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"The Physical Tourist in Frankfurt (1)"

17 Comments -

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Anonymous Unce Al said...

The critical pivot of the Stern Gerlach experiment was cheap cigars,

http://www.aip.org/pt/vol-56/iss-12/p53.html
middle

Luck is as useful as expertise. Imagine what CERN will miss for having banned smoking. "8^>)

9:11 PM, August 07, 2007

Anonymous Dr Who said...

Will the Physical Tourist be visiting Wuerzburg any time soon? I am going there in early september to attend this interesting-looking conference:
http://www.initial-conditions.com

Any suggestions?

9:45 PM, August 07, 2007

Blogger Mauricio said...

ohhh My Godness!!! I've been living in Frankfurt nearly one year and I haven't visited this museum, I should do that soon :), thanks for rememebering that.

1:11 AM, August 08, 2007

Blogger Bee said...

Dear Dr. Who,

Suggestions? Don't miss the German wine :-)

Dear Stefan,

Thanks for this nice writing! Did you know we used to have the annual physics party in the old building of the 'Physikalischer Verein'? (Not sure whether we had one after you moved to Frankfurt?) The acoustic in the hall is astonishingly good. It's always been lots of fun (as well as lots of noise and lots of beer). Best,

B.

7:53 AM, August 08, 2007

Blogger Bee said...

Hi Mauricio:

Don't worry. I've been living in and nearby Frankfurt for 25 years and have never visited the Goethe House. Whenever I went there there were one million Japanese tourists standing in front of it taking photos and I was discouraged. Best,

B.

7:55 AM, August 08, 2007

Blogger Bee said...

Hi Uncle:

You're not going to believe it but I've been asked that question in one of my physics exams. I didn't know the answer but I managed to encourage the prof to tell me the whole history of Stern, Gerlach, and their experiments. After he was done time for the exam had run out. I got a 'very good' ;-) Best,

B.

8:01 AM, August 08, 2007

Blogger Arun said...

After he was done time for the exam had run out. I got a 'very good' ;-)

The moral of the story is that for girls and for professors, it is better to listen.

8:09 AM, August 08, 2007

Blogger Bee said...

Definitely...

Though the actual reason for the grade was probably a different one. It was the last oral exam I had (there are four). If you were a theoretician the guy (an experimentalist) was known to just go with the previous grades (as an amusing side note, the students had folders for every prof where you could look up things like this - they probably still have).

The whole exam happened within 3-4 weeks. I believe nowadays exams don't come anymore in such a bulk. I think they changed the whole procedure, but I'm not following that.

Best,

B.

8:22 AM, August 08, 2007

Blogger Mauricio said...

Dear Bee
your advice gave me a little bit of hope je je ;), since I started the PHD studies at Helmholtz School in Frankfurt I haven't visited too much in the city.

9:45 AM, August 08, 2007

Blogger Lumo said...

Stern and Gerlach were great but this guy whose desk is in Prague is perhaps somewhat more famous. ;-)

12:42 PM, August 08, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Dear Uncle Al,

Imagine what CERN will miss for having banned smoking.

Hm... fortunately, there are still the illegal substances ;-)...

And, about something else, since Germany is on the brink of a large-scale railroad strike (or maybe not?), perhaps this will spur creativity and lead to breakthrough discoveries, as in 1922 (also from the Bad Cigar Report):

In early 1922, he [Stern] and Gerlach met in Göttingen to review the situation and decided to give up. However, a railroad strike delayed Gerlach's return to Frankfurt, giving him a long day to go over all the details again. He decided to continue, improved the alignment, and soon achieved a clear splitting into two beams.


Best, stefan

3:13 PM, August 08, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Dear Dr. Who,


sorry, I do not know much about Würzburg, I should go there and post about it ;-)... I have been there only once, when my wife was invited to give a talk there at the astrophysics colloquium :-).

As she has said, the local Frankenwein is something one should not miss ;-), and there are also famous local beers.

As for "scientific" sightseeing, the historic University buildings downtown Würzburg are very picturesque, and there is some kind of new historic walk, "Wissenschaftsmeile Röntgenring", along former institutes where 13 Nobel prize winners have done research, among them the first winner of the physics prize, Wilhelm Roentgen. I understand you can visit the laboratory where he made the discovery of x-rays, including some original apparatus, but I have not been there.

I hope you'll have a nice trip!
Best, stefan

3:33 PM, August 08, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Dear Maurizio,

I've been living in Frankfurt nearly one year and I haven't visited this museum

Don't worry - I had been working "at the backyard" of the museum, the physics institute was still at Robert-Meyer-Strasse, and my appartment is a five-minute walk away - however, it took more than two years and required a visit by friends from Saarland to eventually go there.

But at least I had been there as a kid - I remember an enormously far trip to that big city with my brother and my parents when I was ten years old ;-).

Best, stefan

3:39 PM, August 08, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Dear Bee,

Did you know we used to have the annual physics party in the old building of the 'Physikalischer Verein'?

I remember these famous parties from heresay - I guess I was already in Frankfurt when the last one took place, but unfortunately, I must have missed it. Obviously I didn't know what I did miss... ;-)

Best, stefan

3:45 PM, August 08, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Dear Lubos,

thanks for the photo from Prague!
No doubt, that guy is far more famous :-)

Do you now who is this Berta Fanta? Einstein chatting with Kafka, that must have been fascinating...

Apropos Prague, also from the "Bad Cigar paper: "Motivated by a spirit of adventure," Stern became the first pupil of Albert Einstein, then in Prague; their discussions were held "in a cafe which was attached to a brothel."... these bohémiens ;-)...

Best, stefan

3:52 PM, August 08, 2007

Anonymous Uncle Al said...

Penguins? ARE YOU A TURTLE?

Gerlach, "No experiment is so dumb that it should not be tried," hence a query given non-metric gravitation theories. We'll do it ourselves come Christmas.

Dauphiné and Brazil twins are common in alpha-quartz. GaPO3 has Leydolt twins, too. Benzil doesn't twin. The universe smiles upon the parity calorimetry experiment.

5:22 PM, August 08, 2007

Anonymous Dr Who said...

Dear Bee and Stefan: thank you for your proposed programme of research. I assure you that I will be subjecting the Frankenwein to a most rigorous series of research investigations, using the most sophisticated technology available, ie my kidneys.....

Thanks! :-) I'll let you know if the problem of the origin of time gets solved in Wuerzburg.

9:33 PM, August 09, 2007

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