Robert Andrews Millikan (March 22, 1868 – December 19, 1953) was an American experimental physicist who won the 1923 Nobel Prize for his measurement of the charge on the electron and for his work on the photoelectric effect. He later studied cosmic rays.
Education
Millikan received a
Bachelor's degree in the
classics from
Oberlin College in
1891 and his
doctorate in
physics from
Columbia University in
1895 -- he was the first to earn a Ph.D. from that department.
He explained his transition from classics to physics in his autobiography:
- At the close of my sophomore year my Greek professor 1889 at home … trying to master the subject. [..." target="_blank" >* I doubt if I have ever taught better in my life than in my first course in physics in 1889. I was so intensely interested in keeping my knowledge ahead of that of the class that they may have caught some of my own interest and enthusiasm.
Millikan's enthusiasm for education continued throughout his career, and he was the coauthor of a popular and influential series of introductory textbooks,[The books, coauthored with Henry Gordon Gale, were A First Course in Physics (1906), Practical Physics (1920), Elements of Physics (1927), and New Elementary Physics (1936).] which were ahead of their time in many ways. Compared to other books of the time, they treated the subject more in the way in which it was thought about by physicists. They also included many homework problems that asked conceptual questions, rather than simply requiring the student to plug numbers into a formula.
Charge of the electron
In
1910, while a
professor at the
University of Chicago, Millikan published the first results of his
oil-drop experiment (since repeated, with varying degrees of success, by generations of physics students) in which he measured the charge on a single
electron. The so-called
elementary charge is one of the fundamental
physical constants and accurate knowledge of its value is of great importance. His experiment measured the force on tiny charged droplets of oil suspended against gravity between two metal electrodes. Knowing the electric field, the charge on the droplet could be determined. Repeating the experiment for many droplets, Millikan showed that the results could be explained as
integer multiples of a common value (-1.592×10
-19 coulomb), the charge on a single electron. That this is somewhat lower than the
modern value of -1.60217653×10
-19 coulomb is probably due to Millikan's use of a somewhat inaccurate value for the
viscosity of
air.
Controversy
Subsequently, maverick physicist
Felix Ehrenhaft claimed to have performed a similar experiment and observed charges smaller than Millikan's
elementary charge. Ehrenhaft stated that the "variability of
e" supported the
aether theory and existence of
subelectrons. This led Millikan to a further series of measurements which he published in
1913 to reassert his original results. Controversy has arisen because, although Millikan states in his paper that "It is to be remarked, too, that this is not a selected group of drops, but represents all the drops experimented upon during 60 consecutive days...", his laboratory notebooks show that he recorded data on 175 drops in the period between
November 11 1911 and
April 16 1912 The calculations of results did not match the totality of the series, because he reported only 58 in his paper.
The reaction was exacerbated because his notebooks feature phrases such as "very low something wrong" and "This is almost exactly right, the best one I ever had!!!" He did not use either of these measurements as data. Though accusations have been made that Millikan was guilty of
fraud and
pathological science, some believe that he was using his experimental insight and personal expertise on the subject-matter to reject unreliable observations on sound physical grounds. According to Goodstein, research has shown that an analysis of the totality of his data does not lead to substantially different results.
Photoelectric effect
When
Einstein published his seminal
1905 paper on the particle theory of light, Millikan was convinced that it had to be wrong, because of the vast body of evidence that had already shown that light was a
wave. He undertook a decade-long experimental program to test Einstein's theory, which required building what he described as "a machine shop
in vacuo" in order to prepare the very clean metal surface of the photoelectrode. His results confirmed Einstein's predictions in every detail, but Millikan was not convinced of Einstein's radical interpretation, and as late as
1916 he wrote, "Einstein's photoelectric equation... cannot in my judgment be looked upon at present as resting upon any sort of a satisfactory theoretical foundation," even though "it actually represents very accurately the behavior" of the photoelectric effect. In his
1950 autobiography, however, he simply declared that his work "scarcely permits of any other interpretation than that which Einstein had originally suggested, namely that of the semi-corpuscular or photon theory of light itself."
