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Arthur Eddington

Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington OM FRS[2] (28 December 1882 – 22 November 1944) was an English astronomer, physicist, and mathematician. He was also a philosopher of science and a populariser of science. The Eddington limit, the natural limit to the luminosity of stars, or the radiation generated by accretion onto a compact object, is named in his honour.


Arthur Eddington

Born
Arthur Stanley Eddington

(1882-12-28)28 December 1882
Died22 November 1944(1944-11-22) (aged 61)
Alma materUniversity of Manchester
Trinity College, Cambridge
Known forArrow of time
Eddington approximation
Eddington experiment
Eddington's affine geometry
Eddington limit
Eddington number
Eddington valve
Eddington–Dirac number
Eddington–Finkelstein coordinates
Eddington stellar model
Eddington–Sweet circulation
AwardsRoyal Society Royal Medal (1928)
Smith's Prize (1907)
RAS Gold Medal (1924)
Henry Draper Medal (1924)
Bruce Medal (1924)
Knight Bachelor (1930)
Order of Merit (1938)
Scientific career
FieldsAstrophysics
InstitutionsTrinity College, Cambridge
Academic advisors
Doctoral studentsSubrahmanyan Chandrasekhar[1]
Leslie Comrie
Hermann Bondi
Other notable studentsGeorges Lemaître
Vibert Douglas
InfluencesHorace Lamb
Arthur Schuster
John William Graham

Around 1920, he foreshadowed the discovery and mechanism of nuclear fusion processes in stars, in his paper "The Internal Constitution of the Stars".[3][4] At that time, the source of stellar energy was a complete mystery; Eddington was the first to correctly speculate that the source was fusion of hydrogen into helium.

Eddington wrote a number of articles that announced and explained Einstein's theory of general relativity to the English-speaking world. World War I had severed many lines of scientific communication, and new developments in German science were not well known in England. He also conducted an expedition to observe the solar eclipse of 29 May 1919 that provided one of the earliest confirmations of general relativity, and he became known for his popular expositions and interpretations of the theory.

Early years

Eddington was born 28 December 1882 in Kendal, Westmorland (now Cumbria), England, the son of Quaker parents, Arthur Henry Eddington, headmaster of the Quaker School, and Sarah Ann Shout.[5]

His father taught at a Quaker training college in Lancashire before moving to Kendal to become headmaster of Stramongate School. He died in the typhoid epidemic which swept England in 1884. His mother was left to bring up her two children with relatively little income. The family moved to Weston-super-Mare where at first Stanley (as his mother and sister always called Eddington) was educated at home before spending three years at a preparatory school. The family lived at a house called Varzin, 42 Walliscote Road, Weston-super-Mare. There is a commemorative plaque on the building explaining Sir Arthur's contribution to science.

In 1893 Eddington entered Brynmelyn School. He proved to be a most capable scholar, particularly in mathematics and English literature. His performance earned him a scholarship to Owens College, Manchester (what was later to become the University of Manchester), in 1898, which he was able to attend, having turned 16 that year. He spent the first year in a general course, but he turned to physics for the next three years. Eddington was greatly influenced by his physics and mathematics teachers, Arthur Schuster and Horace Lamb. At Manchester, Eddington lived at Dalton Hall, where he came under the lasting influence of the Quaker mathematician J. W. Graham. His progress was rapid, winning him several scholarships and he graduated with a BSc in physics with First Class Honours in 1902.

Based on his performance at Owens College, he was awarded a scholarship to Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1902. His tutor at Cambridge was Robert Alfred Herman and in 1904 Eddington became the first ever second-year student to be placed as Senior Wrangler. After receiving his M.A. in 1905, he began research on thermionic emission in the Cavendish Laboratory. This did not go well, and meanwhile he spent time teaching mathematics to first year engineering students. This hiatus was brief. Through a recommendation by E. T. Whittaker, his senior colleague at Trinity College, he secured a position at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, where he was to embark on his career in astronomy, a career whose seeds had been sown even as a young child when he would often "try to count the stars".[6]

 
Plaque at 42 Walliscote Road, Weston-super-Mare
 
Eddington, right, on a horse; possibly during the Fifth Conference of the International Union for Co-operation in Solar Research, held in Bonn, Germany, 1913

Astronomy

In January 1906, Eddington was nominated to the post of chief assistant to the Astronomer Royal at the Royal Greenwich Observatory. He left Cambridge for Greenwich the following month. He was put to work on a detailed analysis of the parallax of 433 Eros on photographic plates that had started in 1900. He developed a new statistical method based on the apparent drift of two background stars, winning him the Smith's Prize in 1907. The prize won him a fellowship of Trinity College, Cambridge. In December 1912, George Darwin, son of Charles Darwin, died suddenly, and Eddington was promoted to his chair as the Plumian Professor of Astronomy and Experimental Philosophy in early 1913. Later that year, Robert Ball, holder of the theoretical Lowndean chair, also died, and Eddington was named the director of the entire Cambridge Observatory the next year. In May 1914, he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society: he was awarded the Royal Medal in 1928 and delivered the Bakerian Lecture in 1926.[7]

Eddington also investigated the interior of stars through theory, and developed the first true understanding of stellar processes. He began this in 1916 with investigations of possible physical explanations for Cepheid variable stars. He began by extending Karl Schwarzschild's earlier work on radiation pressure in Emden polytropic models. These models treated a star as a sphere of gas held up against gravity by internal thermal pressure, and one of Eddington's chief additions was to show that radiation pressure was necessary to prevent collapse of the sphere. He developed his model despite knowingly lacking firm foundations for understanding opacity and energy generation in the stellar interior. However, his results allowed for calculation of temperature, density and pressure at all points inside a star (thermodynamic anisotropy), and Eddington argued that his theory was so useful for further astrophysical investigation that it should be retained despite not being based on completely accepted physics. James Jeans contributed the important suggestion that stellar matter would certainly be ionized, but that was the end of any collaboration between the pair, who became famous for their lively debates.

Eddington defended his method by pointing to the utility of his results, particularly his important mass–luminosity relation. This had the unexpected result of showing that virtually all stars, including giants and dwarfs, behaved as ideal gases. In the process of developing his stellar models, he sought to overturn current thinking about the sources of stellar energy. Jeans and others defended the Kelvin–Helmholtz mechanism, which was based on classical mechanics, while Eddington speculated broadly about the qualitative and quantitative consequences of possible proton–electron annihilation and nuclear fusion processes.

Around 1920, he anticipated the discovery and mechanism of nuclear fusion processes in stars, in his paper "The Internal Constitution of the Stars".[3][4] At that time, the source of stellar energy was a complete mystery; Eddington correctly speculated that the source was fusion of hydrogen into helium, liberating enormous energy according to Einstein's equation E = mc2. This was a particularly remarkable development since at that time fusion and thermonuclear energy, and even the fact that stars are largely composed of hydrogen (see metallicity), had not yet been discovered. Eddington's paper, based on knowledge at the time, reasoned that:

  1. The leading theory of stellar energy, the contraction hypothesis (cf. the Kelvin–Helmholtz mechanism), should cause stars' rotation to visibly speed up due to conservation of angular momentum. But observations of Cepheid variable stars showed this was not happening.
  2. The only other known plausible source of energy was conversion of matter to energy; Einstein had shown some years earlier that a small amount of matter was equivalent to a large amount of energy.
  3. Francis Aston had also recently shown that the mass of a helium atom was about 0.8% less than the mass of the four hydrogen atoms which would, combined, form a helium atom, suggesting that if such a combination could happen, it would release considerable energy as a byproduct.
  4. If a star contained just 5% of fusible hydrogen, it would suffice to explain how stars got their energy. (We now know that most "ordinary" stars contain far more than 5% hydrogen.)
  5. Further elements might also be fused, and other scientists had speculated that stars were the "crucible" in which light elements combined to create heavy elements, but without more accurate measurements of their atomic masses nothing more could be said at the time.

All of these speculations were proven correct in the following decades.

With these assumptions, he demonstrated that the interior temperature of stars must be millions of degrees. In 1924, he discovered the mass–luminosity relation for stars (see Lecchini in § Further reading). Despite some disagreement, Eddington's models were eventually accepted as a powerful tool for further investigation, particularly in issues of stellar evolution. The confirmation of his estimated stellar diameters by Michelson in 1920 proved crucial in convincing astronomers unused to Eddington's intuitive, exploratory style. Eddington's theory appeared in mature form in 1926 as The Internal Constitution of the Stars, which became an important text for training an entire generation of astrophysicists.

