*Max BORN (b.
Dec. 11, 1882, Breslau, now
Wroclaw in Poland; d. Jan. 5, 1970, Göttingen, Germany) German-British
physicist. Born was the son of an embryologist, a professor of anatomy
at the University of Breslau. He was educated at the universities of Breslau,
Heidelberg, Zurich and Göttingen, where he obtained his PhD in 1907. From
1909 until 1933 he taught at Göttingen, being appointed professor of physics
in 1921. With the rise of Hitler he moved to Britain, and from 1936 served
as professor of natural philosophy at the University of Edinburgh and became
British subject in 1939. He returned to Germany on his retirement in 1953.
Born`s early work was on crystals, particularly the vibrations of atoms
in crystal lattices. The Born-Haber cycle is a theoretical cycle
of reactions and changes by which it is possible to calculate the lattice
energy of ionic crystals. He is noted for his role in the development of
the new quantum theory. Together with Pasqual Jordan, he developed (1925)
the matrix mechanics introduced by Werner Heisenberg. (q.v.). He also showed
how to interpret the theoretical results of Louis de Broglie and the experiments
of such people as Clinton J. Davisson, which showed that particles have
wavelike behavior. At the time, it was known that in some circumstances
light, electrons, etc., behaved as waves whereas in others they acted like
particles. (Wiliam Bragg once suggested using the corpuscular (particle)
theory on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and the undulatory (wave) theory
on Thuesday, Thursday, and Saturday.) Mathematical treatments could be
used to predict behavior, but there was a problem in finding some accepted
physical picture of how electrons, for instance, could act in this way.
Erwin Schrödinger, who developed wave mechanics, interpreted particles
as ``wave packets", but this was unsatisfacory because such packets
would dissipate in time. Born`s interpretation was that the particles exist
but are "guided" by a wave. At any point, the amplitude (actually
the square of the amplitude) indicates the probability of finding a particle
there. An essential part of this idea of electrons, atoms, etc., is that
it depends on probability - there is no predetermined way in which absolute
predictions can be made, as in classical physics. A similar result is embodied
in the uncertainty principle of Werner Heisenberg. Einstein, amongst others,
could never eccept this and Born corresponded with him on the subject (the
Born-Einstein letters were published in 1971). Born shared (with
Walter Bothe) the 1954 Nobel Prize for physics. He is buried in Göttingen,
where his tombstone displays his fundamental equation of matrix mechanics:
Anna Jadczyk poff@ift.uni.wroc.pl