Richard Feynman - John Gribbin - E-Book

Richard Feynman E-Book

John Gribbin

0,0

Beschreibung

One hundred years on from his birth, and 30 since his death, Richard Feynman's discoveries in modern physics are still thoroughly relevant. Magnificently charismatic and fun-loving, he brought a sense of adventure to the study of science. His extraordinary career included war-time work on the atomic bomb at Los Alamos, a profoundly original theory of quantum mechanics, for which he won the Nobel prize, and major contributions to the sciences of gravity, nuclear physics and particle theory. Interweaving personal anecdotes and recollections with clear scientific narrative, acclaimed science writers John and Mary Gribbin reveal a fascinating man with an immense passion for life – a superb teacher, a wonderful showman and one of the greatest scientists of his generation.

Sie lesen das E-Book in den Legimi-Apps auf:

Android
iOS
von Legimi
zertifizierten E-Readern
Kindle™-E-Readern
(für ausgewählte Pakete)

Seitenzahl: 602

Das E-Book (TTS) können Sie hören im Abo „Legimi Premium” in Legimi-Apps auf:

Android
iOS
Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.



Richard Feynman

A Life in Science

John Gribbin and Mary Gribbin

   I wonder why. I wonder why.

   I wonder why I wonder.

   I wonder why I wonder why

   I wonder why I wonder!

 

   RICHARD FEYNMAN

Contents

Title PageEpigraphAcknowledgementsPrologue: ‘We love you Dick’  1 A fascination with physics2 Physics before Feynman3 College boy4 Early works5 From Los Alamos to Cornell6 The masterwork7 The legend of Richard Feynman8 Supercool science9 Fame and (some) fortune10 Beyond the Nobel Prize11 Father figure12 The last challenge13 The final years14 Feynman after Feynman  Epilogue: In search of Feynman’s vanBibliographyIndexAbout the AuthorsCopyright

Acknowledgements

Many people gave up time to talk to us about their personal and professional memories of Richard Feynman. Others took the trouble to answer specific queries by mail, e-mail or telephone. Without them, this book could not have been an accurate portrayal of the best-loved scientist of our times. We thank especially Joan Feynman, Carl Feynman, Michelle Feynman and Jacqueline Shaw from Feynman’s immediate family circle; James Bjorken, Norman Dombey, David Goodstein, James Hartle, Robert Jastrow, Daniel Kevles, Hagen Kleinert, Igor Novikov, Kip Thorne and Nick Watkins from the world of physics; Feynman’s former secretary, Helen Tuck; and Ralph Leighton, who knew Feynman as well as anybody did in the last decade of his life. Even where these people have not been quoted directly, their contributions have helped to shape the image of Richard Feynman in our minds, which we hope comes through in this book.

We have also drawn on published accounts of Feynman’s life and work, cited in the text and referred to in full in the Bibliography. Where possible, we have checked important stories about Feynman with their sources; but, of course, we have had to rely on the secondary sources in cases where the originators of the stories are no longer alive, or were otherwise unavailable.

Michael Shermer went to enormous trouble to arrange many interviews for us on a visit to Caltech, and Jagdish Mehra, who was the last person to interview Feynman formally about his life and work, gave permission for us to quote from his own book The Beat of a Different Drum, which remains the definitive technical account of the life and science of Richard Feynman, at a more academic level than the present book.

Benjamin Gribbin spent many hours transcribing recordings of interviews with scrupulous accuracy and unfailing good humour, and Jonathan Gribbin prepared the diagrams with speed and skill. The archivists at Princeton University and Caltech, respectively Ben Primer and Charlotte Erwin, helped us to find source material, as did Karl Berkelman at Cornell University, Helen Samuels at MIT, and Roger Meade at the Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Prologue: ‘We love you Dick’

Does the world really need another book about Richard Feynman? We think so, or we wouldn’t have written it. And this is why. Richard Feynman was the best-loved scientist of modern times, perhaps of all times, and that is something that simply does not come across in any of the other books about the man and his work. There have been books about Feynman the character, a wise-cracking entertainer who imparted not a little worldly wisdom along with his anecdotes; there have been books about Feynman the scientist, putting his work in the perspective of physics in the second half of the twentieth century; there has even been a picture book, combining the illustrations with reminiscences about Feynman by his family and friends. But nobody has captured the essence of Feynman’s science and the essence of Feynman’s persona in one book. This is especially odd because, of all the scientists of modern times, Feynman seems to have been the one who had the best ‘feel’ for science, who understood physics not simply in terms of lines of equations written on a blackboard, but in some deep, inner sense which enabled him to see to the heart of the subject.

This doesn’t mean that Feynman lived his life ‘like a scientist’, in the stereotypical sense of being a cold-blooded logician in everyday life. Far from it. The point is that he did physics ‘like a human being’, carrying into the world of science his inbuilt  sense of fun, his irreverence, and his liking of adventure and the unexpected. The way Feynman did his physics depended on the kind of person he was, far more than in the case of any other physicist we know. It is impossible to understand Feynman’s science properly without understanding what kind of a person he was, and nobody put more life into science than he did.

Equally, it is impossible to understand what kind of man Feynman was without understanding at least something of the science that was so important to him. A fun-loving, adventurous character like Feynman was attracted to physics because physics is fun, and offers opportunity for adventure. You may find that hard to believe. But what’s wrong with the public image of physics is not so much the science itself as the way that the science is taught and portrayed. Perhaps Feynman’s greatest achievement was as a teacher, conveying the fun of science, and entertainer, providing an image of science that cut right across the stereotypes. Ralph Leighton describes Feynman as a ‘shaman of physics’. Feynman talked of nature as ‘She’ or ‘Her’, and seemed to have a contact with the way the world works that few people have. When he gave lectures, he brought his audience into contact with nature in ways that they could not achieve on their own, allowing them to see nature differently, in a transforming experience, so much so that often when he explained some subtle point in a way that they could understand the audience would break out into spontaneous applause, even laughter. The physicist Freeman Dyson has commented,1 ‘I never saw him give a lecture that did not make the audience laugh’, but the laughter stemmed as much from the pleasure of finding things out as from the jokes that Feynman cracked.

After this experience, people would often have a memory of understanding something, but couldn’t always quite reconstruct how it was they had understood – Feynman would raise people to a level of understanding that they had never before achieved, but then they couldn’t quite remember how he had done it. Even fellow scientists sometimes felt this way about a Feynman lecture – Leighton recalls his own father, one of Feynman’s colleagues at Caltech, remarking on this almost transcendental experience. People who attended Feynman’s lectures say that they seemed like magic, almost literally spellbinding, while people who met him report the same sort of feeling, an awareness of being in the presence of something special, even when they can’t quite put their finger on why. They just felt changed by the experience. And people who never met Feynman still write to Leighton to say that they have been inspired by Feynman’s example. It may well be that he will be remembered more in this way, as a ‘wise man’, rather than for the specific aspects of the science that he was involved with.

This would be appropriate, and perhaps what Feynman himself would have wanted. To Feynman, love was more important than science; but it just happened that, as well as loving people, he loved physics.

And people, including physicists, loved him. In an obituary published in Nature on 14 April 1988 (volume 332, page 588), Hans Bethe, who had been Feynman’s boss both at Los Alamos and at Cornell, said ‘more than other scientists, he was loved by his colleagues and his students’. The day Feynman died, the students at Caltech hung a banner across the eleven-storey library building on the campus. The message on the banner read: ‘WE LOVE YOU DICK’. Around the world, many people who hadn’t even met Feynman felt a sense of personal loss when he died. Neither of us ever met him; but the physicist half of the partnership (JG) was exactly the right age to be among the first undergraduates to benefit from Feynman’s Lectures on Physics while at university. The clarity of those lectures helped to shape his career, and reinforced his own feeling that science, even at research level, could still be fun. Reading books and papers by Feynman over the years, and seeing him on TV, reinforced that belief, and made Feynman seem like an old friend.

But to many people who felt the same way, Feynman was, more than any other great scientist of modern times, ‘famous for being famous’. The name of Stephen Hawking is inextricably linked with black holes; Albert Einstein’s with relativity theory; Charles Darwin’s with evolution. But Feynman? To many non-scientists, he was just ‘a scientist’. This is ironic, because Feynman’s greatest work was actually in the area of quantum theory, a subject of enormous fascination to non-scientists today. We want to explain why this work was so important, and how it lies at the heart of investigations of the quantum mysteries today; but we also want to share with you our understanding of the kind of man who carried out that work.

Even today, writing seven years after Feynman died in 1988, it is far too soon to produce a definitive account of the historical importance of the man and his work. We don’t claim that this is more than a personal view of our subject, but it is one we have arrived at through a long (if one-sided) association with his works, and through recent discussions with Feynman’s family and friends.

The one thing that is clear above all else in Feynman’s character, from his own work and from conversations with people who knew him, is passion. His passion for physics, for drawing, for drumming, for life itself and for his jokes. Of course Feynman’s own anecdotes, gathered together by Ralph Leighton and published in two volumes, tend to portray Feynman as a larger than life, legendary scientific superman and scourge of established authority. Were those stories accurate? We asked Feynman’s sister, Joan, on a visit to Pasadena in April 1995. ‘It’s easy to tell which stories are accurate’, she replied. ‘How?’, we asked. ‘My brother didn’t lie.’

Ralph Leighton, to whom the stories were told, agrees, but stresses that Feynman was a showman, who loved telling stories.2 The stories were all true, in that they were about real things that had happened to Feynman; but he used to try telling them in different ways, with different emphasis, until he found the way that worked best. They were not, after all, just anecdotes; in many cases, the stories became parables, and have a moral, telling you something about the right way to live and how to get on in the world, as well as offering amusement and entertainment.

There is indeed a legend growing up around Richard Feynman; but there is truth behind the legend.3 In the classic western The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence, a reporter is faced with a choice between printing the truth about the early career of a great man, or the legend, and in a memorable moment decides to ‘print the legend’. We don’t intend to go that far, although we agree with the spirit of that decision. We offer you something of the legend of Richard Feynman, but also something of the man behind the legend; and we hope we can put across the importance of his scientific work in language that non-scientists can both understand and enjoy. That, after all, is what Feynman himself would have wanted.

 

John Gribbin* Mary Gribbin March 1996

Notes

1. See Freeman Dyson, From Eros to Gaia (Pantheon, New York, 1992).

2. Joan Feynman, interviewed by JG in April 1995, said that according to her mother ‘when Richard was very little he couldn’t decide whether he wanted to be a comedian or a scientist, so he combined the two options’.

3. Interviewed by JG in April 1995, David Goodstein, who is Professor of Physics and Vice Provost at Caltech, said, ‘Feynman is a person of historic proportions; he deserves the kind of attention that he’s gotten, in my opinion.’

*johngribbinscience.wordpress.com/