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Jun Ishiwara

Jun Ishiwara or Atsushi Ishihara (石原 純; January 15, 1881 – January 19, 1947) was a Japanese theoretical physicist, known for his works on the electronic theory of metals, the theory of relativity and quantum theory. Being the only Japanese scientist who made an original contribution to the old quantum theory,[1] in 1915, independently of other scientists, he formulated quantization rules for systems with several degrees of freedom.

Jun Ishiwara
Born(1881-01-15)January 15, 1881
DiedJanuary 19, 1947(1947-01-19) (aged 66)
Citizenship Japan
Alma materUniversity of Tokyo
Scientific career
Fieldstheoretical physics
InstitutionsTohoku University
Doctoral advisorHantaro Nagaoka

Biography edit

Jun Ishiwara was born in the family of Christian priest Ryo Ishiwara and Chise Ishiwara. In 1906, he completed his studies at the Department of Theoretical Physics at the University of Tokyo, where he was a student of Hantaro Nagaoka. Since 1908, Ishiwara taught at the Army School of Artillery and Engineers, and in 1911 received the position of Assistant Professor at the College of Science of Tohoku University. From April 1912 to May 1914 he trained in Europe – at the University of Munich, ETH Zurich and Leiden University, where he worked with Arnold Sommerfeld and Albert Einstein. After returning to his homeland, Ishiwara received a post of professor at Tohoku University, and in 1919 for his scientific work was awarded the Imperial Prize of the Japan Academy.[2][3]

Since 1918, Ishiwara's scientific activity began to decline. In 1921, because of a love affair, he was forced to take leave at the university, and two years later finally retired. After retirement, he devoted himself mainly to writing and scientific journalism (in this area he was one of the pioneers in Japan), he authored many popular books and articles on the latest achievements of science.[2][4] At the end of 1922, Ishiwara hosted Einstein during his visit to Japan; he recorded and published a number of speeches by Einstein, including his Kyoto address, in which Einstein, for the first time, detailed his path to the creation of the theory of relativity.[5] The two-volume monograph of Ishiwara, titled "Fundamental Problems of Physics", was very popular among young scientists and specialists; he also edited the first complete collection of Einstein's works, published in a Japanese translation in 1922-1924. In addition, Ishiwara was known as a poet who wrote poems in the genre of tanka. Shortly before the outbreak of World War II, he criticized the government control over science.[2][4]

Scientific achievements edit

Theory of relativity edit

Ishiwara was one of the first Japanese scholars to turn to the theory of relativity; he wrote the first scientific article in Japan on this subject.[3] In 1909-1911, he studied within the framework of this theory a number of specific problems related to the dynamics of electrons, the propagation of light in moving objects and the calculation of the energy-momentum tensor of the electromagnetic field. In 1913, on the basis of the principle of least action, he derived an expression for this tensor, previously obtained by Hermann Minkowski.[2] Ishiwara took part in the discussions of the first half of the 1910s (the decade from 1910 to 1919) which preceded the creation of the general theory of relativity. Starting from the scalar theory of gravitation proposed by Max Abraham and using the then popular idea of the electromagnetic origin of matter, the Japanese physicist developed his own theory, in which he attempted to unify the electromagnetic and gravitational fields, or, more precisely, to deduce the latter from the former. Assuming that the speed of light is variable and rewriting Maxwell's equations accordingly, he showed that such a representation leads to the appearance of additional terms in the energy-momentum conservation law that can be treated as a gravitational contribution. The result was in agreement with Abraham's theory, but subsequently Ishiwara developed his theory in another direction trying to harmonize it with the theory of relativity.[6] The scientist also made attempts to build a five-dimensional theory for unification of the gravitational and electromagnetic fields.[2]

Quantum physics edit

In the first paper devoted to the problems of quantum physics (1911), Ishiwara derived Planck's law and tried to substantiate the wave properties of radiation on the basis of the assumption that it consists of light quanta. Thus, he anticipated certain ideas of Louis de Broglie and Satyendra Nath Bose. In the same year, he supported the hypothesis of light quanta as a possible explanation of the nature of X-rays and gamma rays.[4][7]