Eddington's work in astrophysics in the late 1920s and the 1930s continued his work in stellar structure, and precipitated further clashes with Jeans and Edward Arthur Milne. An important topic was the extension of his models to take advantage of developments in quantum physics, including the use of degeneracy physics in describing dwarf stars.

Dispute with Chandrasekhar on existence of black holes

The topic of extension of his models precipitated his dispute with Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, who was then a student at Cambridge. Chandrasekhar's work presaged the discovery of black holes, which at the time seemed so absurdly non-physical that Eddington refused to believe that Chandrasekhar's purely mathematical derivation had consequences for the real world. Eddington was wrong and his motivation is controversial. Chandrasekhar's narrative of this incident, in which his work is harshly rejected, portrays Eddington as rather cruel and dogmatic. Chandra benefited from his friendship with Eddington. It was Eddington and Milne who put up Chandra's name for the fellowship for the Royal Society which Chandra obtained. An FRS meant he was at the Cambridge high-table with all the luminaries and a very comfortable endowment for research. Eddington's criticism seems to have been based partly on a suspicion that a purely mathematical derivation from relativity theory was not enough to explain the seemingly daunting physical paradoxes that were inherent to degenerate stars, but to have "raised irrelevant objections" in addition, as Thanu Padmanabhan puts it.[8]

Relativity

During World War I, Eddington was secretary of the Royal Astronomical Society, which meant he was the first to receive a series of letters and papers from Willem de Sitter regarding Einstein's theory of general relativity. Eddington was fortunate in being not only one of the few astronomers with the mathematical skills to understand general relativity, but owing to his internationalist and pacifist views inspired by his Quaker religious beliefs,[6][9] one of the few at the time who was still interested in pursuing a theory developed by a German physicist. He quickly became the chief supporter and expositor of relativity in Britain. He and Astronomer Royal Frank Watson Dyson organized two expeditions to observe a solar eclipse in 1919 to make the first empirical test of Einstein's theory: the measurement of the deflection of light by the sun's gravitational field. In fact, Dyson's argument for the indispensability of Eddington's expertise in this test was what prevented Eddington from eventually having to enter military service.[6][9]

When conscription was introduced in Britain on 2 March 1916, Eddington intended to apply for an exemption as a conscientious objector.[6] Cambridge University authorities instead requested and were granted an exemption on the ground of Eddington's work being of national interest. In 1918, this was appealed against by the Ministry of National Service. Before the appeal tribunal in June, Eddington claimed conscientious objector status, which was not recognized and would have ended his exemption in August 1918. A further two hearings took place in June and July, respectively. Eddington's personal statement at the June hearing about his objection to war based on religious grounds is on record.[6] The Astronomer Royal, Sir Frank Dyson, supported Eddington at the July hearing with a written statement, emphasising Eddington's essential role in the solar eclipse expedition to Príncipe in May 1919. Eddington made clear his willingness to serve in the Friends' Ambulance Unit, under the jurisdiction of the British Red Cross, or as a harvest labourer. However, the tribunal's decision to grant a further twelve months' exemption from military service was on condition of Eddington continuing his astronomy work, in particular in preparation for the Príncipe expedition.[6][9] The war ended before the end of his exemption.

 
One of Eddington's photographs of the total solar eclipse of 29 May 1919, presented in his 1920 paper announcing its success, confirming Einstein's theory that light "bends"

After the war, Eddington travelled to the island of Príncipe off the west coast of Africa to watch the solar eclipse of 29 May 1919. During the eclipse, he took pictures of the stars (several stars in the Hyades cluster, including Kappa Tauri of the constellation Taurus) whose line of sight from the earth happened to be near the sun's location in the sky at that time of year.[10] This effect is noticeable only during a total solar eclipse when the sky is dark enough to see stars which are normally obscured by the sun's brightness. According to the theory of general relativity, stars with light rays that passed near the Sun would appear to have been slightly shifted because their light had been curved by its gravitational field. Eddington showed that Newtonian gravitation could be interpreted to predict half the shift predicted by Einstein.

Eddington's observations published the next year[10] allegedly confirmed Einstein's theory, and were hailed at the time as evidence of general relativity over the Newtonian model. The news was reported in newspapers all over the world as a major story. Afterward, Eddington embarked on a campaign to popularize relativity and the expedition as landmarks both in scientific development and international scientific relations.[11]

It has been claimed that Eddington's observations were of poor quality, and he had unjustly discounted simultaneous observations at Sobral, Brazil, which appeared closer to the Newtonian model, but a 1979 re-analysis with modern measuring equipment and contemporary software validated Eddington's results and conclusions.[12] The quality of the 1919 results was indeed poor compared to later observations, but was sufficient to persuade contemporary astronomers. The rejection of the results from the expedition to Brazil was due to a defect in the telescopes used which, again, was completely accepted and well understood by contemporary astronomers.[13]

 
The minute book of Cambridge ∇2V Club for the meeting where Eddington presented his observations of the curvature of light around the sun, confirming Einstein's theory of general relativity. They include the line "A general discussion followed. The President remarked that the 83rd meeting was historic".

Throughout this period, Eddington lectured on relativity, and was particularly well known for his ability to explain the concepts in lay terms as well as scientific. He collected many of these into the Mathematical Theory of Relativity in 1923, which Albert Einstein suggested was "the finest presentation of the subject in any language." He was an early advocate of Einstein's general relativity, and an interesting anecdote well illustrates his humour and personal intellectual investment: Ludwik Silberstein, a physicist who thought of himself as an expert on relativity, approached Eddington at the Royal Society's (6 November) 1919 meeting where he had defended Einstein's relativity with his Brazil-Príncipe solar eclipse calculations with some degree of scepticism, and ruefully charged Arthur as one who claimed to be one of three men who actually understood the theory (Silberstein, of course, was including himself and Einstein as the other). When Eddington refrained from replying, he insisted Arthur not be "so shy", whereupon Eddington replied, "Oh, no! I was wondering who the third one might be!"[14]

Cosmology

Eddington was also heavily involved with the development of the first generation of general relativistic cosmological models. He had been investigating the instability of the Einstein universe when he learned of both Lemaître's 1927 paper postulating an expanding or contracting universe and Hubble's work on the recession of the spiral nebulae. He felt the cosmological constant must have played the crucial role in the universe's evolution from an Einsteinian steady state to its current expanding state, and most of his cosmological investigations focused on the constant's significance and characteristics. In The Mathematical Theory of Relativity, Eddington interpreted the cosmological constant to mean that the universe is "self-gauging".

Fundamental theory and the Eddington number

During the 1920s until his death, Eddington increasingly concentrated on what he called "fundamental theory" which was intended to be a unification of quantum theory, relativity, cosmology, and gravitation. At first he progressed along "traditional" lines, but turned increasingly to an almost numerological analysis of the dimensionless ratios of fundamental constants.

His basic approach was to combine several fundamental constants in order to produce a dimensionless number. In many cases these would result in numbers close to 1040, its square, or its square root. He was convinced that the mass of the proton and the charge of the electron were a "natural and complete specification for constructing a Universe" and that their values were not accidental. One of the discoverers of quantum mechanics, Paul Dirac, also pursued this line of investigation, which has become known as the Dirac large numbers hypothesis.[15] A somewhat damaging statement in his defence of these concepts involved the fine-structure constant, α. At the time it was measured to be very close to 1/136, and he argued that the value should in fact be exactly 1/136 for epistemological reasons. Later measurements placed the value much closer to 1/137, at which point he switched his line of reasoning to argue that one more should be added to the degrees of freedom, so that the value should in fact be exactly 1/137, the Eddington number.[16] Wags[clarification needed] at the time started calling him "Arthur Adding-one".[17] This change of stance detracted from Eddington's credibility in the physics community. The current CODATA value is 1/137.035999084(21).[18]

Eddington believed he had identified an algebraic basis for fundamental physics, which he termed "E-numbers" (representing a certain group – a Clifford algebra). These in effect incorporated spacetime into a higher-dimensional structure. While his theory has long been neglected by the general physics community, similar algebraic notions underlie many modern attempts at a grand unified theory. Moreover, Eddington's emphasis on the values of the fundamental constants, and specifically upon dimensionless numbers derived from them, is nowadays a central concern of physics. In particular, he predicted a number of hydrogen atoms in the Universe 136 × 2256 ≈ 1.57 1079, or equivalently the half of the total number of particles protons + electrons.[19] He did not complete this line of research before his death in 1944; his book Fundamental Theory was published posthumously in 1948.

