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To: C19fan; Trump_the_Evil_Left; iowamark; SunkenCiv; dennisw; dhs12345
"It is practically impossible to describe Niels Bohr to a person who has never worked with him. Probably his most characteristic property was the slowness of his thinking and comprehension. When, in the late twenties and early thirties, the author of this book was one of the "Bohr boys" working in his Institute in Copenhagen on a Carlsberg (the best beer in the world!) fellowship, he had many a chance to observe it. In the evening, when a handful of Bohr's students were "working" in the Paa Blegdamsvejen Institute, discussing the latest problems of the quantum theory, or playing Ping-pong on the library table with coffee cups placed on it to make the game more difficult, Bohr would appear, complaining that he was very tired, and would like to "do something." To "do something" inevitably meant to go to the movies, and the only movies Bohr liked were those called The Gun Fight at the Lazy Gee Ranch or The Lone Ranger and a Sioux Girl. But it was hard to go with Bohr to the movies. He could not follow the plot, and was constantly asking us, to the great annoyance of the. rest of the audience, questions like this: "Is that the sister of that cowboy who shot the Indian who tried to steal a herd of cattle belonging to her brother-in-law?" The same slowness of reaction was apparent at scientific meetings. Many a time, a visiting young physicist (most physicists visiting Copenhagen were young) would deliver a brilliant talk about his recent calculations on some intricate problem of the quantum theory. Everybody in the audience would understand the argument quite clearly, but Bohr wouldn't. So everybody would start to explain to Bohr the simple point he had missed, and in the resulting turmoil everybody would stop understanding anything. Finally, after a considerable period of time, Bohr would begin to understand, and it would turn out that what he understood about the problem presented by the visitor was quite different from what the visitor meant, and was correct, while the visitor's interpretation was wrong."

- George Gamow

10 posted on 12/20/2018 7:17:24 PM PST by wideminded
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To: wideminded
Interesting. All I remember from Physics was his model of the Hydrogen atom. It has been a few years so go easy on me. :)

His model was very simplistic like a planetary system with the sun being the nucleus and the planet being the electron. It worked okay for the simple Hydrogen atom but failed to describe the behavior of more complex molecules.

The limitations of his model raised more questions and in attempting answer those questions, Physicists created a new science called Quantum Mechanics. Chemistry also benefited. A merging of Chemistry and Physics.

11 posted on 12/21/2018 7:32:55 AM PST by dhs12345
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