问答题
In the span of 18 months, Isaac Newton invented calculus,
constructed a theory of optics, explained how gravity works and discovered his
laws of motion. As a result, 1665 and the early months of 1666 are termed his
annus mirabilis. (46) {{U}}It was a sustained sprint of intellectual achievement
that no one thought could ever be equaled.{{/U}} But in a span of a few years just
before 1900, it all began to unravel. One phenomenon after another was
discovered which could not be explained by the laws of classical physics. (47)
{{U}}The theories of Newton, and of James Clerk Maxwell who followed him in the
mid-19th century by crafting a more comprehensive account of electromagnetism,
were in trouble.{{/U}}
Then, in 1905, a young patent clerk named
Albert Einstein found the way forward. In five remarkable papers, he showed that
atoms are real (it was still controversial at the time), presented his special
theory of relativity, and put quantum theory on its feet. It was a different
achievement from Newton's year, but Einstein's annus mirabilis was no less
remarkable. He did not, like Newton, have to invent entirely new forms of
mathematics. However, he had to revise notions of space and time fundamentally.
(48) {{U}}And unlike Newton, who did not publish his results for nearly 20 years,
so obsessed was he with secrecy and working out the details, Einstein released
his papers one after another, as a fusillade of ideas.{{/U}}
For
Einstein, it was just a beginning--he would go on to create the general theory
of relativity and to pioneer quantum mechanics. While Newton came up with one
system for explaining the world, Einstein thus came up with two. Unfortunately,
his discoveries-- relativity and quantum theory contradict one another. Both
cannot be true everywhere, although both are remarkably accurate .in their
respective domains of the very large and the very small. Einstein would spend
the last years of his life attempting to reconcile the two theories, and
failing. (49){{U}} But then, no one else has succeeded in fixing the problems
either, and Einstein was perhaps the one who saw them most
clearly.{{/U}}
When Einstein was awarded a Nobel prize, in 1921,
it was for the first of his papers of 1905, which proved the existence of
photons--particles of light. (50){{U}} Up until that paper, completed on March
17th and published in Annalen der Physik (as were the other 1905 papers), light
had been supposed to be a wave, since this explains the interference patterns
created when it passes through a grating.{{/U}} Einstein, however, began
from a different premise, by considering the so called "black-body
experiment".