In 1915, Ishiwara became the first non-Western scientist who referred to the Bohr atom theory in a published work.[4] On April 4, 1915, he presented to the Tokyo Mathematico-Physical Society the article "The universal meaning of the quantum of action" ("Universelle Bedeutung des Wirkungsquantums"), in which he attempted to unite the ideas of Max Planck on elementary cells in phase space, the idea of quantizing the angular momentum in the Bohr model atom and the hypothesis of Arnold Sommerfeld about the change of the action integral in quantum processes. Ishiwara suggested that the motion of a quantum system having   degrees of freedom should satisfy the following average relationship between the values of the coordinates ( ) and the corresponding momenta ( ):  , where   is the Planck constant. Ishiwara showed that this new hypothesis can be used to reproduce some quantum effects known at that time. Thus, he succeeded in obtaining an expression for the quantization of the angular momentum in the Bohr atom, taking into account also the ellipticity of electron orbits, although it followed from his theory the need to take the charge of the nucleus of the hydrogen atom equal to two elementary charges. As a second application of the proposed hypothesis, Ishiwara considered the problem of the photoelectric effect, obtaining a linear relationship between the electron energy and the radiation frequency in accordance with the Einstein formula.[8][9] Later in the same year Ishiwara put forward another hypothesis, according to which the product of the energy of the atom and the period of electron motion in the stationary state should be equal to the integer number of Planck constants.[10] In 1918, he linked the postulate proposed three years earlier to the theory of adiabatic invariants.[11]

Around the same time, analogous rules for quantizing systems of many degrees of freedom were independently obtained by William Wilson and Sommerfeld and are usually called the Sommerfeld quantum conditions. The reason for the error of Ishiwara, which was manifested in the calculation of the hydrogen atom, apparently was a superfluous averaging over the number of degrees of freedom (dividing by   before the sum). At the same time, his quantum condition, which differed from Sommerfeld's one in the presence of summation, allowed to obtain correct results regardless of the choice of coordinates. This was pointed out in 1917 by Einstein, who, not knowing about the work of Ishiwara, derived the same relation and showed that in the case of separable coordinates it gives the conditions of Wilson and Sommerfeld.[12]

Select publications edit

  • Ishiwara, Jun (1909). "Zur Optik der bewegten ponderablen Medien". Tokyo Sugaku Buturi-gakkakiwi Kizi [Proceedings of Tokyo Mathematico-Physical Society]. 5: 150–180. doi:10.11429/ptmps1907.5.10_150.
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1912). "Beiträge zur Theorie der Lichtquanten". Scientific Reports of Tohoku University. 1: 67–104.
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1912). "Bericht über die Relativitätstheorie". Jahrbuch der Radioaktivität und Elektronik. 9: 560–648.
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1912). "Zur Theorie der Gravitation". Physikalische Zeitschrift. 13: 1189–1193.
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1913). "Über das Prinzip der kleinsten Wirkung in der Elektrodynamik bewegter ponderabler Körper". Annalen der Physik. 42 (15): 986–1000. Bibcode:1913AnP...347..986I. doi:10.1002/andp.19133471505.
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1914). "Die elektronentheoretische Begründung der Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper". Jahrbuch der Radioaktivität und Elektronik. 11: 167–186.
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1914). "Die Grundlagen einer relativistischen und elektromagnetischen Gravitationstheorie". Physikalische Zeitschrift. 15: 294–298, 506–510.
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1915). "Zur relativistischen Theorie der Gravitation". Scientific Reports of Tohoku University. 4: 111–160.
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1915). "Universelle Bedeutung des Wirkungsquantums". Tokyo Sugaku Buturi-gakkakiwi Kizi. 8: 106–116. doi:10.11429/ptmps1907.8.4_106.
    • Commented English translation: Ishiwara, Jun (2017). "The universal meaning of the quantum of action". European Physical Journal H. 42 (4–5): 523–536. arXiv:1708.03706. Bibcode:2017arXiv170803706P. doi:10.1140/epjh/e2017-80041-1. S2CID 59937705.
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1915). "Über den Fundamentalsatz der Quantentheorie". Tokyo Sugaku Buturi-gakkakiwi Kizi. 8: 318–326. doi:10.11429/ptmps1907.8.10_318.
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1918). "Ryoshi-ron I, II, III [Quantum theory I, II, III]". Tokyo Butsuri-gakko Zasshi. 27: 147–158, 183–195, 221–230.
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1921). Sōtaisei Genri [Principle of Relativity]. Tokyo.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Ishiwara, Jun (1926). Butsuri-gaku no Kisoteki Sho-mondai [The fundamental problems of physics]. Tokyo: Iwanami-shoten.

