fbpx
Wikipedia

Jean Baptiste Perrin

Jean Baptiste Perrin ForMemRS[1] (30 September 1870 – 17 April 1942) was a French physicist who, in his studies of the Brownian motion of minute particles suspended in liquids (sedimentation equilibrium), verified Albert Einstein's explanation of this phenomenon and thereby confirmed the atomic nature of matter. For this achievement he was honoured with the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1926.[2]

Jean Baptiste Perrin
Perrin in 1926
Born(1870-09-30)30 September 1870
Died17 April 1942(1942-04-17) (aged 71)
NationalityFrench
Alma materÉcole Normale Supérieure
University of Paris
Known forNature of cathode rays
Brownian motion
Avogadro constant
Sedimentation equilibrium
Perrin friction factors
ChildrenFrancis Perrin
AwardsMatteucci Medal (1911)
Fellow of the Royal Society (1918)
Nobel Prize in Physics (1926)
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
InstitutionsÉcole Normale Supérieure
University of Paris
Signature

Biography edit

Early years edit

Born in Lille, France, Perrin attended the École Normale Supérieure, the elite grande école in Paris. He became an assistant at the school during the period of 1894–97 when he began the study of cathode rays and X-rays. He was awarded the degree of docteur ès sciences (beyond PhD) in 1897. In the same year he was appointed as a lecturer in physical chemistry at the Sorbonne, Paris. He became a professor at the University in 1910, holding this post until the German occupation of France during World War II.

 
Ioan Cantacuzino (left) with Perrin in 1931

Research and achievements edit

 
Jean Perrin in 1908

In 1895, Perrin showed that cathode rays were of negative electric charge in nature. He determined Avogadro's number (now known as the Avogadro constant) by several methods. He explained solar energy as due to the thermonuclear reactions of hydrogen.

By mid 1900s, Perrin was interested in statistical mechanics questions, which are close to the study of Brownian motion.[3] Following Albert Einstein's publication (1905) of a theoretical explanation of Brownian motion in terms of atoms, Perrin (along with Joseph Ulysses Chaudesaigues who was working in Perrin's lab) did the experimental work to test and verify Einstein's predictions, thereby providing data that would settle the century-long dispute about John Dalton's atomic theory, before the end of the decade.[4][5][3] Carl Benedicks argued Perrin should receive the Nobel Prize in Physics; Perrin received the award in 1926 for this and other work on the discontinuous structure of matter, which put a definite end to the long struggle regarding the question of the physical reality of molecules.[6]

Perrin was the author of a number of books and dissertations. Most notable of his publications were: "Rayons cathodiques et rayons X"; "Les Principes"; "Electrisation de contact"; "Réalité moléculaire"; "Matière et Lumière"; "Lumière et Reaction chimique".

Perrin was also the recipient of numerous prestigious awards including the Joule Prize of the Royal Society in 1896 and the La Caze Prize of the French Academy of Sciences. He was twice appointed a member of the Solvay Committee at Brussels in 1911 and in 1921. He also held memberships with the Royal Society of London and with the Academies of Sciences of Belgium, Sweden, Turin, Prague, Romania and China. He became a Commander of the Legion of Honour in 1926 and was made Commander of the Order of Léopold (Belgium).

In 1919, Perrin proposed that nuclear reactions can provide the source of energy in stars. He realized that the mass of a helium atom is less than that of four atoms of hydrogen, and that the mass-energy equivalence of Einstein implies that the nuclear fusion (4 H → He) could liberate sufficient energy to make stars shine for billions of years.[7] A similar theory was first proposed by American chemist William Draper Harkins in 1915.[8][9] It remained for Hans Bethe and Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker to determine the detailed mechanism of stellar nucleosynthesis during the 1930s.[10]

In 1927, he founded the Institut de Biologie Physico-Chimique together with chemist André Job and physiologist André Mayer. Funding was provided by Edmond James de Rothschild.[11] In 1937, Perrin established the Palais de la Découverte, a science museum in Paris.

