Aris-

fish.

that

brought

it

nourished the young before

birth with an organ called a "placenta." In these respects

the dolphin resembled the four-legged beasts of the dry land,

and Aristotle therefore considered

rather than a Aristotle his

right,

but naturalists ignored

conclusion for two thousand years.

fated to be believed

Naturalists

mammal

fish.

was absolutely

when he was

a

it

when

he was

Aristotle

wrong and

seemed

disbelieved

right.

who came

after Aristotle did not carry

his efforts to classify animals.

on

In ancient and medieval

times books describing animals arranged

them

in

any order

Linnaeus and Classification

and ignored the

117

possibility of

grouping together animals

with similar structures. In the 1500's, however, naturalists

tempts

at

made

the

first at-

But these

such classification since Aristotle.

attempts were not very thorough. For example, one writer

might group together

plants with

all

another might do the same for

all

narrow

leaves while

plants with big yellow

flowers.

The totle

first naturalist

to

do

thorough

as

a job as Aris-

was an Englishman named John Ray. Ray traveled

through Europe, studying plants and animals. In 1667 and for thirty-five years thereafter he published books that

described and classified the plants and animals he had studied.

He

began to

two main groups

Then

mammals by

classify

— those with

toes

dividing

them

into

and those with hooves.

he went on to subdivide these classifications accord-

ing to the

number of hooves or

the toes bore claws or

nails,

toes,

according to whether

and according to whether a

hooved animal had permanent horns or horns that were shed. Thus,

Ray

restored the sense of order that Aristotle

had brought to the realm of

Once Ray had shown beyond

Aristotle.

life.

the way, naturalists soon

In 1735 a

young Swedish

named Carl von Linne published listed different creatures

(He

is

better

a small

book

in

naturalist

which he

according to a system of

known by

went

his

own.

the Latin version of his name,

8

Great Ideas of Science

1 1

Carolus Linnaeus [li-NEE-us].)

based his

work on

Europe (including northern

extensive travel throughout

Scandinavia,

He

which had never before been adequately

ex-

plored).

Linnaeus briefly and clearly described each kind, or species

(plural,

also species),

grouped each collection of (plural, genera)

.

Then he

mal two Latin names

He

of plant and animal.

similar species into a genus

gave each kind of plant or ani-

— one for

its

genus and one for

its

species.

For example, the are very

and

much

cat

alike,

and the lion are two species that

even though one

is

much

genus, the genus Felis (Latin for "cat").

A second Latin

serves to distinguish the ordinary cat

from the

and from other species of the genus. Thus, the cat domesticuSy while the lion Similarly, the

Canis ("dog"). is

is

is

is

lion Felis

Felis leo.

dog and the wolf

The dog

larger

Hence, both are in the same

fiercer than the other.

name

so

are both in the genus

Canis familiaris and the wolf

Cajiis lupus.

Linnaeus even gave human beings such a Latin name.

He placed man in the genus Homo ("man") and called the human species Homo sapiens ("man, wise"). Linnaeus' system Actually,

we

is

known

as

"binomial nomenclature."

use a similar system to identify ourselves.

In America, everyone in the same family has a particular family name, but diiferent

first

names. Thus, one brother

Linnaeus and Classification

might be

listed in the

George," and another

119

telephone directory as

time, naturalists the

world over had

useful.

a

uralist

spoke of Canis lupus, other naturalists a wolf.

It

made no

first

system of

Whenever any

to identify different creatures.

meant

For the

common

names

diately he

"Anderson,

"Anderson, William."

work was tremendously

Linnaeus'

as

nat-

knew imme-

difference

what

language they spoke or what familiar name "wolf" might

own

have in their naturalist

meant one

particular kind of wolf, the

The American

gray wolf.

knew

language. What's more, they

the

European

timber wolf, for example, was

a different species, Canis occidentalis.

This

common

system of identification was a very im-

portant step forward.

new

covered

continents, he

the earth and dis-

found more and more

Aristotle had listed only about five

of animals. species,

As man explored

species

hundred

but by Linnaeus' time tens of thousands were

known. Linnaeus' book of animal classification started off with

only seven pages in thousand

five

its first

edition, but

hundred pages by

its

expanded to two

tenth. If naturalists

had

not adopted a standard classification system, they could

not have been certain naturalists

were

would have

discussing.

group

which

The

plants or animals other

study of natural history

collapsed in chaos.