References edit

  1. ^ Abiko 2015, p. 3.
  2. ^ a b c d e Hirosige 1981.
  3. ^ a b Pelogia & Brasil 2017, p. 509.
  4. ^ a b c d Pelogia & Brasil 2017, p. 510.
  5. ^ Abiko, Seiya (2000). "Einstein's Kyoto Address: "How I Created the Theory of Relativity"". Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences. 31 (1): 2–6. doi:10.2307/27757844. JSTOR 27757844.
  6. ^ Vizgin, Vladimir P. (2011). Unified Field Theories in the first third of the 20th century. Birkhäuser. pp. 38–41.
  7. ^ Abiko 2015, pp. 1, 4.
  8. ^ Mehra & Rechenberg 1982, pp. 210–211.
  9. ^ Pelogia & Brasil 2017, pp. 514–517.
  10. ^ Mehra & Rechenberg 1982, p. 211.
  11. ^ Abiko 2015, p. 2.
  12. ^ Abiko 2015, pp. 2–3.

Sources edit

  • Abiko, Seiya (2015). "Ishiwara's contributions to early quantum theory and the reception of quantum theory in Japan": 1–8. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Hirosige, Tetu (1981). "Ishiwara, Jun". In Charles Coulston, Gillispie (ed.). Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. 7. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 26–27.
  • Mehra, Jagdish; Rechenberg, Helmut (1982). The Historical Development of Quantum Theory. Vol. 1, Part 1: The Quantum Theory of Planck, Einstein, Bohr and Sommerfeld: Its Foundation and the Rise of Its Difficulties, 1900—1925. Springer.
  • Nishio, S. (2011). 科学ジャーナリズムの先駆者――評伝 石原純 [Pioneer of Science Journalism: Biography of Jun Ishiwara]] (in Japanese). Iwanami.
  • Pelogia, Karla; Brasil, Carlos Alexandre (2017). "Analysis of the Jun Ishiwara's "The universal meaning of the quantum of action"". European Physical Journal H. 42 (4–5): 507–521. arXiv:1708.04676. Bibcode:2017EPJH...42..507P. doi:10.1140/epjh/e2017-80034-x. S2CID 119208278.

