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Nobel |
Pieter Zeeman |
Pieter Zeeman was born
on May 25, 1865, at Zonnemaire, a small village in the isle of Schouwen,
Zeeland, The Netherlands, as the son of the local clergyman Catharinus
Forandinus Zeeman and his wife, née Wilhelmina Worst. After having
finished his secondary school education at Zierikzee, the main town of the
island, he went to Delft for two years to receive tuition in the classical
languages, an adequate knowledge of which was required at that time for entrance
to the university. Taking up his abode at the house of Dr. J.W. Lely, conrector
of the Gymnasium and brother of Dr. C. Lely (Minister of Public Works and known
for initiating and developing the work for reclamation of the Zuyderzee), Zeeman
came into an environment which was beneficial for the development of his
scientific talents. It was here also that he came into contact with Kamerlingh
Onnes (Nobel Prize in Physics for 1913), who was twelve years his senior.
Zeeman's wide reading, which included a proper mastery of works such as
Maxwell's Heat, and his passion for performing experiments amazed
Kamerlingh Onnes in no small degree, and formed the basis for a fruitful
friendship between the two scientists.
Zeeman entered Leyden University in 1885 and became mainly a pupil of Kamerlingh
Onnes (mechanics) and Lorentz (experimental physics): the latter was later to
share the Nobel Prize with him. An early reward came in 1890 when he was
appointed assistant to Lorentz, enabling him to participate in an extensive
research programme which included the study of the Kerr effect - an important
foundation for his future great work. He obtained his doctor's degree in 1893,
after which he left for F. Kohlrausch's institute at Strasbourg, where for one
semester he carried out work under E. Cohn. He returned to Leyden in 1894 and
became "privaat-docent" (extra-mural lecturer) from 1895 to 1897.
In 1897, the year following his great discovery of the magnetic splitting of
spectral lines, he was called to a lectureship at the University of Amsterdam;
in 1900 came his appointment as Extraordinary Professor. In 1908 Van
der Waals (Nobel Prize in Physics for 1910) reached the retiring age of 70
and Zeeman was chosen as his successor, at the same time functioning as Director
of the Physics Laboratory. In 1923 a new laboratory, specially erected for him,
was put at his disposal, a prominent feature being a concrete block weighing a
quarter of a million kilograms, erected free from the floor, as a suitable
platform for vibration-free experiments. The institute is now known as the
Zeeman Laboratory of Amsterdam University. Many world-famous scientists have
visited Zeeman there or worked with him for some time. He remained in this dual
function for 35 years - on numerous occasions refusing an invitation to occupy a
Chair abroad - until in 1935 he had to resign on account of his pensionable age.
An accomplished teacher and of kind disposition he was much loved by his pupils.
One of these was C.J. Bakker, who was from 1955 until his untimely death in an
aircraft accident in 1960 the General Director of the Centre Européen des
Recherches Nucléaires (CERN) at Geneva. Another worker in his laboratory was S.
Goudsmit, who in 1925 with G.E. Uhlenbeck originated the concept of electron
spin.
Zeeman's talent for natural science first became apparent in 1883, when, while
still attending the secondary school, he gave an apt description and drawing of
an aurora borealis - then clearly to be observed in his country - which was
published in Nature. (The Editor praised the meticulous observations of
«Professor Zeeman in his observatory at Zonnemaire»!)
Zeeman's main theme of investigation has always concerned optical phenomena. His
first treatise Mesures relatives du phénomène de Kerr, written in 1892,
was rewarded with a Gold
Medal from the Dutch
Society of Sciences at Haarlem; his doctor's thesis dealt with the same subject.
In Strasbourg he studied the propagation and absorption of electrical waves in
fluids. His principal work, however, was the study of the influence of magnetism
on the nature of light radiation, started by him in the summer of 1896, which
formed a logical continuation of his investigation into the Kerr effect. The
discovery of the so-called Zeeman effect, for which he has been awarded the
Nobel Prize, was communicated to the Royal Academy of Sciences in Amsterdam -
through H. Kamerlingh Onnes (1896) and J.D. van der Waals (1897) - in the form
of papers entitled Over den Invloed eener Magnetisatie op den Aard van het
door een Stof uitgezonden Licht (On the influence of a magnetization on the
nature of light emitted by a substance) and Over Doubletten en Tripletten in
het Spectrum teweeggebracht door Uitwendige Magnetische Krachten (On
doublets and triplets in the spectrum caused by external magnetic forces) I, II
and III. (The English translations of these papers appeared in The
Philosophical Magazine; of the first paper a French version appeared in Archives
Néerlandaises des Sciences Exactes et Naturelles, and in a short form in
German in Verhandlungen der Physikalischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin.)