Perrin is considered the founding father of the National Centre for Scientific Research (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)). Following a petition by Perrin signed by over 80 scientists, among them eight Nobel Prize laureates, the French education minister set up the Conseil Supérieur de la Recherche Scientifique (French National Research Council) in April 1933. In 1936, Perrin, now an undersecretary for research, founded the Service Central de la Recherche Scientifique (French Central Agency for Scientific Research).[11] Both institutions were merged under the CNRS umbrella on October 19, 1939.[12]

 
Autochrome portrait by Auguste Léon, 1918

His notable students include Pierre Victor Auger. Jean Perrin was the father of Francis Perrin, also a physicist.[13]

Personal life and death edit

Perrin was an atheist and a socialist.[14][15] He was an officer in the engineer corps during World War I.

After the death of Perrin's wife Henriette in 1938, Nine Choucroun (1896–1978), founder of the Nine Choucroun Prize, became Perrin's partner. In June 1940, when the Germans invaded France, Choucroun and Perrin escaped to Casablanca on the ocean liner Massilia, with part of the French government. In December 1941, they boarded the SS Excambion to New York City, arriving on December 23.[16]

Perrin died at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York on 17 April 1942 at the age of 71.

After the War, in 1948, his remains were transported back to France by the cruiser Jeanne d'Arc and buried in the Panthéon.

Works edit

 
Atomes, 1913
  • Les Principes. Exposé de thermodynamique (1901)/Principles of thermodynamics
  • Traité de chimie physique. Les principes (1903)/Physical chemistry principles
  • Les Preuves de la réalité moléculaire (1911)/Evidences of molecular reality
  • Atomes (in French). Paris: Alcan. 1913.
  • Les Atomes (1913)/The Atoms
  • Matière et lumière (1919)/Matter and light
  • En l'honneur de Madame Pierre Curie et de la découverte du Radium (1922)/ In honor of Mrs Pierre Curie and the discovery of Radium
  • Les Éléments de la physique (1929)/Elements of physics
  • L'Orientation actuelle des sciences (1930)/Current orientation of sciences
  • Les Formes chimiques de transition (1931)/Transition chemical forms
  • La Recherche scientifique (1933)/Scientific research
  • Cours de chimie. 1ère partie. Chimie générale et métalloïdes (1935)/ Chemistry courses: general chemistry and metalloids
  • Grains de matière et grains de lumière (1935)/Grains of matter and grains of light
    • Existence des grains/Existence of grains
    • Structure des atomes/Structure of atoms
    • Noyaux des atomes/Kernels of atoms
    • Transmutations provoquées/Induced transmutations
  • Paul Painlevé: l'homme (1936)/Paul Painlevé: the man
  • L'Organisation de la recherche scientifique en France (1938)/The organisation of scientific research in France
  • À la surface des choses (1940–1941)/At the surface of things
    • Masse et gravitation (1940)/Mass and gravitation
    • Lumière (1940)/Light
    • Espace et temps (1940)/Space and time
    • Forces et travail (1940)/Forces and work
    • Relativité (1941)/Relativity
    • Électricité (1941)/Electricity
    • L'énergie (1941)/Energy
    • Évolution (1941)/Evolution
  • L'Âme de la France éternelle (1942)/The soul of eternal France
  • Pour la Libération (1942)/For Liberation
  • La Science et l'Espérance (1948)/Science and hope
  • Oeuvres scientifiques de Jean Perrin (1950)/Scientific works of Jean Perrin

References edit

  1. ^ Townsend, J. S. (1943). "Jean Baptiste Perrin. 1870-1942". Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 4 (12): 301–326. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1943.0004. S2CID 123521634.
  2. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Physics 1926". Nobel Foundation. from the original on 1 December 2008. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  3. ^ a b Genthon, Arthur (2020). "The concept of velocity in the history of Brownian motion". Eur. Phys. J. H. 45: 49–105. arXiv:2006.05399. doi:10.1140/epjh/e2020-10009-8.
  4. ^ M. Chaudesaigues (1908). "Le mouvement Brownien et la formule d'Einstein". Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l'Académie des sciences (in French). 147: 1044–1046.
  5. ^ Jean Perrin (1909). "Le Mouvement Brownien et la Réalité Moleculaire". Annales de chimie et de physique (in French). 18 (8è série): 5–114.
  6. ^ Mauro Dardo (2004). Nobel Laureates and Twentieth-Century Physics. Cambridge University Press. pp. 114–116. ISBN 0-521-54008-9. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  7. ^ D.Selle, Guidestar (Houston Astronomical Society), October 2012, pp. 6–8
  8. ^ N.C.Panda (1991). Māyā in Physics. Motilal Banarsidess (Delhi). p. 173. ISBN 81-208-0698-0.
  9. ^ Robert S. Mulliken (1975). "William Draper Harkins 1873–1951" (PDF). Biographical Memoirs. 47. National Academy of Sciences: 48–81.
  10. ^ John North, Cosmos: An Illustrated History of Astronomy and Cosmology (University of Chicago Press, p. 545)
  11. ^ a b Zeitoun, Charline (September 2009). "Le CNRS a 70 ans". CNRS le journal. Retrieved February 23, 2012.
  12. ^ Guthleben, Denis (November 3, 2010). "Un peu d'histoire... La création du CNRS". Comité pour l'histoire du CNRS. Retrieved February 23, 2012.
  13. ^ Marcel Froissart. . Collège de France (in French). Retrieved 24 May 2023. Fils de Jean PERRIN, Prix Nobel de Physique en 1926.
  14. ^ Bernard Valeur; Jean-Claude Brochon (2001). New Trends in Fluorescence Spectroscopy: Applications to Chemical and Life Sciences. Springer. p. 17. ISBN 978-3-540-67779-6. Jean and Francis Perrin held similar political and philosophical ideas. Both were socialists and atheists.
  15. ^ Nye, Mary Jo (1975). "Science and Socialism: The Case of Jean Perrin in the Third Republic". French Historical Studies. 9 (1): 141–169. doi:10.2307/286009. ISSN 0016-1071.
  16. ^ Diane Dosso, " Le plan de sauvetage des scientifiques français, New York, 1940–1942 ", Revue de synthèse, Vol. 127, Nr. 2, octobre 2006, pp. 429–451 (in French)

External links edit

  • Jean Baptiste Perrin on Nobelprize.org  
  • Works by or about Jean Baptiste Perrin at Internet Archive
  • Mouvement brownien et molécules, by Jean Perrin, 1923 on Vidéothèque du CNRS (French)
  • Jean Perrin et la réalité moléculaire on Vidéothèque du CNRS (French)

jean, baptiste, perrin, tutor, educational, author, 1786, swiss, composer, jean, perrin, composer, entrepreneur, jean, georges, perrin, formemrs, september, 1870, april, 1942, french, physicist, studies, brownian, motion, minute, particles, suspended, liquids,. For the tutor and educational author see Jean Baptiste Perrin fl 1786 For the Swiss composer see Jean Perrin composer For the IT entrepreneur see Jean Georges Perrin Jean Baptiste Perrin ForMemRS 1 30 September 1870 17 April 1942 was a French physicist who in his studies of the Brownian motion of minute particles suspended in liquids sedimentation equilibrium verified Albert Einstein s explanation of this phenomenon and thereby confirmed the atomic nature of matter For this achievement he was honoured with the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1926 2 Jean Baptiste PerrinPerrin in 1926Born 1870 09 30 30 September 1870Lille FranceDied17 April 1942 1942 04 17 aged 71 New York City U S NationalityFrenchAlma materEcole Normale SuperieureUniversity of ParisKnown forNature of cathode raysBrownian motionAvogadro constantSedimentation equilibriumPerrin friction factorsChildrenFrancis PerrinAwardsMatteucci Medal 1911 Fellow of the Royal Society 1918 Nobel Prize in Physics 1926 Scientific careerFieldsPhysicsInstitutionsEcole Normale SuperieureUniversity of ParisSignature Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Research and achievements 1 3 Personal life and death 2 Works 3 References 4 External linksBiography editEarly years edit Born in Lille France Perrin attended the Ecole Normale Superieure the elite grande ecole in Paris He became an assistant at the school during the period of 1894 97 when he began the study of cathode rays and X rays He was awarded the degree of docteur es sciences beyond PhD in 1897 In the same year he was appointed as a lecturer in physical chemistry at the Sorbonne Paris He became a professor at the University in 1910 holding this post until the German occupation of France during World War II nbsp Ioan Cantacuzino left with Perrin in 1931 Research and achievements edit nbsp Jean Perrin in 1908 In 1895 Perrin showed that cathode rays were of negative electric charge in nature He determined Avogadro s number now known as the Avogadro constant by several methods He explained solar energy as due to the thermonuclear reactions of hydrogen By mid 1900s Perrin was interested in statistical mechanics questions which are close to the study of Brownian motion 3 Following Albert Einstein s publication 1905 of a theoretical explanation of Brownian motion in terms of atoms Perrin along with Joseph Ulysses Chaudesaigues who was working in Perrin s lab did the experimental work to test and verify Einstein s predictions thereby providing data that would settle the century long dispute about John Dalton s atomic theory before the end of the decade 4 5 3 Carl Benedicks argued Perrin should receive the Nobel Prize in Physics Perrin received the award in 1926 for this and other work on the discontinuous structure of matter which put a definite end to the long struggle regarding the question of the physical reality of molecules 6 Perrin was the author of a number of books and dissertations Most notable of his publications were Rayons cathodiques et rayons X Les Principes Electrisation de contact Realite moleculaire Matiere et Lumiere Lumiere et Reaction chimique Perrin was also the recipient of numerous prestigious awards including the Joule Prize of the Royal Society in 1896 and the La Caze Prize of the French Academy of Sciences He was twice appointed a member of the Solvay Committee at Brussels in 1911 and in 1921 He also held memberships with the Royal Society of London and with the Academies of Sciences of Belgium Sweden Turin Prague Romania and China He became a Commander of the Legion of Honour in 1926 and was made Commander of the Order of Leopold Belgium In 1919 Perrin proposed that nuclear reactions can provide the source of energy in stars He realized that the mass of a helium atom is less than that of four atoms of hydrogen and that the mass energy equivalence of Einstein implies that the nuclear fusion 4 H He could liberate sufficient energy to make stars shine for billions of years 7 A similar theory was first proposed by American chemist William Draper Harkins in 1915 8 9 It remained for Hans Bethe and Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker to determine the detailed mechanism of stellar nucleosynthesis during the 1930s 10 In 1927 he founded the Institut de Biologie Physico Chimique together with chemist Andre Job and physiologist Andre Mayer Funding was provided by Edmond James de Rothschild 11 In 1937 Perrin established the Palais de la Decouverte a science museum in Paris Perrin is considered the founding father of the National Centre for Scientific Research Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique CNRS Following a petition by Perrin signed by over 80 scientists among them eight Nobel Prize laureates the French education minister set up the Conseil Superieur de la Recherche Scientifique French National Research Council in April 1933 In 1936 Perrin now an undersecretary for research founded the Service Central de la Recherche Scientifique French Central Agency for Scientific Research 11 Both institutions were merged under the CNRS umbrella on October 19 1939 12 nbsp Autochrome