ishiwara, atsushi, ishihara, 石原, january, 1881, january, 1947, japanese, theoretical, physicist, known, works, electronic, theory, metals, theory, relativity, quantum, theory, being, only, japanese, scientist, made, original, contribution, quantum, theory, 191. Jun Ishiwara or Atsushi Ishihara 石原 純 January 15 1881 January 19 1947 was a Japanese theoretical physicist known for his works on the electronic theory of metals the theory of relativity and quantum theory Being the only Japanese scientist who made an original contribution to the old quantum theory 1 in 1915 independently of other scientists he formulated quantization rules for systems with several degrees of freedom Jun IshiwaraBorn 1881 01 15 January 15 1881Tokyo JapanDiedJanuary 19 1947 1947 01 19 aged 66 Chiba Prefecture JapanCitizenship JapanAlma materUniversity of TokyoScientific careerFieldstheoretical physicsInstitutionsTohoku UniversityDoctoral advisorHantaro Nagaoka Contents 1 Biography 2 Scientific achievements 2 1 Theory of relativity 2 2 Quantum physics 3 Select publications 4 References 5 SourcesBiography editJun Ishiwara was born in the family of Christian priest Ryo Ishiwara and Chise Ishiwara In 1906 he completed his studies at the Department of Theoretical Physics at the University of Tokyo where he was a student of Hantaro Nagaoka Since 1908 Ishiwara taught at the Army School of Artillery and Engineers and in 1911 received the position of Assistant Professor at the College of Science of Tohoku University From April 1912 to May 1914 he trained in Europe at the University of Munich ETH Zurich and Leiden University where he worked with Arnold Sommerfeld and Albert Einstein After returning to his homeland Ishiwara received a post of professor at Tohoku University and in 1919 for his scientific work was awarded the Imperial Prize of the Japan Academy 2 3 Since 1918 Ishiwara s scientific activity began to decline In 1921 because of a love affair he was forced to take leave at the university and two years later finally retired After retirement he devoted himself mainly to writing and scientific journalism in this area he was one of the pioneers in Japan he authored many popular books and articles on the latest achievements of science 2 4 At the end of 1922 Ishiwara hosted Einstein during his visit to Japan he recorded and published a number of speeches by Einstein including his Kyoto address in which Einstein for the first time detailed his path to the creation of the theory of relativity 5 The two volume monograph of Ishiwara titled Fundamental Problems of Physics was very popular among young scientists and specialists he also edited the first complete collection of Einstein s works published in a Japanese translation in 1922 1924 In addition Ishiwara was known as a poet who wrote poems in the genre of tanka Shortly before the outbreak of World War II he criticized the government control over science 2 4 Scientific achievements editTheory of relativity edit Ishiwara was one of the first Japanese scholars to turn to the theory of relativity he wrote the first scientific article in Japan on this subject 3 In 1909 1911 he studied within the framework of this theory a number of specific problems related to the dynamics of electrons the propagation of light in moving objects and the calculation of the energy momentum tensor of the electromagnetic field In 1913 on the basis of the principle of least action he derived an expression for this tensor previously obtained by Hermann Minkowski 2 Ishiwara took part in the discussions of the first half of the 1910s the decade from 1910 to 1919 which preceded the creation of the general theory of relativity Starting from the scalar theory of gravitation proposed by Max Abraham and using the then popular idea of the electromagnetic origin of matter the Japanese physicist developed his own theory in which he attempted to unify the electromagnetic and gravitational fields or more precisely to deduce the latter from the former Assuming that the speed of light is variable and rewriting Maxwell s equations accordingly he showed that such a representation leads to the appearance of additional terms in the energy momentum conservation law that can be treated as a gravitational contribution The result was in agreement with Abraham s theory but subsequently Ishiwara developed his theory in another direction trying to harmonize it with the theory of relativity 6 The scientist also made attempts to build a five dimensional theory for unification of the gravitational and electromagnetic fields 2 Quantum physics edit In the first paper devoted to the problems of quantum physics 1911 Ishiwara derived Planck s law and tried to substantiate the wave properties of radiation on the basis of the assumption that it consists of light quanta Thus he anticipated certain ideas of Louis de Broglie and Satyendra Nath Bose In the same year he supported the hypothesis of light quanta as a possible explanation of the nature of X rays and gamma rays 4 7 In 1915 Ishiwara became the first non Western scientist who referred to the Bohr atom theory in a published work 4 On April 4 1915 he presented to the Tokyo Mathematico Physical Society the article The universal meaning of the quantum of action Universelle Bedeutung des Wirkungsquantums in which he attempted to unite the ideas of Max Planck on elementary cells in phase space the idea of quantizing the angular momentum in the Bohr model atom and the hypothesis of Arnold Sommerfeld about the change of the action integral in quantum processes Ishiwara suggested that the motion of a quantum system having j displaystyle j nbsp degrees of freedom should satisfy the following average relationship