From genus and to

as to

species classification, Linnaeus

similar genera into orders,

and

went on

similar orders into

120

Great Ideas of Science

Linnaeus recognized

classes,

mammals,

mals:

six different classes

birds, reptiles, fish, insects,

His work was carried

further

still

Georges Cuvier (koo-VYAY) four classes

— mammals,

vertebrates; that

all

He

is,

"phylum"

French

naturalist

a

birds, reptiles,

all

and worms.

French

biologist,

Cuvier saw that the

.

and

fish

first

— were

had internal skeletons of bone.

grouped these animals into

called a

by

of ani-

a

still

larger classification

"phyla").

(plural,

Cuvier and the

Jean Baptiste de Lamarck divided the

invertebrates J or animals without internal skeletons, into a

number of

phyla.

Cuvier moved taxonomy in another direction, too. After

1800 naturalists began studying rocks with stony impressions or

remnants that seemed to have been living creatures.

They called these impressions or remnants "fossils." recognized that although

any

Cuvier

did not closely resemble

fossils

existing species, they did fall

somewhere

into the

scheme of taxonomy.

For

instance,

when Cuvier

studied a fossil that had

all

the earmarks of a reptile skeleton, he concluded that the

animal had been a its

member

skeleton he could also

had thus reptiles.

tell

of the class of reptiles. that

it

identified the first of a

Because each of

its

once had wings. Cuvier

group of extinct flying

wings had been supported by

a single long finger bone, he

dactyl" ("wing-finger").

From

named

the creature "ptero-

Linnaeus and Classification

121

Pathway

to Evolution

Cuvier's followers continued to improve the system of classification.

Linnaeus had often grouped animals to-

gether on the basis of outward appearances.

Instead,

Cuvier's followers began to use internal structures,

which

were more important for grouping purposes.

By

the middle 1800's a system for classifying

things had been

begun

worked

out.

The work

so long ago had finally

all

living

that Aristotle had

been completed.

Every

creature, alive or extinct, could be placed in a particular

category. details,

There might be

of

taxonomy

must be certain

true for

creatures,

all

Thus, the

set naturalists thinking.

biological principles that held

however

different they

might appear.

classification of life

gave

rise to

were involved

some

single

living things

This

fine

fact that life could be classified so neatly suggested

that there

all

some of the

but the general plan was accepted.

The development The

disputes about

idea, in turn,

was

in

to lead to

"great ideas of science"

the idea that

phenomenon.

one of the overwhelming

— evolution

(see

Chapter 15).

wood pecker 'like

warbler-like

ground finches

insectivorous

cactus- feeding

vegetarian tree finches

seed-eating ground finches

15 Dar\vin and Evolution

There's something rose

— something

Each one

Only

is

lions

kittens,

a

special about being a lion, a cat, or a

that

unique

no other animal or plant can

species, or kind, of animal or plant.

can give birth to baby

and only rose seeds

can come up

roses.

share.

lions,

only cats can have

— and not dandelion

seeds



Darwin and Evolution Still,

it

Lions are

much

jackals are

two

possible for

is

similarities.

123

like

only lions and not

much

like tigers, for

coyotes

tigers,

and

show

different species to

example, and

— even though

lions breed

and not

jackals breed jackals

coyotes.

In fact, the whole realm of

life

can be conveniently or-

ganized into groups of similar creatures (see Chapter 14).

When

scientists first

became aware of

this,

many

felt that

Were

these similarities could not be just a coincidence.

two

species alike because

members

changed into the other? Could

it

of one species had

be that different species

resembled each other simply because they were closely related?

Some

of the

Greek philosophers had suggested the

bility of relationship

between

had seemed too outlandish and

species, fell

possi-

but their suggestion

on deaf

ears.

It

seemed

unlikely that some lions had once turned into tigers or vice versa, or that

lions

and

some

tigers.

Therefore,

if it

catlike creature

had given

rise to

both

No one had ever seen such a thing happen. happened

at

all, it

must have been

a

very

slow process. In early the earth

modern

was only about

there simply

changed

times most people were convinced that six

thousand years

was not enough time for

their nature.

The whole

idea

old.

Thus,

species to have

was dismissed

as

absurd.

But was the earth

really only six thousand years old?