Eddington number for cycling

Eddington is credited with devising a measure of a cyclist's long-distance riding achievements. The Eddington number in the context of cycling is defined as the maximum number E such that the cyclist has cycled at least E miles on at least E days.[20][21]

For example, an Eddington number of 70 would imply that the cyclist has cycled at least 70 miles in a day on at least 70 occasions. Achieving a high Eddington number is difficult, since moving from, say, 70 to 75 will (probably) require more than five new long-distance rides, since any rides shorter than 75 miles will no longer be included in the reckoning. Eddington's own life-time E-number was 84.[22]

The Eddington number for cycling is analogous to the h-index that quantifies both the actual scientific productivity and the apparent scientific impact of a scientist.[20]

Philosophy

Idealism

Eddington wrote in his book The Nature of the Physical World that "The stuff of the world is mind-stuff."

The mind-stuff of the world is, of course, something more general than our individual conscious minds ... The mind-stuff is not spread in space and time; these are part of the cyclic scheme ultimately derived out of it ... It is necessary to keep reminding ourselves that all knowledge of our environment from which the world of physics is constructed, has entered in the form of messages transmitted along the nerves to the seat of consciousness ... Consciousness is not sharply defined, but fades into subconsciousness; and beyond that we must postulate something indefinite but yet continuous with our mental nature ... It is difficult for the matter-of-fact physicist to accept the view that the substratum of everything is of mental character. But no one can deny that mind is the first and most direct thing in our experience, and all else is remote inference.

— Eddington, The Nature of the Physical World, 276–81.

The idealist conclusion was not integral to his epistemology but was based on two main arguments.

The first derives directly from current physical theory. Briefly, mechanical theories of the ether and of the behaviour of fundamental particles have been discarded in both relativity and quantum physics. From this, Eddington inferred that a materialistic metaphysics was outmoded and that, in consequence, since the disjunction of materialism or idealism are assumed to be exhaustive, an idealistic metaphysics is required. The second, and more interesting argument, was based on Eddington's epistemology, and may be regarded as consisting of two parts. First, all we know of the objective world is its structure, and the structure of the objective world is precisely mirrored in our own consciousness. We therefore have no reason to doubt that the objective world too is "mind-stuff". Dualistic metaphysics, then, cannot be evidentially supported.

But, second, not only can we not know that the objective world is nonmentalistic, we also cannot intelligibly suppose that it could be material. To conceive of a dualism entails attributing material properties to the objective world. However, this presupposes that we could observe that the objective world has material properties. But this is absurd, for whatever is observed must ultimately be the content of our own consciousness, and consequently, nonmaterial.

Ian Barbour, in his book Issues in Science and Religion (1966), p. 133, cites Eddington's The Nature of the Physical World (1928) for a text that argues the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principles provides a scientific basis for "the defense of the idea of human freedom" and his Science and the Unseen World (1929) for support of philosophical idealism "the thesis that reality is basically mental".

Charles De Koninck points out that Eddington believed in objective reality existing apart from our minds, but was using the phrase "mind-stuff" to highlight the inherent intelligibility of the world: that our minds and the physical world are made of the same "stuff" and that our minds are the inescapable connection to the world.[23] As De Koninck quotes Eddington,

There is a doctrine well known to philosophers that the moon ceases to exist when no one is looking at it. I will not discuss the doctrine since I have not the least idea what is the meaning of the word existence when used in this connection. At any rate the science of astronomy has not been based on this spasmodic kind of moon. In the scientific world (which has to fulfill functions less vague than merely existing) there is a moon which appeared on the scene before the astronomer; it reflects sunlight when no one sees it; it has mass when no one is measuring the mass; it is distant 240,000 miles from the earth when no one is surveying the distance; and it will eclipse the sun in 1999 even if the human race has succeeded in killing itself off before that date.

— Eddington, The Nature of the Physical World, 226

Indeterminism

Against Albert Einstein and others who advocated determinism, indeterminism—championed by Eddington[23]—says that a physical object has an ontologically undetermined component that is not due to the epistemological limitations of physicists' understanding. The uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics, then, would not necessarily be due to hidden variables but to an indeterminism in nature itself.

Popular and philosophical writings

Eddington wrote a parody of The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, recounting his 1919 solar eclipse experiment. It contained the following quatrain:[24]

Oh leave the Wise our measures to collate
           One thing at least is certain, LIGHT has WEIGHT,
One thing is certain, and the rest debate—
Light-rays, when near the Sun, DO NOT GO STRAIGHT.

During the 1920s and 30s, Eddington gave numerous lectures, interviews, and radio broadcasts on relativity, in addition to his textbook The Mathematical Theory of Relativity, and later, quantum mechanics. Many of these were gathered into books, including The Nature of the Physical World and New Pathways in Science. His use of literary allusions and humour helped make these difficult subjects more accessible.

Eddington's books and lectures were immensely popular with the public, not only because of his clear exposition, but also for his willingness to discuss the philosophical and religious implications of the new physics. He argued for a deeply rooted philosophical harmony between scientific investigation and religious mysticism, and also that the positivist nature of relativity and quantum physics provided new room for personal religious experience and free will. Unlike many other spiritual scientists, he rejected the idea that science could provide proof of religious propositions.

He is sometimes misunderstood[by whom?] as having promoted the infinite monkey theorem in his 1928 book The Nature of the Physical World, with the phrase "If an army of monkeys were strumming on typewriters, they might write all the books in the British Museum". It is clear from the context that Eddington is not suggesting that the probability of this happening is worthy of serious consideration. On the contrary, it was a rhetorical illustration of the fact that below certain levels of probability, the term improbable is functionally equivalent to impossible.[citation needed]

His popular writings made him a household name in Great Britain between the world wars.

Death

Eddington died of cancer in the Evelyn Nursing Home, Cambridge, on 22 November 1944.[25] He was unmarried. His body was cremated at Cambridge Crematorium (Cambridgeshire) on 27 November 1944; the cremated remains were buried in the grave of his mother in the Ascension Parish Burial Ground in Cambridge.

Cambridge University's North West Cambridge development has been named Eddington in his honour.

Eddington was played by David Tennant in the television film Einstein and Eddington, with Einstein played by Andy Serkis. The film was notable for its groundbreaking portrayal of Eddington as a somewhat repressed gay man. It was first broadcast in 2008.

The actor Paul Eddington was a relative, mentioning in his autobiography (in light of his own weakness in mathematics) "what I then felt to be the misfortune" of being related to "one of the foremost physicists in the world".[26]

Obituaries

  • Obituary 1 by Henry Norris Russell, Astrophysical Journal 101 (1943–46) 133
  • Obituary 2 by A. Vibert Douglas, Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, 39 (1943–46) 1
  • Obituary 3 by Harold Spencer Jones and E. T. Whittaker, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 105 (1943–46) 68
  • Obituary 4 by Herbert Dingle, The Observatory 66 (1943–46) 1
  • The Times, Thursday, 23 November 1944; pg. 7; Issue 49998; col D: Obituary (unsigned) – Image of cutting available at O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Arthur Eddington", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews

Honours

Awards

Named after him

Service

In popular culture

Publications

  • 1914. Stellar Movements and the Structure of the Universe. London: Macmillan.
  • 1918. Report on the relativity theory of gravitation. London, Fleetway Press, Ltd.
  • 1920. Space, Time and Gravitation: An Outline of the General Relativity Theory. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-33709-7
  • 1922. The theory of relativity and its influence on scientific thought
  • 1923. 1952. The Mathematical Theory of Relativity. Cambridge University Press.
  • 1925. The Domain of Physical Science. 2005 reprint: ISBN 1-4253-5842-X
  • 1926. Stars and Atoms. Oxford: British Association.
  • 1926. The Internal Constitution of Stars. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-33708-9
  • 1928. The Nature of the Physical World. MacMillan. 1935 replica edition: ISBN 0-8414-3885-4, University of Michigan 1981 edition: ISBN 0-472-06015-5 (1926–27 Gifford lectures)
  • 1929. Science and the Unseen World. US Macmillan, UK Allen & Unwin. 1980 Reprint Arden Library ISBN 0-8495-1426-6. 2004 US reprint – Whitefish, Montana : Kessinger Publications: ISBN 1-4179-1728-8. 2007 UK reprint London, Allen & Unwin ISBN 978-0-901689-81-8 (Swarthmore Lecture), with a new foreword by George Ellis.
  • 1930. Why I Believe in God: Science and Religion, as a Scientist Sees It. Arrow/scrollable preview.
  • 1933. The Expanding Universe: Astronomy's 'Great Debate', 1900–1931. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-34976-1
  • 1935. New Pathways in Science. Cambridge University Press.
  • 1936. Relativity Theory of Protons and Electrons. Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • 1939. Philosophy of Physical Science. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-7581-2054-0 (1938 Tarner lectures at Cambridge)
  • 1946. Fundamental Theory. Cambridge University Press.

