Was Einstein the First to Invent E = mc2?
According to scientific folklore, formulated this equation in 1905 and, in a single blow, explained how energy can be released in stars and nuclear explosions. This is a vast oversimplification. Einstein was neither the first person to consider the equivalence of mass and energy, nor did he actually prove it.
Anyone who sits through a freshman electricity and magnetism course learns that charged objects carry electric fields, and that moving charges also create magnetic fields. Hence, moving charged particles carry electromagnetic fields. Late 19th-century natural philosophers believed that electromagnetism was more fundamental than Isaac Newton’s laws of motion and that the electromagnetic field itself should provide the origin of mass. In 1881 , later a discoverer of the electron, made the first attempt to demonstrate how this might come about by explicitly calculating the magnetic field generated by a moving charged sphere and showing that the field in turn induced a mass into the sphere itself.
It was not, however, the last. When Englishman John Henry Poynting announced in 1884 a celebrated theorem on the conservation of energy for the electromagnetic field, other scientists quickly attempted to extend conservation laws to mass energy. Indeed, in 1900 the ubiquitous stated that if one required that the momentum of any particles present in an electromagnetic field the momentum of the field itself be conserved , then Poynting’s theorem predicted that the field acts as a “fictitious fluid” with mass such that 2. Poincaré, however, failed to connect with the mass of any real body.
The scope of investigations widened again in 1904 when Fritz Hasenöhrl created a thought experiment involving heat energy in a moving cavity. Largely forgotten today except by , Hasenöhrl was at the time more famous than the obscure patent clerk. Then one of Austria’s leading physicists, he wrote a prize-winning trilogy of papers, “On the theory of radiation in moving bodies,” the last two of which appeared in the in 1904 and early 1905. In the first he imagined a perfectly reflecting cylindrical cavity in which the two end disks—which served as heaters—were suddenly switched on, filling the cavity with ordinary heat, or in physicist lingo, blackbody radiation. Newton’s third law (“for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction”) tells us in modern language that any photons emitted from the heaters must exert a reaction force against the heaters themselves, and so to keep them in place one must exert an external force against each of them (we imagine that these external forces are what keep the disks attached to the cylinder). But because identical photons are emitted from each end, the forces are equal in magnitude, at least as observed by someone sitting inside the cavity.
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