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Hendrik Lorentz attended Mr Timmer's Primary School in Arnhem until
he was 13 years of age when he entered the new High School there.
He entered the University of Leiden in 1870 but, in 1872, he returned
to Arnhem to take up teaching evening classes. He worked for his
doctorate while holding the teaching post.
Lorentz refined Maxwell's electromagnetic theory in his doctoral
thesis The theory of the reflection and refraction of light presented
in 1875. He was appointed professor of mathematical physics at Leiden
University in 1878. He remained in this post until he retired in
1912 when Ehrenfest was appointed to his chair. After retiring from
this chair, Lorentz was appointed director of research at the Teyler
Institute, Haarlem. However, he retained an honorary position at
Leiden, where he continued to lecture.
Before the existence of electrons was proved, Lorentz proposed
that light waves were due to oscillations of an electric charge
in the atom. Lorentz developed his mathematical theory of the electron
for which he received the Nobel Prize in 1902. The Nobel prize was
awarded jointly to Lorentz and Pieter Zeeman, a student of Lorentz.
Zeeman had verified experimentally Lorentz's theoretical work on
atomic structure, demonstrating the effect of a strong magnetic
field on the oscillations by measuring the change in the wavelength
of the light produced.
Lorentz is also famed for his work on the FitzGerald-Lorentz contraction,
which is a contraction in the length of an object at relativistic
speeds. Lorentz transformations, which he introduced in 1904, form
the basis of Einstein's special theory of relativity. They describe
the increase of mass, the shortening of length, and the time dilation
of a body moving at speeds close to the velocity of light.
Lorentz was chairman of the first Solvay Conference held in Brussels
in the autumn of 1911. This conference looked at the problems of
having two approaches, namely that of classical physics and of quantum
theory. However Lorentz never fully accepted quantum theory and
always hoped that it would be possible to incorporate it back into
the classical approach. He said in his presidential address at the
opening ceremony of the conference:-
In this stage of affairs there appeared to us like a wonderful
ray of light the beautiful hypothesis of energy elements which was
first expounded by Planck and then extended by Einstein and Nernst,
and others to many phenomena. It has opened for us unexpected vistas,
even those, who consider it with a certain suspicion, must admit
its importance and fruitfulness.
Some of Lorentz's numerous publications are highlighted in [3]:-
In an early memoir, which became famous, Lorentz applied for the
first time considerations relating to discrete molecules to electric
propagation in material bodies, and incidentally arrived at a rational
reflection-equivalent for each substance independent of its density.
In 1884 he began to study the effect which magnetization exerts
on the polarization of reflected light. His "Theorie Electromagnetique
de Maxwell et son application auz Corps Mouvants" and his "Versuch
einer Theorie der Elektrischen und Optischen Erscheinungen in bewegten
Korpern" were published in 1892 and 1895 respectively. They
embodied the first systematic appearance of the electrodynamic principle
of relativity, and in 1920 he brought out "The Einstein Theory
of Relativity: A Concise Statement". In 1909 he published his
"Theory of Electrons", based on a series of lectures at
Columbia University, and in 1916 he published in French at Leipzig
an account of statistical thermodynamic theories, based on lectures
delivered at the College de France in 1912. An edition of his University
lectures, entitled "Lessons on Theoretical Physics", began
to appear, under his supervision, in 1919. He was also the author
of a textbook of the differential and integral calculus; "Visible
and Invisible Movements", 1901; and "Clerk Maxwell's Electromagnetic
Theory", 1924.
In [7] O W Richardson describes Lorentz as:-
... a man of remarkable intellectual powers ... . Although steeped
in his own investigation of the moment, he always seemed to have
in his immediate grasp its ramifications into every corner of the
universe. ... The singular clearness of his writings provides a
striking reflection of his wonderful powers in this respect. ....
He possessed and successfully employed the mental vivacity which
is necessary to follow the interplay of discussion, the insight
which is required to extract those statements which illuminate the
real difficulties, and the wisdom to lead the discussion among fruitful
channels, and he did this so skilfully that the process was hardly
perceptible.
Lorentz received a great many honours for his outstanding work.
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1905. The Society
awarded him their Rumford Medal in 1908 and their Copley Medal in
1918.
The respect in which Lorentz was held in The Netherlands is seen
in Richardson's description of his funeral [7]:-
The funeral took place at Haarlem at noon on Friday, 10 February.
At the stroke of twelve the State telegraph and telephone services
of Holland were suspended for three minutes as a revered tribute
to the greatest man Holland has produced in our time. It was attended
by many colleagues and distinguished physicists from foreign countries.
The President, Sir Ernest Rutherford, represented the Royal Society
and made an appreciative oration by the graveside.
Article by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson
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