See also

Astronomy

Science

People

Other

References

  1. ^ Arthur Eddington at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. ^ Plummer, H. C. (1945). "Arthur Stanley Eddington. 1882–1944". Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 5 (14): 113–126. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1945.0007. S2CID 121473352.
  3. ^ a b The Internal Constitution of the Stars A. S. Eddington The Scientific Monthly Vol. 11, No. 4 (Oct., 1920), pp. 297–303 JSTOR 6491
  4. ^ a b Eddington, A. S. (1916). "On the radiative equilibrium of the stars". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 77: 16–35. Bibcode:1916MNRAS..77...16E. doi:10.1093/mnras/77.1.16.
  5. ^ (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. 2006. ISBN 090219884X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 January 2013. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Douglas, A. Vibert (1956). The Life of Arthur Eddington. Thomas Nelson and Sons. pp. 92–95.
  7. ^ "Library and Archive Catalogue". Royal Society. Retrieved 29 December 2010.
  8. ^ Padmanabhan, T. (2005). "The dark side of astronomy". Nature. 435 (7038): 20–21. Bibcode:2005Natur.435...20P. doi:10.1038/435020a.
  9. ^ a b c Chandrasekhar, Subrahmanyan (1983). Eddington: The Most Distinguished Astrophysicist of His Time. Cambridge University Press. pp. 25–26. ISBN 978-0521257466.
  10. ^ a b Dyson, F.W.; Eddington, A.S.; Davidson, C.R. (1920). "A Determination of the Deflection of Light by the Sun's Gravitational Field, from Observations Made at the Solar eclipse of May 29, 1919". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A. 220 (571–581): 291–333. Bibcode:1920RSPTA.220..291D. doi:10.1098/rsta.1920.0009.
  11. ^ Sponsel, Alistair (2002). "Constructing a 'Revolution in Science': The Campaign to Promote a Favourable Reception for the 1919 Solar Eclipse Experiments". The British Journal for the History of Science. 35 (4): 439–467. doi:10.1017/S0007087402004818. ISSN 0007-0874. JSTOR 4028276. S2CID 145254889.
  12. ^ Kennefick, Daniel (5 September 2007). "Not Only Because of Theory: Dyson, Eddington and the Competing Myths of the 1919 Eclipse Expedition". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A. arXiv:0709.0685. Bibcode:2007arXiv0709.0685K. doi:10.1016/j.shpsa.2012.07.010. S2CID 119203172.
  13. ^ Kennefick, Daniel (1 March 2009). "Testing relativity from the 1919 eclipse – a question of bias". Physics Today. 62 (3): 37–42. Bibcode:2009PhT....62c..37K. doi:10.1063/1.3099578.
  14. ^ As related by Eddington to Chandrasekhar and quoted in Walter Isaacson "Einstein: His Life and Universe", p. 262
  15. ^ Srinivasan, G. (2014). What Are the Stars?. Berlin: Springer Science & Business Media. p. 31. ISBN 978-3642453021.
  16. ^ Whittaker, Edmund (1945). "Eddington's Theory of the Constants of Nature". The Mathematical Gazette. 29 (286): 137–144. doi:10.2307/3609461. JSTOR 3609461. S2CID 125122360.
  17. ^ Kean, Sam (2010). The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements. New York: Little, Brown and Co. ISBN 978-0316089081.
  18. ^ "2018 CODATA Value: inverse fine-structure constant". The NIST Reference on Constants, Units, and Uncertainty. NIST. 20 May 2019. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
  19. ^ Barrow, J. D.; Tipler, F. J. (1986). The Anthropic Cosmological Principle. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198519492.
  20. ^ a b Jeffers, David; Swanson, John (November 2005). "How high is your E?". Physics World. 18 (10): 21. doi:10.1088/2058-7058/18/10/30. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  21. ^ "Eddington number". 16 March 2008.
  22. ^ "Physics and sport". Physics World. 25 (7): 15. July 2012. Bibcode:2012PhyW...25g..15.. doi:10.1088/2058-7058/25/07/24. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  23. ^ a b de Koninck, Charles (2008). "The philosophy of Sir Arthur Eddington and The problem of indeterminism". The Writings of Charles de Koninck. Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press. ISBN 978-0-268-02595-3. OCLC 615199716.
  24. ^ Douglas, A. Vibert (1956). The Life of Arthur Eddington. Thomas Nelson and Sons. p. 44.
  25. ^ Gates, S. James; Pelletier, Cathie (2019). Proving Einstein Right: The Daring Expeditions that Changed How We Look at the Universe. Public Affairs. ISBN 978-1541762251.
  26. ^ Quakers and the Arts: "Plain and Fancy"- An Anglo-American Perspective, David Sox, Sessions Book Trust, 2000, p. 65
  27. ^ . Astronomical Society of the Pacific. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
  28. ^ . National Academy of Sciences. Archived from the original on 26 January 2013. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
  29. ^ "A.S. Eddington (1882–1944)". Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 25 January 2016.
  30. ^ "Generalforsamling – Norsk Astronomisk Selskap".
  31. ^ a b c d Who's who entry for A.S. Eddington.
  32. ^ "Sir Arthur Eddington | Apr. 16, 1934". Time.
  33. ^ "Structural Realism": entry by James Ladyman in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Further reading

  • Durham, Ian T., "Eddington & Uncertainty". Physics in Perspective (September – December). Arxiv, History of Physics
  • Kilmister, C. W. (1994). Eddington's Search for a Fundamental Theory. Cambridge Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0-521-37165-0.
  • Lecchini, Stefano, "How Dwarfs Became Giants. The Discovery of the Mass–Luminosity Relation" Bern Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science, pp. 224. (2007)
  • Vibert Douglas, A. (1956). The Life of Arthur Stanley Eddington. Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd.
  • Stanley, Matthew. "An Expedition to Heal the Wounds of War: The 1919 Eclipse Expedition and Eddington as Quaker Adventurer." Isis 94 (2003): 57–89.
  • Stanley, Matthew. "So Simple a Thing as a Star: Jeans, Eddington, and the Growth of Astrophysical Phenomenology" in British Journal for the History of Science, 2007, 40: 53–82.
  • Stanley, Matthew (2007). Practical Mystic: Religion, Science, and A.S. Eddington. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-77097-0.