In

1

24

Great Ideas of Science

the 1700's scientists studying the structure of the rocky layers of the earth's crust

were beginning

to suspect that

those layers could be formed only over long periods of

About 1760

time.

a

French

(byoo-FONG), was Then,

Georges de Buff on

daring enough to suggest that the

much

earth might be as

naturalist,

as seventy-five

in 1785, a Scottish physician

ton went further. Hutton,

who had

thousand years

old.

named James Hut-

developed

his

hobby

of studying rocks into a full-time occupation, published a

book

The Theory

called

together

show

much

evidence and

that the earth

He

years old.

beginning

at

of the Earth.

In

it

he brought

many good arguments

to

might actually be many millions of

said firmly that he

saw no sign of any

all.

The Door Opens For the

first

evolution of there

time

life.

it

seemed possible to

If the earth

was

talk about the

millions of years old,

would have been enough time for animals and

to change very slowly into fact, that

man

why

species

could not have noticed

few thousand years of But

new



plants

so slowly, in

this evolution in the

his civilized existence.

should a species change at

all?

And why

change in one particular direction and not in an-

should

it

other?

The

first

person to attempt to answer that question

Darwin and Evolution

was the French

125

Jean Baptiste de Lamarck.

naturalist

In 1809 he presented his theory of evolution in a book

The

Zoological Philosophy.

entitled

changed because they

that creatures

theory suggested

tried to change, with-

out necessarily knowing what they were doing.

Lamarck hypothesized,

for example, that a certain ante-

lope was fond of browsing on the leaves of trees. stretch leaves too.

its

neck upward with

could.

it

It

would

The

its

antelope

its

would then have young

body

proportions.

turn lengthen their bodies little,

over

would reach

new

tongue and life

would all

the

its legs,

would cause

neck, and tongue to lengthen slightly.

those longer

a

stretch

might to reach

All this stretching throughout

its legs,

by

all its

It

many

— the

would

offspring

more by

inherit

would

stretching.

in

Little

thousands of years, the stretching

the point

species

still

The

that

where

that line of antelopes

became

giraffe.

Lamarck's theory depended on the concept of inheritance of acquired characteristics.

body changed during

its

passed on to the young.

lifetime, this

not be

so.

if a

creature's

change could be

Indeed, as the possibility was

began to seem more and more that

it

could

Lamarck's idea had to be abandoned.

In 1831 a

win joined

it

is,

However, there was no evidence

to support such a concept. investigated,

That

young English

the

crew of

naturalist

named Charles Dar-

a ship sent out to explore the world.

Just before leaving, he had read a

book on geology by an

126

Great Ideas of Science

The book

Englishman, Charles Lyell.

discussed and ex-

plained Hutton's theories about the age of the earth. Dar-

win was impressed.

As

the ship passed distant coasts and explored

known

islands,

creatures

still

Darwin had

unknown

little-

a chance to study species of

He

to Europeans.

larly interested in the animal life of the

was particu-

Galapagos

Islands,

located in the Pacific about 650 miles off the coast of

Ecuador.

Darwin found fourteen those obscure islands. other,

and from

coast.

The

different species of finches

on

All differed slightly from one an-

similar finches

on the South American

beaks of some finches were well designed for

eating small seeds, and those of others for eating large ones.

Other finches had beaks made for eating

Darwin suspected from

An

a

common

that

all

ancestor.

insects.

the different finches originated

What

had made them change? Perhaps some

idea flashed through Darwin's mind.

had been born with sHght changes

in their beaks

and had

passed such inborn characteristics on to their young. Dar-

win wasn't

sure,

though.

Would

such accidental changes

be enough to account for the evolution of different species? In 1838

Darwin found an answer

Vrinc'iple of Population, a

English clergyman

its

An

book published

Essay on the

in

1798 by an

named Thomas R. Malthus. Malthus

human

population always increased

food supply.

Therefore, the number of

maintained that the faster than

in

Darwin and Evolution

127

people eventually would be reduced by famine,

not by

if

disease or war.

Nature's

Way

Darwin was impressed by Malthus' arguments,

made him

see

how

not only on the

for they

powerful a force nature could exert

human



population, but on the population

of any species.

Many

creatures multiply in great numbers, but only a

small proportion ever survives. in general those that

It

were more

seemed to Darwin that efficient in

way

one

or

another were the ones that survived. For example, those finches born with slightly stronger beaks

would survive

because they were better able to eat tough seeds. Those that could digest an occasional insect

would have an even

better chance of survival.