The importance of the discovery can at once be judged by the fact that at one
stroke the phenomenon not only confirmed Lorentz' theoretical conclusions with
regard to the state of polarization of the light emitted by flames, but also
demonstrated the negative nature of the oscillating particles, as well as the
unexpectedly high ratio of their charge and mass (e/m). Thus, when in the
following year the discovery of the existence of free electrons in the form of
cathode rays was established by J.J.
Thomson, the identity of electrons and the oscillating light particles could
be established from the negative nature and the e/m ratio of the
particles. The growing number of observations made by other investigators on
studying the effects of using various substances as light emitters - not all of
them explicable by Lorentz' original theory (the so-called «anomalous Zeeman
effect» could only adequately be explained at a later date, with the advent of
Bohr's atomic theory, quantum wave mechanics, and the concept of the electron
spin) - was assembled by him in his book Researches in Magneto-Optics
(London 1913, German translation in 1914). Not only has the Zeeman effect thrown
much light on the mechanism of light radiation and on the nature of matter and
electricity, but its immense importance lies in the fact that even to this day
it offers the ultimate means for revealing the intimate structure of the atom
and the nature and behaviour of its components. It still serves as the final
test in any new theory of the atom.
Already in his second communication Zeeman expressed the opinion that the
accepted existence of strong magnetic fields on the surface of the sun could be
verified, since these should alter spectral lines derived from the celestial
body. (It is typical of Zeeman to extend physical concepts into the realm of
celestial phenomena.) In a letter to him (1908) the astronomer G.E. Hale,
Director of Mount Wilson Observatory, corroborated this opinion by means of
photographs which indicated that in solar vortices the spectral lines indeed
appeared to be affected by magnetic fields. Even the theoretical prediction
concerning the probable interrelationship between the directions of polarization
and those of the magnetic fields was subsequently confirmed by Hale.
With regard to Zeeman's activities outside the field of the magnetic splitting
of spectral lines, mention should first be made of his work on the Doppler
effect in optics and in canal rays (laboratory tests). A second field of study
was that on the propagation of light in moving media (justification of the
existence of the Lorentz-term in the Fresnel drag coefficient). Other
investigations were those into the influence of the magnetic moment of the
nucleus on the hyperfine structure of spectral lines. He also succeeded, with J.
de Gier, in discovering a number of new isotopes (38Ar, 64Ni,
amongst others) by means of Thomson's parabola mass spectrograph. Zeeman's
predilection for testing fundamental laws also found expression in his
verification - carried out with an accuracy of < 1: 107 - of the
equality of heavy and inert masses.
Zeeman was Honorary Doctor of the Universities of Göttingen, Oxford,
Philadelphia, Strasbourg, Liège, Ghent, Glasgow, Brussels and Paris. He was
also a member or honorary member of numerous learned academies, including the
very rare distinction of Associé Etranger of the Académie des Sciences of
Paris. He was also member and Chairman of the Commission Internationale des
Poids et Mesures, Paris. Appointed member of the Royal Academy of Sciences of
Amsterdam in 1898, he served as the Secretary of the Mathematical-Physical
Section from 1912 to 1920. Among the other distinctions may be mentioned the
Rumford Medal of the Royal Society of London, the Prix Wilde of the Academie des
Sciences of Paris, the Baumgartner-Preis of the Akademie der Wissenschaften of
Vienna, the Matteucci Medal of the Italian Society of Sciences, the Franklin
Medal of the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia, the Henry Draper Medal of the
National Academy of Sciences of Washington. He was also made a Knight of the
Order of Orange-Nassau and Commander of the Order of the Netherlands Lion.
Outside his field of study Zeeman showed much interest in literature and the
stage. An entertaining host, he loved to invite his collaborators and pupils to
dine with him at his home, an event preceded by a learned talk in his study and
followed by a gathering in the family circle.
Zeeman married Johanna Elisabeth Lebret in 1895; they had one son and three
daughters. During the last year of his professorship he suffered from
ill-health. He died after a short illness on October 9, 1943.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1967
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.