External links

  • Works by Arthur Eddington at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by Arthur Stanley Eddington at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by or about Arthur Eddington at Internet Archive
  • Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington at Find a Grave
  • Trinity College Chapel
  • Arthur Stanley Eddington (1882–1944). University of St Andrews, Scotland.
  • Quotations by Arthur Eddington
  • Arthur Stanley Eddington The Bruce Medalists.
  • Russell, Henry Norris, "Review of The Internal Constitution of the Stars by A.S. Eddington". Ap.J. 67, 83 (1928).
  • project in proceeding in fórum astronomical.
  • O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Arthur Eddington", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews
  • Biography and bibliography of Bruce medalists: Arthur Stanley Eddington
  • Eddington books: The Nature of the Physical World, The Philosophy of Physical Science, Relativity Theory of Protons and Electrons, and Fundamental Theory

arthur, eddington, arthur, stanley, eddington, december, 1882, november, 1944, english, astronomer, physicist, mathematician, also, philosopher, science, populariser, science, eddington, limit, natural, limit, luminosity, stars, radiation, generated, accretion. Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington OM FRS 2 28 December 1882 22 November 1944 was an English astronomer physicist and mathematician He was also a philosopher of science and a populariser of science The Eddington limit the natural limit to the luminosity of stars or the radiation generated by accretion onto a compact object is named in his honour SirArthur EddingtonOM FRSBornArthur Stanley Eddington 1882 12 28 28 December 1882Kendal Westmorland EnglandDied22 November 1944 1944 11 22 aged 61 Cambridge Cambridgeshire EnglandAlma materUniversity of ManchesterTrinity College CambridgeKnown forArrow of timeEddington approximationEddington experimentEddington s affine geometryEddington limitEddington numberEddington valveEddington Dirac numberEddington Finkelstein coordinatesEddington stellar modelEddington Sweet circulationAwardsRoyal Society Royal Medal 1928 Smith s Prize 1907 RAS Gold Medal 1924 Henry Draper Medal 1924 Bruce Medal 1924 Knight Bachelor 1930 Order of Merit 1938 Scientific careerFieldsAstrophysicsInstitutionsTrinity College CambridgeAcademic advisorsE T Whittaker Alfred North Whitehead Ernest William Barnes Robert Alfred HermanDoctoral studentsSubrahmanyan Chandrasekhar 1 Leslie ComrieHermann BondiOther notable studentsGeorges LemaitreVibert DouglasInfluencesHorace LambArthur SchusterJohn William GrahamAround 1920 he foreshadowed the discovery and mechanism of nuclear fusion processes in stars in his paper The Internal Constitution of the Stars 3 4 At that time the source of stellar energy was a complete mystery Eddington was the first to correctly speculate that the source was fusion of hydrogen into helium Eddington wrote a number of articles that announced and explained Einstein s theory of general relativity to the English speaking world World War I had severed many lines of scientific communication and new developments in German science were not well known in England He also conducted an expedition to observe the solar eclipse of 29 May 1919 that provided one of the earliest confirmations of general relativity and he became known for his popular expositions and interpretations of the theory Contents 1 Early years 2 Astronomy 2 1 Dispute with Chandrasekhar on existence of black holes 3 Relativity 4 Cosmology 5 Fundamental theory and the Eddington number 5 1 Eddington number for cycling 6 Philosophy 6 1 Idealism 6 2 Indeterminism 7 Popular and philosophical writings 8 Death 8 1 Obituaries 9 Honours 9 1 Awards 9 2 Named after him 9 3 Service 10 In popular culture 11 Publications 12 See also 12 1 Astronomy 12 2 Science 12 3 People 12 4 Other 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly years EditEddington was born 28 December 1882 in Kendal Westmorland now Cumbria England the son of Quaker parents Arthur Henry Eddington headmaster of the Quaker School and Sarah Ann Shout 5 His father taught at a Quaker training college in Lancashire before moving to Kendal to become headmaster of Stramongate School He died in the typhoid epidemic which swept England in 1884 His mother was left to bring up her two children with relatively little income The family moved to Weston super Mare where at first Stanley as his mother and sister always called Eddington was educated at home before spending three years at a preparatory school The family lived at a house called Varzin 42 Walliscote Road Weston super Mare There is a commemorative plaque on the building explaining Sir Arthur s contribution to science In 1893 Eddington entered Brynmelyn School He proved to be a most capable scholar particularly in mathematics and English literature His performance earned him a scholarship to Owens College Manchester what was later to become the University of Manchester in 1898 which he was able to attend having turned 16 that year He spent the first year in a general course but he turned to physics for the next three years Eddington was greatly influenced by his physics and mathematics teachers Arthur Schuster and Horace Lamb At Manchester Eddington lived at Dalton Hall where he came under the lasting influence of the Quaker mathematician J W Graham His progress was rapid winning him several scholarships and he graduated with a BSc in physics with First Class Honours in 1902 Based on his performance at Owens College he was awarded a scholarship to Trinity College Cambridge in 1902 His tutor at Cambridge was Robert Alfred Herman and in 1904 Eddington became the first ever second year student to be placed as Senior Wrangler After receiving his M A in 1905 he began research on thermionic emission in the Cavendish Laboratory This did not go well and meanwhile he spent time teaching mathematics to first year engineering students This hiatus was brief Through a recommendation by E T Whittaker his senior colleague at Trinity College he secured a position at the Royal Observatory Greenwich where he was to embark on his career in astronomy a career whose seeds had been sown even as a young child when he would often try to count the stars 6 Plaque at 42 Walliscote Road Weston super Mare Eddington right on a horse possibly during the Fifth Conference of the International Union for Co operation in Solar Research held in Bonn Germany 1913Astronomy EditIn January 1906 Eddington was nominated to the post of chief assistant to the Astronomer Royal at the Royal Greenwich Observatory He left Cambridge for Greenwich the following month He was put to work on a detailed analysis of the parallax of 433 Eros on photographic plates that had started in 1900 He developed a new statistical method based on the apparent drift of two background stars winning him the Smith s Prize in 1907 The prize won him a fellowship of Trinity College Cambridge In December 1912 George Darwin son of Charles Darwin died suddenly and Eddington was promoted to his chair as the Plumian Professor of Astronomy and Experimental Philosophy in early 1913 Later that year Robert Ball holder of the theoretical Lowndean chair also died and Eddington was named the director of the entire Cambridge Observatory the next year In May 1914 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society he was awarded the Royal Medal in 1928 and delivered the Bakerian Lecture in 1926 7 Eddington also investigated the interior of stars through theory and developed the first true understanding of stellar processes He began this in 1916 with investigations of possible physical explanations for Cepheid variable stars He began by extending Karl Schwarzschild s earlier work on radiation pressure in Emden polytropic models These models treated a star as a sphere of gas held up against gravity by internal thermal pressure and one of Eddington s chief additions was to show that radiation pressure was necessary to prevent collapse of the sphere He developed his model despite knowingly lacking firm foundations for understanding opacity and energy generation in the stellar interior However his results allowed for calculation of temperature density and pressure at all points inside a star thermodynamic anisotropy and Eddington argued that his theory was so useful for further astrophysical investigation that it should be retained despite not being based on completely accepted physics James Jeans contributed the important suggestion that stellar matter would certainly be ionized but that was the end of any collaboration between the pair who became famous for their lively debates Eddington defended his method by pointing to the utility of his results particularly his important mass luminosity relation This had the unexpected result of showing that virtually all stars including giants and dwarfs behaved as ideal gases In the process of developing his stellar models he sought to overturn current thinking about the sources of stellar energy Jeans and others defended the Kelvin Helmholtz mechanism which was based on classical mechanics while Eddington speculated broadly about the qualitative and quantitative consequences of possible proton electron annihilation and nuclear fusion processes Around 1920 he anticipated the discovery and mechanism of nuclear fusion processes in stars in his paper The Internal Constitution of the Stars 3 4 At that time the source of stellar energy was a complete mystery Eddington correctly speculated that the source was fusion of hydrogen into helium liberating enormous energy according to Einstein s equation E mc2 This was a particularly remarkable development since at that time fusion and thermonuclear energy and even the fact that stars are largely composed of hydrogen see metallicity had not yet been discovered Eddington s paper based on knowledge at the time reasoned that The leading theory of stellar energy the contraction hypothesis cf the Kelvin Helmholtz mechanism should cause stars rotation to visibly speed up due to conservation of angular momentum But observations of Cepheid variable stars showed this was not happening The only other known plausible source of energy was conversion of matter to energy Einstein had shown some years earlier that a small amount of matter was equivalent to a large amount of energy Francis Aston had also recently shown that the mass of a helium atom was about 0 8 less than the mass of the four hydrogen atoms which would combined form a helium atom suggesting that if such a combination