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"Wolfgang Pauli, 1931, not so dry"

6 Comments -

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Blogger Kris Krogh said...

Hi Bee,

My favorite Pauli photo was taken by Roy Glauber, who shared the 2005 physics Nobel. You can find it on Glauber's Nobel Prize website.

Glauber's caption:

Life with Wolfgang Pauli; a Spring 1950 outing. Prepared to photograph Pauli kicking the ball into the lake, as he had done earlier, I stood to one side, carefully aiming the camera at him. Pauli indeed kicked the ball, and I managed to snap the shutter just before the camera hit me squarely in the face.

I think the look on Pauli's face in this moment says a lot about his personality, and also his treatment of other physicists. (Especially those with different ideas than his.)

Cheers,

Kris

2:26 PM, January 30, 2012

Blogger Phil Warnell said...

Hi Bee,

In as his shoulder and the stairs are primarily both of fermionic nature his exclusion principal might have prevented the two from ever making contact; however he forgot that a two spin particle can render the entire outcome bosonic.

Best,

Phil

4:52 AM, January 31, 2012

Blogger joel rice said...

I read somewhere that Hamilton towards the end was 'not so dry' either. Perhaps one can blame it on the baleful influence of quaternions, driving people to drink, though it looks like Pauli was having more fun. I wonder what Pauli thought about the muon. It is curious that if there are three generations of fermions, where are the three 'generations of spinors' ? And now that we know that all fermions have mass, where did Weyl get off proposing massless fermions instead proposing that it is impossible for fermions to live in the null space of spacetime ?

11:05 AM, January 31, 2012

Blogger Bee said...

Hi Kris,

Thanks for the link, that is a great photo indeed! Best,

B.

11:42 AM, January 31, 2012

Blogger Bee said...

Hi Joel,

There is a German saying "Dummheit frißt, Intelligenz säuft (das Genie macht beides)" but don't tell anybody I ever mentioned it ;o) Also, sorry for the nitpicking, but we strictly speaking don't know that all fermions have mass because we have evidence so far only for the differences of the mass squared of the neutrinos. Best,

B.

11:46 AM, January 31, 2012

Blogger Anonymous Snowboarder said...

Bee- an intersting post might be about Great Physicist Party Animals! (note that the party operator may not always commute with the ability to hold liquor operator!)

(i hope this only posts once, captcha probs)

7:48 PM, February 01, 2012

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