Generation after generation, slightly

more

efficient in

expense of the slightly

number

of

ways

in

the

finches

any way would survive

less efficient ones.

were

that

at the

There were

which they might be more

a

efficient.

Therefore, in the end there would be a number of widely different species, each specializing in a different It

seemed to Darwin that

this process of natural selection

held true not only for finches, but for ral selection

way.

all

creatures.

Natu-

determined which creatures would survive by

1

Great Ideas of Science

28

starving out those that did not have

some

little

edge of

superiority.

Darwin worked on

his

theory of natural selection for

Finally, in 1859, he published his views in a

years.

On

entitled

the Origin of Species by

Selection, or the Preservation of

Means

book

of Natural

Favoured Races

in the

Struggle for Life.

At

first,

Darwin's views created

a

storm of controversy.

But more and more evidence gathered through the years has supported the central point of his theory

change of species through natural

The

idea of evolution,

first

losophers and finally nailed revolutionized

all

— the slow

selection.

glimpsed by the Greek phi-

down by

thinking in biology.

It

Charles Darwin,

was undoubtedly

the most important single idea in the history of biology.

modern

16 Russell and Stellar Evolution

Aristotle thought

by

that the earth

different laws (see Chapter 7).

there

was

erratic

and decay.

On

change

and the heavens ran

On

— sunshine

earth,

he observed,

and storm, growth

the other hand, he beUeved that the

heavens never changed.

The sun, moon, and planets circled

the heavens so mechanically that their position at any given

Great Ideas of Science

1 3

moment

The

could be predicted long in advance.

stars

remained always in place, always the same.

To

be sure, there were objects which seemed to be

falling stars,

heavens. air

but to Aristotle they did not

They were

just

phenomena

belonged to the earth.

fall

in the

(We know

air,

The

friction

produced

as

they

fall

atmosphere causes them to burn and give off Aristotle

He

was both wrong and

and the

that falling stars

are rocks that enter the earth's atmosphere space.

from the

from outer through the

Thus,

light.

right about falling stars.

was wrong because they do come from the heavens,

but right because they become ''things in the falling stars are also called "meteors,"

meaning

from

a

air."

In fact,

Greek word

''things in the air.")

In 134 B.C.,

two

centuries after Aristotle's death, the

Greek astronomer Hipparchus (hih-PAHR-kus) noted

new

star in the constellation Scorpio.

think?

Could

after all?

stars

What was

a

he to

be "born"? Could the heavens change

But perhaps

observation was wrong, he

his

thought. Perhaps the star had always been there.

To make fooled,

sure that

no future astronomer would be

Hipparchus prepared

sand bright

stars.

It

was the

a

first star

the next sixteen hundred years. stars

were reported for many

In 1054 A.D. a

new

star

map

of

more than

a thou-

map, and the best for

However, no more new

centuries.

appeared in the constellation

Taurus, but only Chinese and Japanese astronomers noted

Russell and Stellar Evolution

it.

131

In Europe, science was at a

that



low ebb

no astronomer reported the new

weeks

it

so low, in fact,

although for

star,

blazed brighter than any object in the sky except

for the sun and

moon.

In 1572 a bright

new

star blazed

up once

By

in the constellation Cassiopeia.

again, this time

this time, science

was

again beginning to flourish in Europe and astronomers

were watching the heavens a

Among them was (BRAH-uh). He

carefully.

young Dane named Tycho Brahe

observed the star and wrote a book about

entitled

it

De

Nova Stella ("Concerning the New Star"). Ever since, a new star in the heavens has been called a "nova." There was no denying

it

now.

Aristotle had been

wrong. The heavens were not changeless.

More Evidence More was

in store.

of

Change

In 1577 a comet appeared in the

heavens, and Brahe tried to calculate earth. stars

He



did this

by having

at as nearly the

The

should seem to shift position places.

The

closer

it

was

were

observatories

Brahe

when

— from two

as possible

— one was

other in Czechoslovakia.

from the

position noted against the

same time

different observatories. siderable distance apart

its

distance

its

in

Denmark and

knew

that the

seen from

to earth, the

a con-

more

two

it

the

comet

different

should

shift.

Great Ideas of Science

132

However, the comet instead.

the

didn't shift at

shifted

This meant that the comet was farther away than

moon. Therefore,

was

moon

the

all;

despite

its

erratic motion, the

comet

a part of the heavens.