could happen it would release considerable energy as a byproduct If a star contained just 5 of fusible hydrogen it would suffice to explain how stars got their energy We now know that most ordinary stars contain far more than 5 hydrogen Further elements might also be fused and other scientists had speculated that stars were the crucible in which light elements combined to create heavy elements but without more accurate measurements of their atomic masses nothing more could be said at the time All of these speculations were proven correct in the following decades With these assumptions he demonstrated that the interior temperature of stars must be millions of degrees In 1924 he discovered the mass luminosity relation for stars see Lecchini in Further reading Despite some disagreement Eddington s models were eventually accepted as a powerful tool for further investigation particularly in issues of stellar evolution The confirmation of his estimated stellar diameters by Michelson in 1920 proved crucial in convincing astronomers unused to Eddington s intuitive exploratory style Eddington s theory appeared in mature form in 1926 as The Internal Constitution of the Stars which became an important text for training an entire generation of astrophysicists Eddington s work in astrophysics in the late 1920s and the 1930s continued his work in stellar structure and precipitated further clashes with Jeans and Edward Arthur Milne An important topic was the extension of his models to take advantage of developments in quantum physics including the use of degeneracy physics in describing dwarf stars Dispute with Chandrasekhar on existence of black holes Edit The topic of extension of his models precipitated his dispute with Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar who was then a student at Cambridge Chandrasekhar s work presaged the discovery of black holes which at the time seemed so absurdly non physical that Eddington refused to believe that Chandrasekhar s purely mathematical derivation had consequences for the real world Eddington was wrong and his motivation is controversial Chandrasekhar s narrative of this incident in which his work is harshly rejected portrays Eddington as rather cruel and dogmatic Chandra benefited from his friendship with Eddington It was Eddington and Milne who put up Chandra s name for the fellowship for the Royal Society which Chandra obtained An FRS meant he was at the Cambridge high table with all the luminaries and a very comfortable endowment for research Eddington s criticism seems to have been based partly on a suspicion that a purely mathematical derivation from relativity theory was not enough to explain the seemingly daunting physical paradoxes that were inherent to degenerate stars but to have raised irrelevant objections in addition as Thanu Padmanabhan puts it 8 Relativity EditDuring World War I Eddington was secretary of the Royal Astronomical Society which meant he was the first to receive a series of letters and papers from Willem de Sitter regarding Einstein s theory of general relativity Eddington was fortunate in being not only one of the few astronomers with the mathematical skills to understand general relativity but owing to his internationalist and pacifist views inspired by his Quaker religious beliefs 6 9 one of the few at the time who was still interested in pursuing a theory developed by a German physicist He quickly became the chief supporter and expositor of relativity in Britain He and Astronomer Royal Frank Watson Dyson organized two expeditions to observe a solar eclipse in 1919 to make the first empirical test of Einstein s theory the measurement of the deflection of light by the sun s gravitational field In fact Dyson s argument for the indispensability of Eddington s expertise in this test was what prevented Eddington from eventually having to enter military service 6 9 When conscription was introduced in Britain on 2 March 1916 Eddington intended to apply for an exemption as a conscientious objector 6 Cambridge University authorities instead requested and were granted an exemption on the ground of Eddington s work being of national interest In 1918 this was appealed against by the Ministry of National Service Before the appeal tribunal in June Eddington claimed conscientious objector status which was not recognized and would have ended his exemption in August 1918 A further two hearings took place in June and July respectively Eddington s personal statement at the June hearing about his objection to war based on religious grounds is on record 6 The Astronomer Royal Sir Frank Dyson supported Eddington at the July hearing with a written statement emphasising Eddington s essential role in the solar eclipse expedition to Principe in May 1919 Eddington made clear his willingness to serve in the Friends Ambulance Unit under the jurisdiction of the British Red Cross or as a harvest labourer However the tribunal s decision to grant a further twelve months exemption from military service was on condition of Eddington continuing his astronomy work in particular in preparation for the Principe expedition 6 9 The war ended before the end of his exemption One of Eddington s photographs of the total solar eclipse of 29 May 1919 presented in his 1920 paper announcing its success confirming Einstein s theory that light bends After the war Eddington travelled to the island of Principe off the west coast of Africa to watch the solar eclipse of 29 May 1919 During the eclipse he took pictures of the stars several stars in the Hyades cluster including Kappa Tauri of the constellation Taurus whose line of sight from the earth happened to be near the sun s location in the sky at that time of year 10 This effect is noticeable only during a total solar eclipse when the sky is dark enough to see stars which are normally obscured by the sun s brightness According to the theory of general relativity stars with light rays that passed near the Sun would appear to have been slightly shifted because their light had been curved by its gravitational field Eddington showed that Newtonian gravitation could be interpreted to predict half the shift predicted by Einstein Eddington s observations published the next year 10 allegedly confirmed Einstein s theory and were hailed at the time as evidence of general relativity over the Newtonian model The news was reported in newspapers all over the world as a major story Afterward Eddington embarked on a campaign to popularize relativity and the expedition as landmarks both in scientific development and international scientific relations 11 It has been claimed that Eddington s observations were of poor quality and he had unjustly discounted simultaneous observations at Sobral Brazil which appeared closer to the Newtonian model but a 1979 re analysis with modern measuring equipment and contemporary software validated Eddington s results and conclusions 12 The quality of the 1919 results was indeed poor compared to later observations but was sufficient to persuade contemporary astronomers The rejection of the results from the expedition to Brazil was due to a defect in the telescopes used which again was completely accepted and well understood by contemporary astronomers 13 The minute book of Cambridge 2V Club for the meeting where Eddington presented his observations of the curvature of light around the sun confirming Einstein s theory of general relativity They include the line A general discussion followed The President remarked that the 83rd meeting was historic Throughout this period Eddington lectured on relativity and was particularly well known for his ability to explain the concepts in lay terms as well as scientific He collected many of these into the Mathematical Theory of Relativity in 1923 which Albert Einstein suggested was the finest presentation of the subject in any language He was an early advocate of Einstein s general relativity and an interesting anecdote well illustrates his humour and personal intellectual investment Ludwik Silberstein a physicist who thought of himself as an expert on relativity approached Eddington at the Royal Society s 6 November 1919 meeting where he had defended Einstein s relativity with his Brazil Principe solar eclipse calculations with some degree of scepticism and ruefully charged Arthur as one who claimed to be one of three men who actually understood the theory Silberstein of course was including himself and Einstein as the other When Eddington refrained from replying he insisted Arthur not be so shy whereupon Eddington replied Oh no I was wondering who the third one might be 14 Cosmology EditEddington was also heavily involved with the development of the first generation of general relativistic cosmological models He had been investigating the instability of the Einstein universe when he learned of both Lemaitre s 1927 paper postulating an expanding or contracting universe and Hubble s work on the recession of the spiral nebulae He felt the cosmological constant must have played the crucial role in the universe s evolution from an Einsteinian steady state to its current expanding state and most of his cosmological investigations focused on the constant s significance and characteristics In The Mathematical Theory of Relativity Eddington interpreted the cosmological constant to mean that the universe is self gauging Fundamental theory and the Eddington number EditDuring the 1920s until his death Eddington increasingly concentrated on what he called fundamental theory which was intended to be a unification of quantum theory relativity cosmology and gravitation At first he progressed along traditional lines but turned increasingly to an almost numerological analysis of the dimensionless ratios of fundamental constants His basic approach was to combine several fundamental constants in order to produce a dimensionless number In many cases these would result in numbers close to 1040 its square or its square root He was convinced that the mass of the proton and the charge of the electron were a natural and complete specification for constructing a Universe and that their values were not accidental One of the discoverers of quantum mechanics Paul Dirac also pursued this line of investigation which has become known as the Dirac large numbers hypothesis 15 A somewhat damaging statement in his defence of these concepts involved the fine structure constant a At the time it was measured to be very close to 1 136 and he argued that the value should in fact be exactly 1 136 for epistemological reasons Later measurements placed the value