INDIAN |
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& S.N. BOSE
NATIONAL CENTRE FOR
BASIC SCIENCES, KOLKATA |
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Physics 2005 |
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100 YEARS AFTER
EINSTEIN’S REVOLUTION |
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A National Conference
to celebrate the
World Year of Physics 2005 |
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Dates: Nov 3 ─ 6, 2005 |
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Venue: I.I.T.,
Kanpur |
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2005 : World Year
of Physics |
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The UN has declared the World Year of Physics
to commemorate the three papers that Albert Einstein, then a humble technical
clerk (third class) in the Swiss patent office at The second paper, established the foundations
of the theory of Special Relativity,
which made Einstein’s name a household word. It changed forever the way we
think about space, time and matter. Contrary to the popular belief that
“everything is relative” Einstein showed that while space and time may change
depending on the motion of the observer, the laws of physics are fixed and
eternal, and work in the same way on cosmic scales as they do in the
laboratory. Relativity also leads to the famous equation , suggesting a method for the generation of energy by mass
conversion, which is used in nuclear reactors (and also, unfortunately, in
nuclear weapons). The third of these wonderful papers showed that Brownian motion, the tiny jerky
movements which are seen under the microscope to be executed by minute
colloidal particles suspended in a fluid., arise
from random collisions with the atoms of the fluid. This proved beyond doubt
that the atomic theory of matter is the correct picture. Before this. many scientists did not believe in the existence of atoms
and molecules. Today, when we can actually manipulate clumps of atoms and
call it nanotechnology, it is appropriate to remember that it is Einstein who
set the ball rolling in this direction. Of course, Einstein’s creative rage did not
stop in 1905. He went on to lay the foundations for General Relativity,
Cosmology, Lasers, Quantum Statistics,
Solid State Physics and the Unified Field Theory ¾ in short, most of modern physics ¾ apart from establishing himself as a great
humanist and man of vision. Today, it is impossible to be a physicist or a
layman and not encounter some application of Einstein’s ideas every single
day. If we can also adopt some of his noble ideas on universal peace and
pan-humanism, the world would become a much better place to live in. |