portrait by Auguste Leon 1918 His notable students include Pierre Victor Auger Jean Perrin was the father of Francis Perrin also a physicist 13 Personal life and death edit Perrin was an atheist and a socialist 14 15 He was an officer in the engineer corps during World War I After the death of Perrin s wife Henriette in 1938 Nine Choucroun 1896 1978 founder of the Nine Choucroun Prize became Perrin s partner In June 1940 when the Germans invaded France Choucroun and Perrin escaped to Casablanca on the ocean liner Massilia with part of the French government In December 1941 they boarded the SS Excambion to New York City arriving on December 23 16 Perrin died at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York on 17 April 1942 at the age of 71 After the War in 1948 his remains were transported back to France by the cruiser Jeanne d Arc and buried in the Pantheon Works edit nbsp Atomes 1913 Les Principes Expose de thermodynamique 1901 Principles of thermodynamics Traite de chimie physique Les principes 1903 Physical chemistry principles Les Preuves de la realite moleculaire 1911 Evidences of molecular reality Atomes in French Paris Alcan 1913 Les Atomes 1913 The Atoms Matiere et lumiere 1919 Matter and light En l honneur de Madame Pierre Curie et de la decouverte du Radium 1922 In honor of Mrs Pierre Curie and the discovery of Radium Les Elements de la physique 1929 Elements of physics L Orientation actuelle des sciences 1930 Current orientation of sciences Les Formes chimiques de transition 1931 Transition chemical forms La Recherche scientifique 1933 Scientific research Cours de chimie 1ere partie Chimie generale et metalloides 1935 Chemistry courses general chemistry and metalloids Grains de matiere et grains de lumiere 1935 Grains of matter and grains of light Existence des grains Existence of grains Structure des atomes Structure of atoms Noyaux des atomes Kernels of atoms Transmutations provoquees Induced transmutations Paul Painleve l homme 1936 Paul Painleve the man L Organisation de la recherche scientifique en France 1938 The organisation of scientific research in France A la surface des choses 1940 1941 At the surface of things Masse et gravitation 1940 Mass and gravitation Lumiere 1940 Light Espace et temps 1940 Space and time Forces et travail 1940 Forces and work Relativite 1941 Relativity Electricite 1941 Electricity L energie 1941 Energy Evolution 1941 Evolution L Ame de la France eternelle 1942 The soul of eternal France Pour la Liberation 1942 For Liberation La Science et l Esperance 1948 Science and hope Oeuvres scientifiques de Jean Perrin 1950 Scientific works of Jean PerrinReferences edit Townsend J S 1943 Jean Baptiste Perrin 1870 1942 Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society 4 12 301 326 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1943 0004 S2CID 123521634 The Nobel Prize in Physics 1926 Nobel Foundation Archived from the original on 1 December 2008 Retrieved 13 November 2022 a b Genthon Arthur 2020 The concept of velocity in the history of Brownian motion Eur Phys J H 45 49 105 arXiv 2006 05399 doi 10 1140 epjh e2020 10009 8 M Chaudesaigues 1908 Le mouvement Brownien et la formule d Einstein Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des seances de l Academie des sciences in French 147 1044 1046 Jean Perrin 1909 Le Mouvement Brownien et la Realite Moleculaire Annales de chimie et de physique in French 18 8e serie 5 114 Mauro Dardo 2004 Nobel Laureates and Twentieth Century Physics Cambridge University Press pp 114 116 ISBN 0 521 54008 9 Retrieved 13 February 2014 Why the Stars Shine D Selle Guidestar Houston Astronomical Society October 2012 pp 6 8 N C Panda 1991 Maya in Physics Motilal Banarsidess Delhi p 173 ISBN 81 208 0698 0 Robert S Mulliken 1975 William Draper Harkins 1873 1951 PDF Biographical Memoirs 47 National Academy of Sciences 48 81 John North Cosmos An Illustrated History of Astronomy and Cosmology University of Chicago Press p 545 a b Zeitoun Charline September 2009 Le CNRS a 70 ans CNRS le journal Retrieved February 23 2012 Guthleben Denis November 3 2010 Un peu d histoire La creation du CNRS Comite pour l histoire du CNRS Retrieved February 23 2012 Marcel Froissart Professeurs disparus Hommage a Francis Perrin College de France in French Retrieved 24 May 2023 Fils de Jean PERRIN Prix Nobel de Physique en 1926 Bernard Valeur Jean Claude Brochon 2001 New Trends in Fluorescence Spectroscopy Applications to Chemical and Life Sciences Springer p 17 ISBN 978 3 540 67779 6 Jean and Francis Perrin held similar political and philosophical ideas Both were socialists and atheists Nye Mary Jo 1975 Science and Socialism The Case of Jean Perrin in the Third Republic French Historical Studies 9 1 141 169 doi 10 2307 286009 ISSN 0016 1071 Diane Dosso Le plan de sauvetage des scientifiques francais New York 1940 1942 Revue de synthese Vol 127 Nr 2 octobre 2006 pp 429 451 in French External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jean Perrin Jean Baptiste Perrin on Nobelprize org nbsp Works by or about Jean Baptiste Perrin at Internet Archive Mouvement brownien et molecules by Jean Perrin 1923 on Videotheque du CNRS French Jean Perrin et la realite moleculaire on Videotheque du CNRS French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jean Baptiste Perrin amp oldid 1222491391, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.