much closer to 1 137 at which point he switched his line of reasoning to argue that one more should be added to the degrees of freedom so that the value should in fact be exactly 1 137 the Eddington number 16 Wags clarification needed at the time started calling him Arthur Adding one 17 This change of stance detracted from Eddington s credibility in the physics community The current CODATA value is 1 137 035999 084 21 18 Eddington believed he had identified an algebraic basis for fundamental physics which he termed E numbers representing a certain group a Clifford algebra These in effect incorporated spacetime into a higher dimensional structure While his theory has long been neglected by the general physics community similar algebraic notions underlie many modern attempts at a grand unified theory Moreover Eddington s emphasis on the values of the fundamental constants and specifically upon dimensionless numbers derived from them is nowadays a central concern of physics In particular he predicted a number of hydrogen atoms in the Universe 136 2256 1 57 1079 or equivalently the half of the total number of particles protons electrons 19 He did not complete this line of research before his death in 1944 his book Fundamental Theory was published posthumously in 1948 Eddington number for cycling Edit Eddington is credited with devising a measure of a cyclist s long distance riding achievements The Eddington number in the context of cycling is defined as the maximum number E such that the cyclist has cycled at least E miles on at least E days 20 21 For example an Eddington number of 70 would imply that the cyclist has cycled at least 70 miles in a day on at least 70 occasions Achieving a high Eddington number is difficult since moving from say 70 to 75 will probably require more than five new long distance rides since any rides shorter than 75 miles will no longer be included in the reckoning Eddington s own life time E number was 84 22 The Eddington number for cycling is analogous to the h index that quantifies both the actual scientific productivity and the apparent scientific impact of a scientist 20 Philosophy EditIdealism Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Eddington wrote in his book The Nature of the Physical World that The stuff of the world is mind stuff The mind stuff of the world is of course something more general than our individual conscious minds The mind stuff is not spread in space and time these are part of the cyclic scheme ultimately derived out of it It is necessary to keep reminding ourselves that all knowledge of our environment from which the world of physics is constructed has entered in the form of messages transmitted along the nerves to the seat of consciousness Consciousness is not sharply defined but fades into subconsciousness and beyond that we must postulate something indefinite but yet continuous with our mental nature It is difficult for the matter of fact physicist to accept the view that the substratum of everything is of mental character But no one can deny that mind is the first and most direct thing in our experience and all else is remote inference Eddington The Nature of the Physical World 276 81 The idealist conclusion was not integral to his epistemology but was based on two main arguments The first derives directly from current physical theory Briefly mechanical theories of the ether and of the behaviour of fundamental particles have been discarded in both relativity and quantum physics From this Eddington inferred that a materialistic metaphysics was outmoded and that in consequence since the disjunction of materialism or idealism are assumed to be exhaustive an idealistic metaphysics is required The second and more interesting argument was based on Eddington s epistemology and may be regarded as consisting of two parts First all we know of the objective world is its structure and the structure of the objective world is precisely mirrored in our own consciousness We therefore have no reason to doubt that the objective world too is mind stuff Dualistic metaphysics then cannot be evidentially supported But second not only can we not know that the objective world is nonmentalistic we also cannot intelligibly suppose that it could be material To conceive of a dualism entails attributing material properties to the objective world However this presupposes that we could observe that the objective world has material properties But this is absurd for whatever is observed must ultimately be the content of our own consciousness and consequently nonmaterial Ian Barbour in his book Issues in Science and Religion 1966 p 133 cites Eddington s The Nature of the Physical World 1928 for a text that argues the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principles provides a scientific basis for the defense of the idea of human freedom and his Science and the Unseen World 1929 for support of philosophical idealism the thesis that reality is basically mental Charles De Koninck points out that Eddington believed in objective reality existing apart from our minds but was using the phrase mind stuff to highlight the inherent intelligibility of the world that our minds and the physical world are made of the same stuff and that our minds are the inescapable connection to the world 23 As De Koninck quotes Eddington There is a doctrine well known to philosophers that the moon ceases to exist when no one is looking at it I will not discuss the doctrine since I have not the least idea what is the meaning of the word existence when used in this connection At any rate the science of astronomy has not been based on this spasmodic kind of moon In the scientific world which has to fulfill functions less vague than merely existing there is a moon which appeared on the scene before the astronomer it reflects sunlight when no one sees it it has mass when no one is measuring the mass it is distant 240 000 miles from the earth when no one is surveying the distance and it will eclipse the sun in 1999 even if the human race has succeeded in killing itself off before that date Eddington The Nature of the Physical World 226 Indeterminism Edit See also Indeterminism and Indeterminism in science Against Albert Einstein and others who advocated determinism indeterminism championed by Eddington 23 says that a physical object has an ontologically undetermined component that is not due to the epistemological limitations of physicists understanding The uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics then would not necessarily be due to hidden variables but to an indeterminism in nature itself Popular and philosophical writings EditEddington wrote a parody of The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam recounting his 1919 solar eclipse experiment It contained the following quatrain 24 Oh leave the Wise our measures to collate One thing at least is certain LIGHT has WEIGHT One thing is certain and the rest debate Light rays when near the Sun DO NOT GO STRAIGHT During the 1920s and 30s Eddington gave numerous lectures interviews and radio broadcasts on relativity in addition to his textbook The Mathematical Theory of Relativity and later quantum mechanics Many of these were gathered into books including The Nature of the Physical World and New Pathways in Science His use of literary allusions and humour helped make these difficult subjects more accessible Eddington s books and lectures were immensely popular with the public not only because of his clear exposition but also for his willingness to discuss the philosophical and religious implications of the new physics He argued for a deeply rooted philosophical harmony between scientific investigation and religious mysticism and also that the positivist nature of relativity and quantum physics provided new room for personal religious experience and free will Unlike many other spiritual scientists he rejected the idea that science could provide proof of religious propositions He is sometimes misunderstood by whom as having promoted the infinite monkey theorem in his 1928 book The Nature of the Physical World with the phrase If an army of monkeys were strumming on typewriters they might write all the books in the British Museum It is clear from the context that Eddington is not suggesting that the probability of this happening is worthy of serious consideration On the contrary it was a rhetorical illustration of the fact that below certain levels of probability the term improbable is functionally equivalent to impossible citation needed His popular writings made him a household name in Great Britain between the world wars Death EditEddington died of cancer in the Evelyn Nursing Home Cambridge on 22 November 1944 25 He was unmarried His body was cremated at Cambridge Crematorium Cambridgeshire on 27 November 1944 the cremated remains were buried in the grave of his mother in the Ascension Parish Burial Ground in Cambridge Cambridge University s North West Cambridge development has been named Eddington in his honour Eddington was played by David Tennant in the television film Einstein and Eddington with Einstein played by Andy Serkis The film was notable for its groundbreaking portrayal of Eddington as a somewhat repressed gay man It was first broadcast in 2008 The actor Paul Eddington was a relative mentioning in his autobiography in light of his own weakness in mathematics what I then felt to be the misfortune of being related to one of the foremost physicists in the world 26 Obituaries Edit Obituary 1 by Henry Norris Russell Astrophysical Journal 101 1943 46 133 Obituary 2 by A Vibert Douglas Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada 39 1943 46 1 Obituary 3 by Harold Spencer Jones and E T Whittaker Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 105 1943 46 68 Obituary 4 by Herbert Dingle The Observatory 66 1943 46 1 The Times Thursday 23 November 1944 pg 7 Issue 49998 col D Obituary unsigned Image of cutting available at O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Arthur Eddington MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St AndrewsHonours EditAwards Edit Smith s Prize 1907 Bruce Medal of Astronomical Society of the Pacific 1924 27 Henry Draper Medal of the National Academy of Sciences 1924 28 Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society 1924 Foreign membership of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences 1926 29 Prix Jules Janssen of the Societe astronomique de France French Astronomical Society 1928 Royal Medal of the Royal Society 1928 Knighthood 1930 Order of Merit 1938 Honorary member of