字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント In 1905, Albert Einstein published a series of papers that many consider a starting point for the modern age of physics. But other than "E equals m c squared", most people only know that Einstein was famous, not for what he was famous. Since this week marks the 133rd anniversary of his birth, as is customary in western traditions we will celebrate by taking a brief tour of his scientific publications. Today, his paper from March, 1905 on why light is a particle. Einstein didn't just pull this idea out of thin air – he first noted that the light emitted from something hot (like a lightbulb filament), actually has the same energy distribution as a gas, which is somewhat surprising if you're a nineteenth century physicist who thinks that light is a continuous wave and very much not a gas composed of individual molecules. And while the idea that "light behaves kind of like a gas" was already well known before Einstein, no one had taken the logical but crazy next step to conclude that light must then be made of individual particles, too! So Einstein proposed that these "light-quanta" were in fact real particles that could account for a few recent and unexplained experiments having to do with knocking electrons off of metals or gas molecules. He turned out to be right on all counts and got a nobel prize for his work… but that's a story for another day.
B1 中級 アルバート・アインシュタイン:光はなぜ量子なのか (Albert Einstein: Why Light is Quantum) 337 38 稲葉白兎 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語