Then

Dutch astronomer David

in 1596 the

(fuh-BRISH-us) discovered

The

tion Cetus.

Sometimes

it

not be seen.

star

was

It

a strange star in the constella-

was always changing

was very

its

bright, sometimes so

a "variable star"

The

other kind of change.

Fabricius

star

brightness.

dim

it

could

and represented an-

came

to be called

Mira

("wonderful"). Still

other changes were observed. In 1718, for example,

the English astronomer stars

Edmund

had indeed changed

Without

were they

An

just

was

it

physicist

this

possible to

make

them or

question became possible after the

any

or spectrum, of colors. its

sense of

in

Gustav R. Kirchhoif invented the spec-

a device that splits

light has

times.

were many kinds of changes

troscope on 1859 (see also Chapter 11). is

Greek

random changes?

answer to

German

their positions since

a doubt, there

the heavens. But

Halley showed that some

own

light falling

on

A it

spectroscope

into a pattern,

Each chemical element emitting

spectrum.

Therefore, the spectroscope

can identify the elements in a source of light and has been used to determine those elements present in the sun and in other

stars.

Different stars produce different "light spectra."

In

Russell and Stellar Evolution

133

1867 an Italian astronomer, Pietro A. Secchi (SAYK-kee), divided stars into four different "spectral classes."

astronomers divided them more finely, into ten

This was an exciting development, for could not be ties, just as

classified in

plants

it

Later

classes.

meant

that stars

groups according to their proper-

and animals could be

classified

according

to their characteristics (see Chapter 14).

In 1893 the

how

German

the light emitted

physicist

by any source

Wien's work made

perature.

temperature of a

Wilhelm Wien showed

star just

its

tem-

possible to tell the surface

it

from

varied with

its

spectral class. It turned

out that the temperature seemed to be related to the color

and

size

of the

star.

The Danish astronomer Ejnar Hertzsprung

(in 1905)

and the American astronomer Henry N. Russell (in 1914)

compared the temperatures of various 720sity

(the

amount of

stars to their

light given off).

graphs of the results and found that almost into a straight line

which came

They all

lumi-

plotted

the stars

to be called "the

fell

main

sequence."

There were

cool, red stars

— huge

bodies

known

as

"red giants." Although each part of their surface was dim,

they gave off

a lot of light

because the total surface was

very great.

Then

there

Although giants."

were yellow

smaller,

they

There were

still

stars, still

hotter than the red giants.

could be called "yellow

smaller and hotter stars

— hot

134

Great Ideas of Science

enough

to be blue-white!

have the

maximum

Blue-white

temperature.

both smaller and cooler.

stars

After

appeared to

that, stars

were

There were "yellow dwarfs"

(such as our sun) and very cool, dim stars called "red dwarfs."

Evolution of Stars?

For the

first

time,

mankind glimpsed

a pattern of steady

change in the heavens. Perhaps the heavens grew old as the earth did;

perhaps the

had

a life cycle like that

Perhaps there was

of living creatures.

evolution of the

stars

stars, just as

there

just

stellar evolution,

was evolution of

life

on

earth.

Russell suggested that stars cool, thin gas that shone

were born

with a dim red

as

huge masses of

heat.

As they aged,

they contracted and grew hotter and hotter until they

maximum now growing

They

continued to con-

reached a

temperature.

tract,

cooler and cooler, and finally became

blackened burnt-out cinders.

Our

sun,

it

seemed, was well

past middle age.

This theory, however, was too simple.

Actually, at

the beginning of the twentieth century, astronomers didn't

know what made

a star shine, or radiate light.

In the

Russell and Stellar Evolution

1880's

had been suggested that the energy for

it

came from

radiation tional

135

its

a star's

slow contraction and that gravita-

energy was converted to

light.

(This meshed nicely

with Russell's notions.) However, such a process couldn't supply enough energy, so the idea had to be abandoned. In the 1890's scientists had discovered that the center of the atom,

its

larger than

American

"nucleus," contained a store of energy far

had been imagined. In the 1930's

physicist,

a

German-

Hans A. Bethe (BAY-tuh), worked

out a scheme of nuclear reactions that could go on within the sun's interior and supply

it

with the energy to form

light.