the Norwegian Astronomical Society 1939 30 Hon Freeman of Kendal 1930 31 Named after him Edit Lunar crater Eddington asteroid 2761 Eddington Royal Astronomical Society s Eddington Medal Eddington mission now cancelled Eddington Tower halls of residence at the University of Essex Eddington Astronomical Society an amateur society based in his hometown of Kendal Eddington a house group of students used for in school sports matches of Kirkbie Kendal School Eddington new suburb of North West Cambridge opened in 2017Service Edit Gave the Swarthmore Lecture in 1929 Chairman of the National Peace Council 1941 1943 President of the International Astronomical Union of the Physical Society 1930 32 of the Royal Astronomical Society 1921 23 31 Romanes Lecturer 1922 31 Gifford Lecturer 1927 31 In popular culture EditEddington is a central figure in the short story The Mathematician s Nightmare The Vision of Professor Squarepunt by Bertrand Russell a work featured in The Mathematical Magpie by Clifton Fadiman He was portrayed by David Tennant in the television film Einstein and Eddington a co production of the BBC and HBO broadcast in the United Kingdom on Saturday 22 November 2008 on BBC2 His thoughts on humour and religious experience were quoted in the adventure game The Witness a production of the Thelka Inc released on 26 January 2016 Time placed him on the cover on 16 April 1934 32 Publications Edit1914 Stellar Movements and the Structure of the Universe London Macmillan 1918 Report on the relativity theory of gravitation London Fleetway Press Ltd 1920 Space Time and Gravitation An Outline of the General Relativity Theory Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 33709 7 1922 The theory of relativity and its influence on scientific thought 1923 1952 The Mathematical Theory of Relativity Cambridge University Press 1925 The Domain of Physical Science 2005 reprint ISBN 1 4253 5842 X 1926 Stars and Atoms Oxford British Association 1926 The Internal Constitution of Stars Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 33708 9 1928 The Nature of the Physical World MacMillan 1935 replica edition ISBN 0 8414 3885 4 University of Michigan 1981 edition ISBN 0 472 06015 5 1926 27 Gifford lectures 1929 Science and the Unseen World US Macmillan UK Allen amp Unwin 1980 Reprint Arden Library ISBN 0 8495 1426 6 2004 US reprint Whitefish Montana Kessinger Publications ISBN 1 4179 1728 8 2007 UK reprint London Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 0 901689 81 8 Swarthmore Lecture with a new foreword by George Ellis 1930 Why I Believe in God Science and Religion as a Scientist Sees It Arrow scrollable preview 1933 The Expanding Universe Astronomy s Great Debate 1900 1931 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 34976 1 1935 New Pathways in Science Cambridge University Press 1936 Relativity Theory of Protons and Electrons Cambridge Univ Press 1939 Philosophy of Physical Science Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 7581 2054 0 1938 Tarner lectures at Cambridge 1946 Fundamental Theory Cambridge University Press See also EditAstronomy Edit Chandrasekhar limit Eddington luminosity also called the Eddington limit Gravitational lens Outline of astronomy Stellar nucleosynthesis Timeline of stellar astronomy List of astronomersScience Edit Arrow of time Classical unified field theories Degenerate matter Dimensionless physical constant Dirac large numbers hypothesis also called the Eddington Dirac number Eddington number Introduction to quantum mechanics Luminiferous aether Parameterized post Newtonian formalism Special relativity Theory of everything also called final theory or ultimate theory Timeline of gravitational physics and relativity List of experimentsPeople Edit List of science and religion scholarsOther Edit Infinite monkey theorem Numerology Ontic structural realism 33 References Edit Arthur Eddington at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Plummer H C 1945 Arthur Stanley Eddington 1882 1944 Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society 5 14 113 126 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1945 0007 S2CID 121473352 a b The Internal Constitution of the Stars A S Eddington The Scientific Monthly Vol 11 No 4 Oct 1920 pp 297 303 JSTOR 6491 a b Eddington A S 1916 On the radiative equilibrium of the stars Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 77 16 35 Bibcode 1916MNRAS 77 16E doi 10 1093 mnras 77 1 16 Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh 2006 ISBN 090219884X Archived from the original PDF on 24 January 2013 Retrieved 1 April 2016 a b c d e f Douglas A Vibert 1956 The Life of Arthur Eddington Thomas Nelson and Sons pp 92 95 Library and Archive Catalogue Royal Society Retrieved 29 December 2010 Padmanabhan T 2005 The dark side of astronomy Nature 435 7038 20 21 Bibcode 2005Natur 435 20P doi 10 1038 435020a a b c Chandrasekhar Subrahmanyan 1983 Eddington The Most Distinguished Astrophysicist of His Time Cambridge University Press pp 25 26 ISBN 978 0521257466 a b Dyson F W Eddington A S Davidson C R 1920 A Determination of the Deflection of Light by the Sun s Gravitational Field from Observations Made at the Solar eclipse of May 29 1919 Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A 220 571 581 291 333 Bibcode 1920RSPTA 220 291D doi 10 1098 rsta 1920 0009 Sponsel Alistair 2002 Constructing a Revolution in Science The Campaign to Promote a Favourable Reception for the 1919 Solar Eclipse Experiments The British Journal for the History of Science 35 4 439 467 doi 10 1017 S0007087402004818 ISSN 0007 0874 JSTOR 4028276 S2CID 145254889 Kennefick Daniel 5 September 2007 Not Only Because of Theory Dyson Eddington and the Competing Myths of the 1919 Eclipse Expedition Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A arXiv 0709 0685 Bibcode 2007arXiv0709 0685K doi 10 1016 j shpsa 2012 07 010 S2CID 119203172 Kennefick Daniel 1 March 2009 Testing relativity from the 1919 eclipse a question of bias Physics Today 62 3 37 42 Bibcode 2009PhT 62c 37K doi 10 1063 1 3099578 As related by Eddington to Chandrasekhar and quoted in Walter Isaacson Einstein His Life and Universe p 262 Srinivasan G 2014 What Are the Stars Berlin Springer Science amp Business Media p 31 ISBN 978 3642453021 Whittaker Edmund 1945 Eddington s Theory of the Constants of Nature The Mathematical Gazette 29 286 137 144 doi 10 2307 3609461 JSTOR 3609461 S2CID 125122360 Kean Sam 2010 The Disappearing Spoon And Other True Tales of Madness Love and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements New York Little Brown and Co ISBN 978 0316089081 2018 CODATA Value inverse fine structure constant The NIST Reference on Constants Units and Uncertainty NIST 20 May 2019 Retrieved 20 May 2019 Barrow J D Tipler F J 1986 The Anthropic Cosmological Principle Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198519492 a b Jeffers David Swanson John November 2005 How high is your E Physics World 18 10 21 doi 10 1088 2058 7058 18 10 30 Retrieved 17 September 2022 Eddington number 16 March 2008 Physics and sport Physics World 25 7 15 July 2012 Bibcode 2012PhyW 25g 15 doi 10 1088 2058 7058 25 07 24 Retrieved 17 September 2022 a b de Koninck Charles 2008 The philosophy of Sir Arthur Eddington and The problem of indeterminism The Writings of Charles de Koninck Notre Dame Ind University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 978 0 268 02595 3 OCLC 615199716 Douglas A Vibert 1956 The Life of Arthur Eddington Thomas Nelson and Sons p 44 Gates S James Pelletier Cathie 2019 Proving Einstein Right The Daring Expeditions that Changed How We Look at the Universe Public Affairs ISBN 978 1541762251 Quakers and the Arts Plain and Fancy An Anglo American Perspective David Sox Sessions Book Trust 2000 p 65 Past Winners of the Catherine Wolfe Bruce Gold Medal Astronomical Society of the Pacific Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 19 February 2011 Henry Draper Medal National Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 19 February 2011 A S Eddington 1882 1944 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 25 January 2016 Generalforsamling Norsk Astronomisk Selskap a b c d Who s who entry for A S Eddington Sir Arthur Eddington Apr 16 1934 Time Structural Realism entry by James Ladyman in the Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyFurther reading EditDurham Ian T Eddington amp Uncertainty Physics in Perspective September December Arxiv History of Physics Kilmister C W 1994 Eddington s Search for a Fundamental Theory Cambridge Univ Press ISBN 978 0 521 37165 0 Lecchini Stefano How Dwarfs Became Giants The Discovery of the Mass Luminosity Relation Bern Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science pp 224 2007 Vibert Douglas A 1956 The Life of Arthur Stanley Eddington Thomas Nelson and Sons Ltd Stanley Matthew An Expedition to Heal the Wounds of War The 1919 Eclipse Expedition and Eddington as Quaker Adventurer Isis 94 2003 57 89 Stanley Matthew So Simple a Thing as a Star Jeans Eddington and the Growth of Astrophysical Phenomenology in British Journal for the History of Science 2007 40 53 82 Stanley Matthew 2007 Practical Mystic Religion Science and A S Eddington University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 77097 0 External links EditArthur Eddington at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Works by Arthur Eddington at Project Gutenberg Works by Arthur Stanley Eddington at Faded Page Canada Works by or about Arthur Eddington at Internet Archive Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington at Find a Grave Trinity College Chapel Arthur Stanley Eddington 1882 1944 University of St Andrews Scotland Quotations by Arthur Eddington Arthur Stanley Eddington The Bruce Medalists Russell Henry Norris Review of The Internal Constitution of the Stars by A S Eddington Ap J 67 83 1928 Experiments of Sobral and Principe repeated in the space project in proceeding in forum astronomical O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Arthur Eddington MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews Biography and bibliography of Bruce medalists Arthur Stanley Eddington Eddington books The Nature of the Physical World The Philosophy of Physical Science Relativity Theory of Protons and Electrons and Fundamental Theory Portals Biography Physics Mathematics Astronomy Stars Spaceflight Outer space Solar System Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arthur Eddington amp oldid 1145291944, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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