Since Millikan's work formed some of the basis for modern particle physics, it is ironic that he was rather conservative in his opinions about 20th century developments in physics, as in the case of the photon theory. Another example is that his textbook, as late as the 1927 version, unambiguously states the existence of the ether, and mentions Einstein's theory of relativity only in a noncommittal note at the end of the caption under Einstein's portrait, stating as the last in a list of accomplishments that he was "author of the special theory of relativity in 1905 and of the general theory of relativity in 1914, both of which have had great success in explaining otherwise unexplained phenomena and in predicting new ones."
Later life
In
1917, solar astronomer
George Ellery Hale convinced Millikan to begin spending several months each year at the Throop College of Technology, a small academic institution in
Pasadena, California that Hale wished to transform into a major center for scientific research and education. A few years later Throop College became the
California Institute of Technology (Caltech), and Millikan left the
University of Chicago in order to become Caltech's "chairman of the executive council" (effectively its president). Millikan would serve in that position from
1921 to
1945. At Caltech most of his scientific research focused on the study of "
cosmic rays" (a term which he coined). About
1927 he worked with
Freidrich Hund on the development of the theory now known as the
Millikan-Hund theory, regarding quantum behaviour. In the
1930s he entered into a debate with
Arthur Compton over whether cosmic rays were composed of high-energy photons (Millikan's view) or charged particles (Compton's view). Millikan thought the cosmic ray photons were the "
birth cries" of new atoms continually being created by God to counteract
entropy and prevent the
heat death of the universe. Compton would eventually be proven right by the observation that cosmic rays are deflected by the Earth's
magnetic field (and so must be charged particles).
In his private life, Millikan was an enthusiastic tennis player. He was married with 3 sons, the eldest of which, Clark B. Millikan, became a prominent aerodynamic engineer.
His beliefs are of some note today. In his later life he became interested in the relationship between Christian faith and science, his own father having been a minister. He dealt with this in pamphlets and the book Evolution in Science and Religion. A more controversial belief of his was eugenics. This led to his association with the Human Betterment Foundation and his praising of San Marino, California for being "the westernmost outpost of Nordic civilization . . . a population which is twice as Anglo-Saxon as that existing in New York, Chicago or any of the great cities of this country."[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPcap/2000-03/16/076r-031600-idx.html
He died at his home in San Marino, California in 1954 and was interred in the "Court of Honor" at Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.
Bibliography
- Goodstein, D., " In defense of Robert Andrews Millikan", Engineering and Science, 2000. No 4, pp30-38 (pdf).
- Millikan, R A (1950) The Autobiography of Robert Millikan
- Nobel Lectures, "Robert A. Millikan – Nobel Biography". Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam.
- Segerstråle, U (1995) Good to the last drop? Millikan stories as “canned” pedagogy, Science and Engineering Ethics vol 1, pp197-214
- Robert Andrews Millikan "Robert A. Millikan – Nobel Biography".
- The NIST Reference on Constants, Units, and Uncertainty
Further reading
- Waller, John, "Einstein's Luck: The Truth Behind Some of the Greatest Scientific Discoveries". Oxford University Press, 2003. ISBN 0198607199
- Physics paper On the Elementary Electrical Charge and the Avogadro Constant (extract) http://www.aip.org/history/gap/
-
See also
External links
1868 births | 1953 deaths | Columbia University alumni | Nobel Prize in Physics winners | American physicists | Christians in science | Scottish-Americans | American eugenicists | University of Chicago faculty | Oberlin College alumni
Robert Andrews Millikan | Robert Andrews Millikan | Robert Andrews Millikan | Robert Andrews Millikan | Robert Andrews Millikan | Robert Millikan | Robert Millikan | Robert Millikan | Robert Millikan | ロバート・ミリカン | Robert Andrews Millikan | Robert Millikan | Robert Andrews Millikan | Милликэн, Роберт Эндрюс | Robert Andrews Millikan | Роберт Миликен | Robert A. Millikan | 罗伯特·安德鲁·密立根