Pyotr Kapitsa
(1894 - 1984)
Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa was born in Kronstadt, Russia on July 9, 1894. From 1923 to 1926, Kaptisa became a
Clerk Maxwell Student at Cambridge University, and then
Assistant Director of Magnetic Research at Cavendish
Laboratory (1924-1932). From 1930 to 1934, Kapitsa also
became Messel Reseach Professor of the Royal Society
and Director of the Royal Society Mond Laboratory.
He worked in Cambridge for more than 10 years and
then went on a professional visit to the Soviet Union
in 1934, and was not allowed to return to Cambridge.
Ernest Rutherford, whom Kapitsa had worked with at Cambridge,
sold the Soviets Kapitsa's laboratory equipment. The
Soviets then made Kapitsa form the Institute for Physical
Problems with his equipment. Kapitsa was eventually
removed from his role as head of the institute he created,
over his refusal to take part in the Soviet Hydrogen
Bomb project. During World
War II, he directed the Department of Oxygen Industry.
He discovered superfluidity with some contribution
from John F. Allen and Don Misener in 1937. Kapitsa
won the Nobel
Prize in Physics in 1978 for his work in low-temperature
physics. He shared the prize with Arno
Allan Penzias and Robert Woodrow Wilson (who won for unrelated work).
Kaptisa died on April 8, 1984.
Honorary degrees
· D.Phys.-Math.Sc., USSR Academy of Sciences,
1928
· D.Sc., Algiers University, 1944, Sorbonne,
1945
· D.Ph., Oslo University, 1946
· D.Sc., Jagellonian University, 1964; Technische
Universität Dresden, 1964; Charles University,
1965; Columbia University, 1969; Wroclaw Technical University,
1972; Delhi University, 1972; Université de Lausanne,
1973
· D.Ph., Turku University, 1977
Honorary memberships
· Member of the USSR Academy of Sciences, 1939
(corresponding member - 1929)
· Fellow of the Royal Society, London, 1929;
French Physical Society, 1931
· Institute of Physics, England, 1934; International
Academy of Astronautics, 1964
· Honorary Member of the Moscow Society of Naturalists,
1935
· the Institute of Metals, England, 1943
· the Franklin Institute, 1944
· Trinity College Cambridge, 1925
· New York Academy of Sciences, 1946
· Indian Academy of Sciences, 1947
· the Royal Irish Academy, 1948
· National Institute of Sciences of India, 1957
· German Academy of Naturalists "Leopoldina",
1958
· International Academy of the History of Science,
1971
· Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Bombay,
India, 1977
· Foreign Member of Royal Danish Academy of Sciences
and Letters, 1946
· National Academy of Sciences, USA, 1946
· Indian National Sciences Academy, 1956
· Polish Academy of Sciences, 1962
· Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, 1966
· American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1968
· Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences, 1969
· Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 1971
· Finnish Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1974
· Honorary Fellow of Churchill College Cambridge,
1974
Awards
· Medal of the Liége University, 1934
· Faraday Medal of the Institute of Electrical
Engineers, 1942
· Franklin Medal of the Franklin Institute, 1944
· Sir Devaprasad Sarbadhikary Gold Medal of the
Calcutta University, 1955
· Kothenius Gold Medal of the German Academy
of Naturalists "Leopoldina", 1959
· Frédéric Joliot-Curie Silver
Medal of the World Peace Committee, 1959
· Lomonosov Gold Medal of the USSR Academy of
Sciences, 1959
· Great Gold Medal of the USSR Exhibition of
Economic Achievements, 1962
· Medal for Merits in Science and to Mankind
of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, 1964
· International Niels Bohr Medal of Dansk Ingeniørvorening,
1964
· Rutherford Medal of the Institute of Physics
and Physical Society, England, 1966
· Golden Kamerlingh Onnes Medal of the Netherlands
Society of Refrigeration, 1968
· Copernic Memorial Medal of the Polish Academy
of Sciences, 1974
· USSR State Prize - 1941, 1943
· Simon Memorial Award of the Institute of Physics
and Physical Society, England, 1973
· Rutherford Memorial Lecture, Royal Society
of London; Bernal Memorial Lecture, Royal Society of
London, 1976
· Order of Lenin- 1943, 1944, 1945, 1964, 1971,
1974
· Hero of Socialist Labour, 1945, 1974
· Order of the Red Banner of Labour, 1954
· Order of the Jugoslav Banner with Ribbon, 1967
Publications
· Collected Papers of P.L. Kapitsa, 3 vol., Pergamon
Press, Oxford, 1964 - 1967
· High Power Microwave Electronics, Pergamon
Press, 1964
· Experiment. Theory. Practice. "Nauka",
Moscow, 1977
· Le livre du problème de physique, CEDIC,
Paris, 1977
The following press release from the Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences describes Kapitsa's work:
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has
decided to award the 1978 Nobel Prize for
Physics in two equal parts: one to Professor
Piotr Leontevitch Kapitsa, Institute of
Physical Problems, USSR Academy of Sciences,
Moscow, for his basic inventions and discoveries
in the area of low-temperature physics;
and the other, to be shared equally between
Dr Arno A. Penzias and Dr Robert W. Wilson,
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Holmdel, New
Jersey, USA, for their discovery of cosmic
microwave background radiation.