In these reactions, Bethe hypothesized, atoms of hydro-

gen (the simplest of slightly

all

atoms)

converted to the

are

more complicated atoms of helium. The

enormous hydrogen supply has allowed

it

to shine for five

or six billion years, with enough left over for billions of years. It is still a

young

Thus, the sun

is

sun's

many more

not in decline after

all.

star.

Astronomers have continued to study the nature of the nuclear reactions going on within a

star.

As hydrogen

turns to helium, they believe, the helium collects at the

center as a "helium core."

It

continues to

grow

hotter as

the star ages, until the helium atoms begin to interact and

form

still

more complicated atoms.

believed to take place, too.

Other changes are

1 3

Great Ideas of Science

6

Tremendous Explosion Eventually, the

below

The

a certain level.

hydrogen supply

original

star's

temperature and brightness of

the star change so drastically that

quence.

It

pulsate as

The

it

main

leaves the

se-

expands enormously and sometimes begins to

its

star

structure

may

grows

less stable.

then explode.

remaining "fuel" ignites

at

If

so,

once and the

ceedingly bright for a short period. these

sinks

virtually star

all

its

becomes ex-

Explosions such as

formed the novas observed by Hipparchus and

Tycho

Brahe.

In short, astronomers have developed the idea of heav-

— which Hipparchus two thousand years ago — the point of debating how enly change

first startled

stars are

to

born, grow, age, and

die.

Astronomers can go

still

Some

further.

universe was born in a huge explosion still

flying apart.

billions of stars.

Each fragment

is

Perhaps the day will come

have exploded, and

verse

perhaps, as is

whose fragments

a vast galaxy of

galaxies will have spread out of sight,

Or

theorize that the

when

all

when all the

some other astronomers

all

the

stars will

Perhaps,

think, the uni-

new

always being formed very slowly, and from arise as the old

many

the universe will be dead.

constantly being reborn.

and galaxies

when

are

ones

die.

it

matter

new

is

stars

Russell and Stellar Evolution

137

Indeed, the idea of change in the heavens gives us theories

not merely of

tioji



to

stellar evolution,

but of a cosmic evolu-

a ''great idea of science'' almost too vast in scope

comprehend.

INDEX

Croton, 10 Cuvier, Georges, 120 Dalton, John, 41-44, 75 Darwin, Charles, 125-128 Deduction, 18 Definite proportions, law Democritus, 36-38 Diamond, 50 Digestion, 110 Dolphins, 116

Abdera, 36 Acceleration, 60 Air, 45-54

compression of, 39-40 Air resistance, 33 Alexander the Great, 115 Alexandria, 21

Amino

acids, 113

Ammonium

cyanate, 107

Animals, classification

of,

Archimedes, 20-23, 25-28,

Earth, age of, 123-124

116-120 31, 34

Egypt, 21 Einstein, Albert, 69, 95-96 Electric generators, 68

Aristotle, 26, 31, 54-57, 114-117, 121,

129-130 Asklepios, 102

Atoms,

Electromagnetic

Babylon,

69

Energy, 81

structure of, 96-97

Axioms,

field,

Electrons, 96

37

18,

conservation of, 8 quanta of, 93-94

24

Entropy, 88 4,

22

Enzymes, 110-113

Bernoulli, Daniel, 76 Berthelot, Pierre E., 108

isolation of, 112

Epicurus, 38 Epilepsy, 102, 104 Euclid, 24 Eupalinus, 22

Berzelius Jons J., 107 Bethe, Hans A., 135 Black, Joseph, 51 Black body, 91-92

Even numbers,

Bohr, Niels, 96 Boltzmann, Ludwig, 77 Boyle, Robert, 39-40 Brahe, Tycho, 131 Buchner, Eduard, 111 Buff on, Georges de, 124 Bunsen, Robert Wilhelm von, 90

Experimental science, 34 Experimentation, 32 Fabricius, David, 132

Fallingbodies, 31-34, 57 Faraday, Michael, 66-68 Ferments, 109-111 Fields, 68-69 Fischer, Emil, 113 Force, 60, 63 Fossils, 120

Caloric, 73 Carbon dioxide, 48-49, 51

Carnot, Nicholas L.