between the values of the coordinates q i displaystyle q i nbsp and the corresponding momenta p i displaystyle p i nbsp 1 j i 1 j p i d q i h displaystyle frac 1 j sum i 1 j int p i dq i h nbsp where h displaystyle h nbsp is the Planck constant Ishiwara showed that this new hypothesis can be used to reproduce some quantum effects known at that time Thus he succeeded in obtaining an expression for the quantization of the angular momentum in the Bohr atom taking into account also the ellipticity of electron orbits although it followed from his theory the need to take the charge of the nucleus of the hydrogen atom equal to two elementary charges As a second application of the proposed hypothesis Ishiwara considered the problem of the photoelectric effect obtaining a linear relationship between the electron energy and the radiation frequency in accordance with the Einstein formula 8 9 Later in the same year Ishiwara put forward another hypothesis according to which the product of the energy of the atom and the period of electron motion in the stationary state should be equal to the integer number of Planck constants 10 In 1918 he linked the postulate proposed three years earlier to the theory of adiabatic invariants 11 Around the same time analogous rules for quantizing systems of many degrees of freedom were independently obtained by William Wilson and Sommerfeld and are usually called the Sommerfeld quantum conditions The reason for the error of Ishiwara which was manifested in the calculation of the hydrogen atom apparently was a superfluous averaging over the number of degrees of freedom dividing by j displaystyle j nbsp before the sum At the same time his quantum condition which differed from Sommerfeld s one in the presence of summation allowed to obtain correct results regardless of the choice of coordinates This was pointed out in 1917 by Einstein who not knowing about the work of Ishiwara derived the same relation and showed that in the case of separable coordinates it gives the conditions of Wilson and Sommerfeld 12 Select publications editIshiwara Jun 1909 Zur Optik der bewegten ponderablen Medien Tokyo Sugaku Buturi gakkakiwi Kizi Proceedings of Tokyo Mathematico Physical Society 5 150 180 doi 10 11429 ptmps1907 5 10 150 Ishiwara Jun 1912 Beitrage zur Theorie der Lichtquanten Scientific Reports of Tohoku University 1 67 104 Ishiwara Jun 1912 Bericht uber die Relativitatstheorie Jahrbuch der Radioaktivitat und Elektronik 9 560 648 Ishiwara Jun 1912 Zur Theorie der Gravitation Physikalische Zeitschrift 13 1189 1193 Ishiwara Jun 1913 Uber das Prinzip der kleinsten Wirkung in der Elektrodynamik bewegter ponderabler Korper Annalen der Physik 42 15 986 1000 Bibcode 1913AnP 347 986I doi 10 1002 andp 19133471505 Ishiwara Jun 1914 Die elektronentheoretische Begrundung der Elektrodynamik bewegter Korper Jahrbuch der Radioaktivitat und Elektronik 11 167 186 Ishiwara Jun 1914 Die Grundlagen einer relativistischen und elektromagnetischen Gravitationstheorie Physikalische Zeitschrift 15 294 298 506 510 Ishiwara Jun 1915 Zur relativistischen Theorie der Gravitation Scientific Reports of Tohoku University 4 111 160 Ishiwara Jun 1915 Universelle Bedeutung des Wirkungsquantums Tokyo Sugaku Buturi gakkakiwi Kizi 8 106 116 doi 10 11429 ptmps1907 8 4 106 Commented English translation Ishiwara Jun 2017 The universal meaning of the quantum of action European Physical Journal H 42 4 5 523 536 arXiv 1708 03706 Bibcode 2017arXiv170803706P doi 10 1140 epjh e2017 80041 1 S2CID 59937705 Ishiwara Jun 1915 Uber den Fundamentalsatz der Quantentheorie Tokyo Sugaku Buturi gakkakiwi Kizi 8 318 326 doi 10 11429 ptmps1907 8 10 318 Ishiwara Jun 1918 Ryoshi ron I II III Quantum theory I II III Tokyo Butsuri gakko Zasshi 27 147 158 183 195 221 230 Ishiwara Jun 1921 Sōtaisei Genri Principle of Relativity Tokyo a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ishiwara Jun 1926 Butsuri gaku no Kisoteki Sho mondai The fundamental problems of physics Tokyo Iwanami shoten References edit Abiko 2015 p 3 a b c d e Hirosige 1981 a b Pelogia amp Brasil 2017 p 509 a b c d Pelogia amp Brasil 2017 p 510 Abiko Seiya 2000 Einstein s Kyoto Address How I Created the Theory of Relativity Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences 31 1 2 6 doi 10 2307 27757844 JSTOR 27757844 Vizgin Vladimir P 2011 Unified Field Theories in the first third of the 20th century Birkhauser pp 38 41 Abiko 2015 pp 1 4 Mehra amp Rechenberg 1982 pp 210 211 Pelogia amp Brasil 2017 pp 514 517 Mehra amp Rechenberg 1982 p 211 Abiko 2015 p 2 Abiko 2015 pp 2 3 Sources editAbiko Seiya 2015 Ishiwara s contributions to early quantum theory and the reception of quantum theory in Japan 1 8 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hirosige Tetu 1981 Ishiwara Jun In Charles Coulston Gillispie ed Dictionary of Scientific Biography Vol 7 New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 26 27 Mehra Jagdish Rechenberg Helmut 1982 The Historical Development of Quantum Theory Vol 1 Part 1 The Quantum Theory of Planck Einstein Bohr and Sommerfeld Its Foundation and the Rise of Its Difficulties 1900 1925 Springer Nishio S 2011 科学ジャーナリズムの先駆者 評伝 石原純 Pioneer of Science Journalism Biography of Jun Ishiwara in Japanese Iwanami Pelogia Karla Brasil Carlos Alexandre 2017 Analysis of the Jun Ishiwara s The universal meaning of the quantum of action European Physical Journal H 42 4 5 507 521 arXiv 1708 04676 Bibcode 2017EPJH 42 507P doi 10 1140 epjh e2017 80034 x S2CID 119208278 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jun Ishiwara amp oldid 1179392966, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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