Low-temperature physics All objects and
matter consist of small particles - atoms
and molecules - that are in constant motion.
The temperature of the matter or body is
dependent on the intensity of this so-called
'heat movement'. When the movement is halted,
the temperature of the body drops to the
'absolute zero point' at minus 273° Celsius.
Low-temperature physics deals with the properties of
materials at temperatures immediately above the absolute
zero point. It has been shown that at these temperatures
many kinds of materials acquire radically different
properties, which are of interest to physicists and
often technically valuable. Many metals and alloys,
for instance, become what is known as superconductive.
The first Nobel Prize in this area was given in 1913
to Kamerling-Onnes, of Leiden University, The Netherlands,
for 'his investigations on the properties of matter
at low temperatures, which led inter alla to the production
of liquid helium'. This substance has since become one
of the most useful means for attaining low temperatures.
In 1934, Kapitsa constructed a new device for producing
liquid helium, which cooled the gas by periodic expansions.
For the first time, a machine had been made which could
produce liquid helium in large quantities without previous
cooling with liquid hydrogen. This heralded a new epoch
in the field of low-temperature physics.
In the 1920s, it had been found that when liquid helium
was exposed to a temperature of less than 2.3 degrees
above absolute zero, it was changed into an unusual
form, which was named He II, or 'helium two'. By 1938,
Kapitsa was able-to show that He II had such great internal
mobility and negligible or vanishing viscosity, that
it could better be characterized as a 'superfluid'.
During the next few years, Kapitsa's experiments on
the properties of He II indicated that it is in a macroscopic
'quantum state', and that He II is therefore a 'quantum
fluid' with zero entropy, i.e., that it has a perfect
atomic order.
As a result of his remarkable experimental and technical
abilities, Kapitsa has played a leading role in low-temperature
physics for a number of decades. He has also shown an
amazing capacity to organize and to lead work: he established
laboratories for the study of low-temperatures in both
Cambridge, United Kingdom and Moscow. One of his associates
was Lev D. Landau who in 1962 was awarded the Nobel
Prize in physics for his theoretical studies on liquid
helium. Kapitsa's discoveries, ideas and new techniques
have been basic to the modern expansion of the science
of low-temperature physics.
Mysterious background radiation
It has been known for a relatively long time that
various astronomical objects emit radiation in the form
of radio waves. Radioastronomy has grown in significance
and is now a very important complement to classical
optical astronomy. The radiation is emitted in various
ways; for example, hydrogen clouds in the Galaxy radiate
when excited, and cosmic ray electrons radiate when
spiralling in the weak magnetic fields of interstellar
space. Various objects, such as single stars, galaxies
and - quasars, have been found to emit radio waves.
In order to study these radio sources, it is, of course,
necessary that their radiation show up over the general
background radiation. The composition and origin of
this background were for a long time not well understood;
it was assumed to consist of the integrated radiation
from a great number of sources, both galactic and extragalactic.
The study of cosmic microwave radiation, and especially
of the weak background radiation, obviously requires
the use of a very sensitive receiver. Such an apparatus
was built in the beginning of the 1960s at Bell Telephone
Laboratories in the USA. It was originally used for
radio communications with the satellites Echo and Telstar.
