The Launch Complex
  LINKS

Homepage
Space Shuttle
International Space Station
Solar System

Space Facts
Space History

Famous People
    Ancient Epoch
    Middle Ages
    Renaissance
    Age of Enlightenment
    Modern Era
        Lowell
        Fleming
        Planck
        Leavitt
        Hale
        Rutherford
        Einstein
        Eddington
        Goddard
        Bohr
        Hubble
        Velikovsky
        Heisenberg
    Present Day
Space Milestones
Rocketry History
U.S. Space History
Space Multimedia

Space Games
Space News
X-Planes
Hot Sites
Guestbook

Last Updated: May 26, 2007
Webmaster:
Richard Kalie

Max Planck

(1858 - 1947 AD)

German physicist who formulated an equation describing the blackbody spectrum in 1900. Wien and Rayleigh had also developed equations, but Wien's only worked at high frequencies, and Rayleigh's only worked at low frequencies. Planck's spectrum was obtained by postulating that energy was directly proportional to frequency (E = hν). Planck believed that this quantization applied only to the absorption and emission of energy by matter, not to electromagnetic waves themselves. However, it turned out to be much more general than he could have imagined.

Planck received the Nobel Prize in physics in 1918 for his quantum theory after it had been successfully applied to the photoelectric effect by Einstein and the atom by Niels Bohr. Planck showed there were difficulties in relating the statistical theory of molecular motion to the thermodynamical approach. He also criticized the probabilistic interpretation of entropy. He was the first to write down the equation usually attributed to Boltzmann, S = k ln W. In fact, the constant k (as opposed to R/NA, where R is the universal gas constant and NA is Avogadro's number) was first used by Planck in 1900. Lorentz and others called k Planck's constant until 1911 (Pais 1991, p. 60), when the term Boltzmann's constant became generally accepted.

Planck was also a philosopher of science. In his Scientific Autobiography and Other Papers, he stated Planck's Principle, which holds that "A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it." This view contradicts that forwarded by Karl Popper known as Popper's Principle.

**The preceding information is provided by the Eric Weisstein's World of Scientific Biogra.**

Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1