S.,

86-87

Catalyst, 109

Cause and Chaos, 47

effect,

12

Evolution, 124-128 stellar, 134-137

99

Classes, 120

Galapagos

Rudolf J. E., 87 Clock, pendulum, 35 Combustion, 49-53 Comets, 131-132 Compass, 65 Conon, 22, 24

Galileo, 29-35, 57

Clausius,

Islands, 126

Gases, 48-49 kinetic theory of, 76-79

Gassendi, Pierre, 39

Genus, 118 Geometry, 19 Gods, 4

Conservation of energy, 85 Conservation of matter, 53

life

138

and, 101

of, 41

Index

139

Grandfather's clock, 35 Gravitation, 64 universal, 61-62 Hales, Stephen, 48 Halley, Edmund, 132

Heat, 73-79

energy and, 82-84 kinetic theory, 77-78 Heisenberg, Werner, 8 Helium, 90 Helmholtz, Hermann von, 85 Hertzsprung, Ejnar, 133

Hiero

II,

Magnetism, 64-67 Malthus, Thomas R., 126 Mass, 59 Mathematics, applied, 28 Matter, composition of, 37-44 Maxwell, James Clerk, 68, 76-78 Mayer, Julius R., 85-86 Mechanical view, 64, 99 Meteors, 130 Miletus, 2 Mira, 132 Moon, 61

Motion, laws

21

Hipparchus, 130 Hippocrates, 103, 107 Hippocratic oath, 104 Hutton, James, 124, 126

Huygens, Christian, Hypoteneuse, 16

35

31

of,

58-61

random, 75-76

Museum,

22

Natural selection, 127

Newton,

Isaac, 57-62

Nile River,

3

Nitrogen dioxide, 48 Notes, musical, 11

Illness, 102

Inertia, 59

Inheritance of acquired characteristics,

125

Inorganic chemistry, 107 Invertebrates, 120 Ionia, 5

Joule,

James

P.,

82-84

Kelvin, Lord, 84 Kinetic energy, 81 Kinetic theory of gases, 76-79 Kinetic theory of heat, 77-78 Kirchhoff, Gustav R., 90-91, 132 Kiihne, Wilhelm, 110

Lamarck, Jean B.

de, 120, 125

Lavoisier, Antoine-Laurent, 49-54

Laws

of nature, 6

Leucippus, 37 Lever, 25

Nova, 131 Numbers, 12-17

Odd

numbers,

12

Orders, 119 Organic chemistry, 107

Pendulum, 30, 35 Perkin, William H., 108 Photoelectric effect, 95 Phyla, 120 Planck, Max, 93-95 Platinum, 109 Plato, 24, 114 Priestley, Joseph, 48-49 Prism, 90 Proust, Joseph L., 41 Pterodactyl, 120 Proteins, 112-113 Pythagoras, 10-19, 23

Pythagorean theorem,

17

Life, 98 ff

Quanta, 93-94

Light, 89-93

Quantum

Limestone, 51 Lines of force, 66-67 Linnaeus, Carolus, 118-120 Linne, Carl von, 117

Radiation, electromagnetic, 69 Random motion, 75-76

Lucretius, 39 Lyell, Charles, 126

theory, 95-97

Ray, John, 117 Rayleigh, Lord, 91 Reason, 7

4

Index

140 Reaumur, Rene A. Right

F. de, 109-1 IQ

triangles, 16

Rumford, Count, 71-75, 82 Russell,

Henry

N., 133-135

Sanger, Frederick, 113 Schrodinger, Erwin, 97 Science, idea of, 7-8 Secchi, Pietro A., 133 Soda water, 49 Species, 118

Spectral classes, 133 Spectroscope, 90, 132 Spectrum, 90

Thermodynamics, 86 second law of, 88 Thompson, Benjamin. See Rumford, Count Thomson, William. See Kelvin, Lord Time, measurement of, 34-35 Triangular numbers,

13

Uncertainty, principle of, 8 Universe, birth of, 136 composition of, 1-4 gods and, Urea, 108

Square numbers, 14 Stars, 133

explosion of, 136 maps of, 130 Steam engine, 86 Stellar evolution, 134-137

Sumner, James

B., 112

Sun, 73 Syracuse, 20

Taxonomy, 115-120 Thales, 1-7,

Theorems,

18, 65,

18

van Helmont, Jan

B., 46, 51

Vertebrates, 120 Violet catastrophe, 92 Vitalism, 100, 107

end

of. 111

Water, 1-4 Wien, Wilhelm, 92-93, 133 Wohler, Friedrich, 106-108

100 Yeast, 110

^