When this instrument became available for research,
the two radio astronomers, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson,
decided to use it for the study of microwave background
radiation. It was very well suited for this purpose:
the instrument noise, i.e., the radiation created by
the instrument itself, was very low; furthermore, it
was tuned to a wavelength of 7 centimeters. It was already
known that the intensity of cosmic microwaves decreases
with decreasing wavelength; hence, the intensity at
7 centimeters would be expected to be quite low. However,
to their surprise, Penzias and Wilson found a comparatively
high intensity. They suspected at first that this radiation
must originate either in the instrument or in the atmosphere.
However, by painstaking testing, they showed that it
came from outer space and that its intensity was the
same in all directions. Hence, their measurements allowed
the surprising conclusion that the universe is filled
uniformly with microwave radiation.
These two researchers made no suggestions
about the origin of this mysterious radiation.
When their discovery became known, however,
it was found that speculations had already
been made about the existence of a weak,
microwave background radiation. The starting-point
for these speculations had been a number
of attempts, made during the 1940s, to
explain the synthesis of chemical elements.
A theory developed by the American physicist
Gamow and his associates suggested that
this synthesis took place at the beginning
of the existence of the universe. It is
known from studies of the spectra of stars
and galaxies that the universe is at present
expanding uniformly. This means that at
a certain point, 15 billion years ago,
the universe was very compact; it is thus
tempting to assume that the universe was
created by a cosmic explosion, or 'big
bang', although other explanations are
possible. This 'big bang' theory implies
the occurrence of very high temperatures,
of about 10 billion degrees. Only at those
temperatures can various nuclear reactions
take place such that chemical elements
could be built up from the elementary particles
assumed to be present from the very beginning.
It also implies the release of a large
amount of radiation, whose spectrum extends
from the X-ray region, through visible
light, to radio waves. After this hypothetical
explosion, the temperature would decrease
rapidly (the whole 'creation' is assumed
to have been completed in a few minutes).
The question then remains of what would
have happened to the debris of the explosion:
matter, consisting of hydrogen, helium
and various other light elements, would
have expanded as a hot cloud of gas which
would gradually have cooled
down to form condensations, which developed
into galaxies and stars. But what about
the radiation? Since the universe is virtually
transparent to radiation of these wavelengths,
nothing would really have happened to it:
the radiation would expand in universe
at the same rate as the universe is expanding.
The question is whether it still exists
and, if so, whether it can be detected.
The difficulty here is that because of
the expansion of the universe, the wavelength
of the radiation has decreased, in the
same way that light from distant galaxies
is 'red-shifted' Instead of the 'hard'
radiation that would have been emitted
during the 'big bang', the radiation that
might be detected now would correspond
to that emitted by a body with a temperature
of 3 degrees above absolute zero. No visible
light is emitted at such a low temperature,
and the radiation emitted falls: entirely
within the microwave region, with a maximum
intensity of about 0.1 centimeters. It
was because of these difficulties that
the early predictions were forgotten: it
was assumed that it would be impossible
to detect such weak radiation in the cosmic
noise
When Penzias and Wilson discovered cosmic microwave
background radiation, it was reasonable to suspect that
it was fossil radiation from the 'big bang'. Support
for this interpretation came from a number of investigations
of the shape of the spectrum, which soon showed that
it was indeed that which would be expected for a body
with a temperature of 3 degrees. This provided solid
support for the view that background radiation is the
fossil remains of the 'big bang'; other interpretations
are possible, however, even if they lack detailed theoretical
backgrounds. The discovery of Penzias and Wilson was
a fundamental one: it has made it possible to obtain
information about cosmic processes that took place a
very long time ago, at the time of the creation of the
universe.
Recently, investigation of this radiation
has been extended. Due to the fact that
it fills the entire universe and interacts
with interstellar and intergalactic matter,
it can be used as a measuring probe. During
the last few years it has been found that
this radiation is not quite uniform and
that it is intensity has a certain directional
dependence; this can be interpreted as
an effect of the motion of the earth and
of the solar system relative to the radiation
field, and its variation can be used to
measure that motion. Since the distribution
of the intensity of the radiation reflects
the distribution of matter in the universe,
the possibility is opened up of defining
absolute motion in space. Thus, the discovery
of cosmic microwave background radiation
by Penzias and Wilson has marked an important
stage in the science of cosmogony.”
Sources: Nobelprize.org,
Nobel
Prize Biography, Wikipedia,
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