Article ID: CBB443070232

The concept of velocity in the history of Brownian motion (2020)

unapi

Interest in Brownian motion was shared by different communities: this phenomenon was first observed by the botanist Robert Brown in 1827, then theorised by physicists in the 1900s, and eventually modelled by mathematicians from the 1920s, while still evolving as a physical theory. Consequently, Brownian motion now refers to the natural phenomenon but also to the theories accounting for it. There is no published work telling its entire history from its discovery until today, but rather partial histories either from 1827 to Perrin’s experiments in the late 1900s, from a physicist’s point of view; or from the 1920s from a mathematician’s point of view. In this article, we tackle the period straddling the two ‘half-histories’ just mentioned, in order to highlight continuity, to investigate the domain-shift from physics to mathematics, and to survey the enhancements of later physical theories. We study the works of Einstein, Smoluchowski, Langevin, Wiener, Ornstein and Uhlenbeck from 1905 to 1934 as well as experimental results, using the concept of Brownian velocity as a leading thread. We show how Brownian motion became a research topic for the mathematician Wiener in the 1920s, why his model was an idealization of physical experiments, what Ornstein and Uhlenbeck added to Einstein’s results, and how Wiener, Ornstein and Uhlenbeck developed in parallel contradictory theories concerning Brownian velocity.

...More
Citation URI
stagingisis.isiscb.org/p/isis/citation/CBB443070232

This citation is part of the Isis database.

Similar Citations

Article Pippard, Sir Brian; (2001)
Dispersion in the Ether: Light over the Water unapi

Book Giulia Giannini; (2012)
Verso Oriente: Gianantonio Tadini e la prima prova fisica della rotazione terrestre unapi

Article Pesic, Peter; (2013)
Helmholtz, Riemann, and the Sirens: Sound, Color, and the “Problem of Space” unapi

Book Blay, Michel; (2002)
L'homme sans repos: Du mouvement de la terre à l'esthétique métaphysique de la vitesse (XVIIe-XXe siècles) unapi

Article Hahn, Alexander J.; (2002)
The Pendulum Swings Again: A Mathematical Reassessment of Galileo's Experiments with Inclined Planes unapi

Chapter Renn, Jürgen; Damerow, Peter; Rieger, Simone; (2001)
Hunting the White Elephant: When and How Did Galileo Discover the Law of Fall? unapi

Article Karl-Heinz Schlote; (2016)
The Discussion of Ohm’s Law for Electrolytes by Jena’s Physicists – an Interplay of Computation and Experiment unapi

Article Hong, Sungook; (2000)
Once upon a time in physics when both mathematics and experiment were helpless: A strange life of voltaic contact potential unapi

Article Schemmel, Matthias; (2014)
Medieval Representations of Change and Their Early Modern Application unapi

Chapter Pietro Daniel Omodeo; (2015)
Riflessioni sul moto terrestre nel Rinascimento: tra filosofia naturale, meccanica e cosmologia unapi

Chapter Patricia Radelet-de-Grave; (2015)
La chute des corps, le mouvement des corps célestes et l'unification des mondes unapi

Chapter Ken'ichi Takahashi; (2015)
On the Need to Rewrite the Formation Process of Galileo's Theory of Motion unapi

Article Raffaele Pisano; Danilo Capecchi; (2013)
Conceptual and Mathematical Structures of Mechanical Science in the Western Civilization around the 18th century unapi

Article Pourciau, Bruce; (2004)
The Importance of Being Equivalent: Newton's Two Models of One-Body Motion unapi

Article Ekholm, Karin J.; (2010)
Tartaglia's ragioni: A maestro d'abaco's Mixed Approach to the Bombardier's Problem unapi

Article Luigi Guerrini; (2014)
Pereira and Galileo: Acceleration in Free Fall and Impetus Theory unapi

Book Zanin, Fabio; (2004)
L'analisi matematica del movimento e i limiti della fisica tardo-medievale: la ricezione della perspectiva e delle calculationes alla Facoltà delle arti di Parigi, 1340-1350 unapi

Article Hao Dong; (2021)
Hobbes’s model of refraction and derivation of the sine law unapi

Article Bruce Pourciau; (2020)
The Principia’s second law (as Newton understood it) from Galileo to Laplace unapi

Article Palmerino, Carla Rita; (2010)
The Geometrization of Motion: Galileo's Triangle of Speed and Its Various Transformations unapi

Authors & Contributors
Pourciau, Bruce H.
Blay, Michel
Capecchi, Danilo
Damerow, Peter
Ekholm, Karin Jori
Guerrini, Luigi
Journals
Archive for History of Exact Sciences
Physics in Perspective
Almagest
British Journal for the History of Science
Bruniana & Campanelliana: Ricerche Filosofiche e Materiali Storico-testuali
Early Science and Medicine: A Journal for the Study of Science, Technology and Medicine in the Pre-modern Period
Publishers
Armand Colin
Il Poligrafo
Olschki
Concepts
Physics
Mathematics
Motion (physical)
Experiments and experimentation
Mechanics
Geometry
People
Galilei, Galileo
Descartes, René
Kepler, Johannes
Newton, Isaac
Brahe, Tycho
Einstein, Albert
Time Periods
17th century
16th century
18th century
19th century
Renaissance
Early modern
Places
Italy
Europe
Germany
Venice (Italy)
United States
Pisa (Italy)
Institutions
Cambridge University
Jesuits (Society of Jesus)
Université de Paris
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment