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This is the story of the greatest
scientific discovery ever.

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The discovery that everything
is made of atoms.

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The vast variety and richness
of everything we see around us
in the world and beyond,

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how it's built up,
how it all fits together

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is all down to atoms

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and the mysterious laws they obey.

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As scientists delved deep into the
atom, into the very heart of matter,

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they unravelled Nature's
most shocking secrets.

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They had to abandon everything
they believed in

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and create a whole new science.

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A science that today underpins
the whole of physics,
chemistry, biology,

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and maybe even life itself.

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But for me, the story of
how humanity solved the mystery
of the atom

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is both inspiring and remarkable.

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It's a story of great geniuses.

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Of men and women driven by their
thirst for knowledge and glory.

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It's a story of false starts
and conflicts, of ambition
and revelation.

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A story that lead us through
some of the most exciting
and exhilarating ideas

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ever conceived of by the human race.

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And for a working physicist like me,

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it's the most important story
there is.

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On 5th October, 1906,

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in a hotel room near Trieste,

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a German scientist called
Ludwig Boltzmann hanged himself.

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Boltzmann had a long history
of psychological problems

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and one of the key factors
in his depression

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was that he'd been vilified,
even ostracised,

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for believing something that today
we take for granted.

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He believed that matter cannot be
infinitely divisible
into ever smaller pieces.

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Instead, he argued that ultimately
everything is made of basic
building blocks -

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atoms.

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It seems incredible now
that Boltzmann's revelation
was so controversial.

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But 100 years ago,

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arguing atoms were real
was considered by most
to be a waste of time.

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Although philosophers
since the Greeks

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had speculated that the world
might be made out of some kind of
basic unit of matter,

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they realised that they were
far too small to see

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even under the most powerful
microscopes.

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Speculating about them was therefore
a complete waste of time.

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But then, in the middle
of the 19th century,

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whether or not the atom was real

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was suddenly a question
of burning importance.

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The reason was this.

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Steam.

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By the 1850s, it was changing
the world.

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It powered the mighty engines,

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the trains, the ships, the factories
of the Industrial Revolution.

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So figuring out how to use it
more effectively

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became a matter
of crucial commercial, political
and military significance.

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Not surprisingly, then,

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it became the key question
of 19th-century science.

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The demand to build more powerful
and efficient steam engines

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in turn created an urgent need

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to understand and predict
the behaviour of water and steam

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at high temperatures and pressures.

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Ludwig Boltzmann
and his scientific allies

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showed that if you imagined steam
as made of millions of tiny
rigid spheres,

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atoms,

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then you could create some powerful
mathematical equations.

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And those equations are capable of
predicting the behaviour of steam

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with incredible accuracy.

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But these same equations plunged
Boltzmann and his fellow atomists
into controversy.

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Their enemies argued that since
the atoms referred to in their
calculations were invisible,

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they were merely
a mathematical convenience

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rather than real physical objects.

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To claim that imaginary entities
were real seemed presumptuous,

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even blasphemous.

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Boltzmann's critics argued that
it was sacrilegious

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to reduce God's miraculous creation

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down to a series of collisions
between tiny inanimate spheres.

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Boltzmann was condemned as
an irreligious materialist.

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The tragic irony
of Boltzmann's story

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is that when he took his own life
in 1906,

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he was unaware that
he'd been vindicated.

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You see, a year before he died,

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a young scientist had published
a paper

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which undeniably, irrefutably,
proclaimed the reality of the atom.

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You might have heard of
this young scientist.

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His name was Albert Einstein.

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In 1905, the year before
Boltzmann's suicide,

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Albert Einstein was 26 years old.

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His brash arrogance had upset
most of his professors and teachers

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and he was barely employable.

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Then he got his girlfriend pregnant.

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That was followed
by a hasty marriage.

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He needed a job. Any job.
Having not quite distinguished
himself at university,

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he took up a job as a patents clerk
here in Berne in Switzerland.

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He'd moved into this small
one-bedroom apartment on Kramgasse

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with his young wife Mileva.

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Despite dire personal straits,

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the young Einstein
had a burning ambition.

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He was desperate to make his mark
as a physicist.

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And in 1905, during one
miraculous year,

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the mark he made
was truly incredible.

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Having an undemanding job
meant that young Einstein had
plenty of time on his hands

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both at work and here
in this tiny apartment

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to think deep thoughts.

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In the space of just a few months,
he was to publish several papers

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that would change science for ever.

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Now, everyone's heard of
his Theory of Relativity,

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even if they don't understand it.

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His paper on the nature of light
would win him the Nobel Prize
a few years later.

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But ironically, it wasn't either
of these two papers

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that had the most impact
on the discovery of atoms.

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The one that made all the difference

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was a short paper on how tiny grains
of pollen danced in water.

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Almost 80 years earlier, in 1827,

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a Scottish botanist
called Robert Brown

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sprinkled pollen grains
in some water

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and examined it
through a microscope.

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What he found was really strange.

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Instead of the pollen grains
floating gently in the water,

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they danced around furiously,

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almost as though they were alive.
Now,

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while this so-called
"Brownian motion" was strange,

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scientists soon forgot about it.

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They found it mundane, even boring.
Who cared if the pollen
jiggled about in the water?

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And what had the jiggling to do
with atoms anyway?

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For nearly 80 years, Brown's
discovery remained a little-known
scientific anomaly.

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Then Einstein changed everything.

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In one staggering insight,

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Einstein saw that Brownian motion
was all about atoms.

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In fact, he realised that the
jiggling of pollen grains in water

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could settle the raging debate about
the reality of atoms for ever.

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His argument was simple.

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The pollen will only jiggle
if they were being jostled
by something else.

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So Einstein said that the water must
be made of tiny atom-like particles

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which themselves are jiggling

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and continually buffeting
the pollen.

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If there were no atoms,

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then the pollen would stay still.

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So Boltzmann and his contemporaries

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had been rowing furiously
about this question for nothing.

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The answer was there all along.

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Einstein proved that
for Brownian motion to happen,

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atoms must exist.

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Einstein's paper went way beyond
just verbal arguments.

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With flawless mathematics,

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he proved that the dance
of the pollen

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revealed the size of the atom.

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And it's mind-numbingly tiny.

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One tenth of a millionth
of a millimetre across!

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A single human hair, itself
one of the narrowest things visible
to the naked eye,

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is over one million atoms wide.

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Let me put it another way.

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There are more atoms
in a single glass of water

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than there are glasses of water
in all the oceans of the world!

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It sort of hurts your head
just to think about it.

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Einstein's paper ended the debate

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about whether the atom was real
or not.

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And Boltzmann had been
totally vindicated.

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The atom had to be real.

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By the early years
of the 20th century,

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the atom had arrived.

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Scientists who'd argued
that the atom was real
were no longer heretics.

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In a dramatic sudden reversal,

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they became the new orthodoxy.

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But they were to pay a huge price
for their success.

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Before they'd had a chance
to congratulate each other
on discovering the atom,

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it ripped the rug out
from under their feet

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and sent them spiralling
into a bizarre and at times
terrifying new world.

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And it all kicked off here

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in what by 1910 was the world's
centre for atomic physics -

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Manchester.

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Two of the most extraordinary men
in the history of science

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worked here in the physics
department of Manchester University
between 1911 and 1916.

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They were Ernest Rutherford
and Niels Bohr,

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on the face of it,
two very different personalities

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and the unlikeliest
of collaborators.

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Rutherford was from a remote part
of New Zealand

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and grew up on a farm.

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Bohr was born in Copenhagen,

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wealthy and erudite,
virtually an aristocrat.

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Rutherford was the ultimate
experimentalist.

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He loved technology

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and ingenious arrangements
of batteries, coils, magnets
and radioactive rocks.

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But he was also blessed
with a profound intuition.

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In contrast, Bohr was
the ultimate theoretician.

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To him, science was about deep
thought and abstract mathematics.

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Pen and paper, chalk and blackboard
were his tools.

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Logic was his path to truth.

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Although their approaches
to their work couldn't have been
more different,

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they had one thing in common.

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They were prepared to ditch three
centuries of scientific convention

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if it didn't fit what
they believed to be true.

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They were genuine revolutionaries.

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Rutherford and Bohr were two of
the most extraordinary minds
ever produced by the human race.

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But it would take every bit
of their dogged tenacity

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and inspirational brilliance

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to take on the atom.

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In 1907, Ernest Rutherford took over
the physics department
in Manchester.

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This was a period of
momentous scientific change.

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Just over ten years earlier,
in Germany,

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came the first demonstration of
weird rays that see through flesh

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to reveal our bones.

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These rays were so inexplicable

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scientists didn't know
what to call them.

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So they were named x-rays.

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A couple of years after that,
in Cambridge,

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it was shown that powerful
electric currents

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could produce strange streams of
tiny glowing charged particles

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that were called electrons.

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00:14:37,168 --> 00:14:40,133
And in 1896 in Paris,

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came the most significant discovery
of all.

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One that, more than any other, would
unlock the secrets of the atom.

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00:14:48,101 --> 00:14:53,284
The metal uranium was shown to emit
a strange and powerful energy

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that was named radioactivity.

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00:14:56,604 --> 00:14:59,663
It seemed straight out of
science fiction.

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Radioactive metals were warm
to touch.

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00:15:02,757 --> 00:15:04,806
They could even burn the skin.

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And the rays could pass through
solid matter as if it wasn't there.

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It truly was a marvel
of the modern age.

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00:15:13,611 --> 00:15:17,438
Rutherford was obsessed
with radioactivity.

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00:15:17,473 --> 00:15:19,841
All sorts of questions plagued him.

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00:15:19,876 --> 00:15:22,895
How was it made? Why did it come
in different forms?

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00:15:22,930 --> 00:15:25,914
How far could it travel
through a vacuum or through air?

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00:15:25,949 --> 00:15:28,798
Did it alter the materials
that it encountered?

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00:15:28,833 --> 00:15:33,953
In Manchester, together with
his assistants, Hans Geiger -
of Geiger counter fame -

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00:15:33,988 --> 00:15:38,072
and Ernest Marsden, he devised
a series of experiments

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that would probe the enigma
of radioactivity.

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1909. Manchester University.

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These are the props.

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00:15:48,309 --> 00:15:51,947
Gold leaf, beaten until it's just
a few atoms thick.

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00:15:51,982 --> 00:15:54,391
A moveable phosphorescent screen

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that flashed when struck
by radioactive waves.

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00:15:57,940 --> 00:16:01,386
And inside this box
is the star attraction.

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A tiny piece of the metal radium.

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00:16:06,143 --> 00:16:08,788
Radium is an extraordinarily
powerful source

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of the kind of radioactivity that
Rutherford had named alpha-rays.

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They weren't really rays.
They were more like a steady stream
of particles.

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Radium spat out these particles
like a machine gun
that never ran out of bullets.

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Rutherford set his students
a simple-enough task.

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Use the radium gun.

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Shoot the alpha-radioactivity
at the gold leaf

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00:16:32,811 --> 00:16:35,061
and with the phosphorescent plate,

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00:16:35,096 --> 00:16:38,695
count the number of particles
that come out the other side.

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00:16:38,730 --> 00:16:42,420
In practice, that meant
sitting alone in the dark

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00:16:42,455 --> 00:16:46,853
and counting tiny,
almost invisible, flashes
on the phosphorescent screen.

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00:16:46,888 --> 00:16:51,491
It was deeply tedious,
but Rutherford insisted
that they keep at it.

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00:16:56,290 --> 00:16:59,929
Weeks passed and the team of
researchers found nothing unusual.

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00:16:59,964 --> 00:17:03,048
The alpha particles seemed to punch
through the gold

242
00:17:03,083 --> 00:17:05,052
almost as though it wasn't there.

243
00:17:05,087 --> 00:17:09,246
Very occasionally, they would swerve
slightly as they went through.

244
00:17:09,281 --> 00:17:11,885
Hardly front-page news!

245
00:17:13,085 --> 00:17:17,804
Now comes what must be the most
consequential off-the-cuff remark

246
00:17:17,839 --> 00:17:19,660
in the history of science.

247
00:17:19,695 --> 00:17:21,447
One that changed the world.

248
00:17:21,482 --> 00:17:26,442
The story goes that Rutherford
bumped into his assistant, Geiger,
in the corridor.

249
00:17:26,477 --> 00:17:29,885
Geiger reported that so far
they'd seen nothing unusual.

250
00:17:29,920 --> 00:17:33,759
In response, Rutherford could have
easily nodded and walked on,

251
00:17:33,794 --> 00:17:35,044
but he didn't.

252
00:17:35,079 --> 00:17:38,077
He later claimed that he said what
he said at the time

253
00:17:38,112 --> 00:17:39,753
for the sheer hell of it.

254
00:17:39,788 --> 00:17:41,362
But I don't believe him.

255
00:17:41,397 --> 00:17:44,281
Rutherford had great scientific
intuition

256
00:17:44,316 --> 00:17:47,835
and I think he had a hunch that
something was about to happen.

257
00:17:47,870 --> 00:17:50,400
Here's what he said to Geiger.

258
00:17:50,435 --> 00:17:55,073
"Tell young Marsden to see if
he can detect any alpha particles

259
00:17:55,108 --> 00:17:59,270
"on the same side of the gold leaf
as the radium source."

260
00:17:59,305 --> 00:18:03,431
In other words, see if any alpha
particles are bouncing back.

261
00:18:03,466 --> 00:18:06,869
Now, it's an extraordinary
suggestion from Rutherford

262
00:18:06,904 --> 00:18:09,707
and one that he had
no logical reason to make.

263
00:18:09,742 --> 00:18:12,474
After all, Geiger and Marsden
had spent weeks

264
00:18:12,509 --> 00:18:17,067
seeing the alpha particles do
nothing but stream straight through
the gold leaf,

265
00:18:17,102 --> 00:18:19,146
almost as though it wasn't there.

266
00:18:19,181 --> 00:18:21,986
Why would any bounce back?

267
00:18:29,623 --> 00:18:33,462
But Geiger and Marsden were young
and in awe of the big New Zealander.

268
00:18:33,497 --> 00:18:37,501
They did their master's bidding
and went back into their dark lab

269
00:18:37,536 --> 00:18:39,147
and watched patiently.

270
00:18:39,182 --> 00:18:42,424
For days, they saw
absolutely nothing.

271
00:18:42,459 --> 00:18:45,185
They strained their eyes
to the point of myopia

272
00:18:45,220 --> 00:18:48,997
but didn't see a single alpha
particle bouncing back off the gold.

273
00:18:49,032 --> 00:18:52,777
It seemed that Rutherford's
suggestion really was a stupid one.

274
00:18:52,812 --> 00:18:55,777
But then the impossible happened.

275
00:19:02,774 --> 00:19:05,019
One afternoon in 1909,

276
00:19:05,054 --> 00:19:08,972
Geiger burst into Rutherford's
office with some astonishing news.

277
00:19:09,007 --> 00:19:10,936
Very, very occasionally,

278
00:19:10,971 --> 00:19:15,615
an alpha particle would indeed
ricochet back off the gold leaf.

279
00:19:15,650 --> 00:19:20,608
Geiger calculated that only one in
8,000 alpha particles would do this.

280
00:19:20,643 --> 00:19:22,493
It's a tiny percentage,

281
00:19:22,528 --> 00:19:25,212
but Rutherford's mind reeled
with the news.

282
00:19:25,247 --> 00:19:30,086
He would later say it was like
firing a shell at a piece
of tissue paper

283
00:19:30,121 --> 00:19:32,210
and have it bounce back at you.

284
00:19:32,245 --> 00:19:35,764
There and then, Rutherford knew
he'd struck physics gold.

285
00:19:35,799 --> 00:19:38,289
Although it would take him
over a year

286
00:19:38,324 --> 00:19:41,803
to fully understand why the alpha
particles would do this,

287
00:19:41,838 --> 00:19:45,281
when he did, he would show humanity
for the first time

288
00:19:45,316 --> 00:19:47,086
the inside of an atom.

289
00:19:47,121 --> 00:19:50,721
People had barely got used to
the idea that atoms existed.

290
00:19:50,756 --> 00:19:54,056
But now Rutherford knew
that this minute world,

291
00:19:54,091 --> 00:19:57,358
one tenth of a millionth
of a millimetre across,

292
00:19:57,393 --> 00:20:00,323
had its own internal structure.

293
00:20:00,358 --> 00:20:04,121
Within the atomic,
there's a sub-atomic world.

294
00:20:04,156 --> 00:20:08,316
And Ernest Rutherford believed
he knew what it looked like.

295
00:20:09,675 --> 00:20:13,514
Rutherford realised that
the bouncing alpha particle

296
00:20:13,549 --> 00:20:16,194
revealed an atom
that was totally unexpected.

297
00:20:17,192 --> 00:20:19,597
It had no familiar analogy
on Earth.

298
00:20:19,632 --> 00:20:23,071
So Rutherford looked for one
in the heavens.

299
00:20:23,106 --> 00:20:26,511
He pictured the atom
as a tiny solar system.

300
00:20:27,591 --> 00:20:31,148
Electrons, tiny particles
of negative electricity,

301
00:20:31,183 --> 00:20:34,708
orbit around a minute
positively-charged object

302
00:20:34,743 --> 00:20:36,388
called the nucleus.

303
00:20:38,547 --> 00:20:44,746
Rutherford calculated that the
nucleus was 10,000 times smaller
than the atom itself.

304
00:20:46,145 --> 00:20:50,784
That's why only one in 8,000
alpha particles bounced back.

305
00:20:50,818 --> 00:20:54,703
They're the ones that hit
the tiny nucleus by chance.

306
00:20:54,738 --> 00:20:57,901
The rest whizz by
without hitting anything.

307
00:20:59,581 --> 00:21:02,264
The first astonishing consequence
of this idea

308
00:21:02,299 --> 00:21:07,180
is that Rutherford's atom
is almost entirely empty space.

309
00:21:09,339 --> 00:21:14,857
That's why nearly all the alpha
particles race through the gold
atoms as if there's nothing there.

310
00:21:14,892 --> 00:21:17,337
There really is nothing there.

311
00:21:19,975 --> 00:21:23,174
Consider the bizarre implications
of Rutherford's atom

312
00:21:23,209 --> 00:21:25,419
by imagining it on a bigger scale.

313
00:21:25,454 --> 00:21:28,377
If the nucleus were the size
of a football,

314
00:21:28,412 --> 00:21:32,853
then the nearest electron would be
in orbit half a mile away.

315
00:21:32,888 --> 00:21:35,771
The rest of the atom would be
completely empty space.

316
00:21:36,850 --> 00:21:38,535
Let me explain it another way.

317
00:21:38,570 --> 00:21:42,528
If you were to suck out
all the empty space
from every atom in my body,

318
00:21:42,563 --> 00:21:46,769
then I would shrink down to a size
smaller than a grain of salt.

319
00:21:46,804 --> 00:21:49,052
Of course, I'd still weigh the same.

320
00:21:49,087 --> 00:21:52,486
If you did the same thing
to the entire human race,

321
00:21:52,521 --> 00:21:54,531
then all six billion of us

322
00:21:54,566 --> 00:21:57,445
would fit inside a single apple!

323
00:21:58,525 --> 00:22:02,443
The atom was unlike anything
we had ever encountered before.

324
00:22:02,478 --> 00:22:05,883
And it would only get stranger
and stranger!

325
00:22:06,962 --> 00:22:10,361
Almost immediately,
a problem surfaced,

326
00:22:10,396 --> 00:22:11,926
and it was a big one.

327
00:22:11,961 --> 00:22:15,080
According to the tried and trusted
science of the time,

328
00:22:15,115 --> 00:22:17,364
the electrons should lose
their energy,

329
00:22:17,399 --> 00:22:19,918
run out of speed
and spiral into the nucleus

330
00:22:19,953 --> 00:22:21,718
in less than the blink of an eye.

331
00:22:22,797 --> 00:22:26,616
Rutherford's atom contradicted
the known laws of science.

332
00:22:26,651 --> 00:22:30,284
The atom didn't care that it defied
scientific convention.

333
00:22:30,319 --> 00:22:34,015
It's almost entirely empty space
and it's gonna stay that way.

334
00:22:34,050 --> 00:22:37,713
I show no signs of shrinking down
to the size of a grain of salt.

335
00:22:37,748 --> 00:22:40,433
And the Earth is, well,
the size of the Earth.

336
00:22:40,468 --> 00:22:42,631
It's not getting smaller.

337
00:22:46,791 --> 00:22:49,516
It's worth remembering
the time scale.

338
00:22:49,551 --> 00:22:53,869
In six short years
from 1905 through to 1911,

339
00:22:53,904 --> 00:22:56,672
the atom had announced its existence

340
00:22:56,707 --> 00:23:00,007
with the fact that it was
unimaginably small.

341
00:23:00,042 --> 00:23:03,234
Then it revealed that it was mainly
empty space.

342
00:23:03,269 --> 00:23:06,426
And now it didn't obey
the known laws of physics.

343
00:23:07,506 --> 00:23:11,624
Not surprisingly, all the
established scientists of the day,

344
00:23:11,659 --> 00:23:13,509
including Einstein, were baffled.

345
00:23:13,544 --> 00:23:17,303
Scientific ideas they'd put
their faith in all their lives

346
00:23:17,338 --> 00:23:20,262
had failed completely
to explain the atom.

347
00:23:21,341 --> 00:23:24,700
The atom now required
a new generation of scientists

348
00:23:24,735 --> 00:23:27,356
to follow in Rutherford's footsteps.

349
00:23:27,391 --> 00:23:29,944
Bold, brilliant and above all,
young.

350
00:23:29,979 --> 00:23:33,578
It was crucial they had no loyalty
or attachment

351
00:23:33,613 --> 00:23:36,297
to ideas held by
previous generations.

352
00:23:51,252 --> 00:23:54,331
One of the first of this new breed
was Niels Bohr.

353
00:23:55,292 --> 00:23:57,392
He sailed from Denmark in 1911

354
00:23:57,427 --> 00:23:59,491
and made his way to English soil.

355
00:24:00,611 --> 00:24:03,174
Having finished his studies
in Copenhagen,

356
00:24:03,209 --> 00:24:07,413
Bohr decided to move abroad and be
at the centre of the new physics.

357
00:24:07,448 --> 00:24:13,647
The trail led him to Britain,
Manchester University
and Ernest Rutherford.

358
00:24:19,006 --> 00:24:20,849
Bohr had a brilliant mind,

359
00:24:20,884 --> 00:24:24,962
at times hampered by a pathological
obsession with detail.

360
00:24:24,997 --> 00:24:28,839
In fact, the story goes that Bohr
taught himself English

361
00:24:28,874 --> 00:24:32,681
by reading Dickens' Pickwick Papers
over and over again.

362
00:24:33,800 --> 00:24:37,679
Bohr was so captivated by
Rutherford's picture of the atom

363
00:24:37,714 --> 00:24:40,519
that he made it his mission
to solve the puzzles

364
00:24:40,554 --> 00:24:43,124
of why the atom didn't collapse

365
00:24:43,159 --> 00:24:46,398
and why there was
so much empty space.

366
00:24:48,596 --> 00:24:51,516
As one of the new breed
of theoretical physicists,

367
00:24:51,551 --> 00:24:53,359
he was fearless in his thinking

368
00:24:53,394 --> 00:24:57,754
and was prepared to abandon
common sense and human intuition

369
00:24:57,789 --> 00:24:59,691
to find an explanation.

370
00:24:59,726 --> 00:25:01,559
So, in a leap of genius,

371
00:25:01,594 --> 00:25:05,072
he started to look for clues
about the atom's structure

372
00:25:05,107 --> 00:25:07,357
not by looking at matter

373
00:25:07,392 --> 00:25:12,550
but by examining the mysterious
and wonderful nature of light.

374
00:25:20,548 --> 00:25:23,067
Now, atoms and light
are clearly connected.

375
00:25:23,102 --> 00:25:25,552
Most substances glow
when they're heated.

376
00:25:25,587 --> 00:25:29,070
For centuries people had realised
that different substances

377
00:25:29,105 --> 00:25:33,323
glow with their own distinctive
colours, a bit like a signature.

378
00:25:33,358 --> 00:25:37,542
So the green of copper, the yellow
of sodium and the red of lithium.

379
00:25:38,623 --> 00:25:42,941
These colours associated with
different substances
are called "spectra".

380
00:25:42,976 --> 00:25:44,705
And Bohr's great insight

381
00:25:44,740 --> 00:25:50,060
was to realise that spectra are
telling us something about the inner
structure of the atom,

382
00:25:50,095 --> 00:25:53,139
that they could explain
all that empty space.

383
00:25:54,218 --> 00:25:58,382
Bohr's idea was to take Rutherford's
solar system model of the atom

384
00:25:58,417 --> 00:26:03,295
and replace it with something
that's almost impossible
to imagine or visualise.

385
00:26:03,330 --> 00:26:08,174
So sensible ideas like empty space
and particles moving around orbits
fade away.

386
00:26:08,209 --> 00:26:10,180
They're replaced with something

387
00:26:10,215 --> 00:26:15,773
that is one of the most
misunderstood and misused concepts
in the whole of science -

388
00:26:15,808 --> 00:26:17,576
the quantum jump.

389
00:26:17,611 --> 00:26:20,411
Now, it takes most working
physicists many years

390
00:26:20,446 --> 00:26:22,496
to come to terms with quantum jumps.

391
00:26:22,531 --> 00:26:25,729
Bohr himself said that if
you think you've understood it,

392
00:26:25,764 --> 00:26:28,089
then you haven't thought
about it enough.

393
00:26:28,124 --> 00:26:29,933
So I'm going to take a deep breath

394
00:26:29,968 --> 00:26:32,533
and in under 30 seconds try
and explain to you

395
00:26:32,568 --> 00:26:36,047
one of the most complicated concepts
in the whole of science

396
00:26:36,082 --> 00:26:39,726
but one that underpins
the entire universe.

397
00:26:46,484 --> 00:26:49,683
Bohr described the atom
not as a solar system

398
00:26:49,718 --> 00:26:52,087
but as a multi-storey building.

399
00:26:52,122 --> 00:26:54,821
The ground floor is where
the nucleus lives,

400
00:26:54,856 --> 00:26:57,486
with the electrons occupying
the floors above.

401
00:26:57,521 --> 00:27:01,799
Mysterious laws mean the electrons
can only live ON the floors,

402
00:27:01,834 --> 00:27:03,163
never in-between.

403
00:27:03,198 --> 00:27:05,883
Other mysterious laws
mean that sometimes

404
00:27:05,918 --> 00:27:09,397
they can instantaneously jump
from one floor to another.

405
00:27:10,477 --> 00:27:12,921
These are what we call
quantum jumps.

406
00:27:12,956 --> 00:27:17,000
Now, Bohr had absolutely no idea
what these laws were.

407
00:27:17,035 --> 00:27:21,555
But thinking like this allowed him
to make a startling prediction.

408
00:27:21,590 --> 00:27:25,632
When an electron jumps from
a higher floor to a lower one,

409
00:27:25,667 --> 00:27:27,469
it gives off light.

410
00:27:27,504 --> 00:27:29,237
More significantly,

411
00:27:29,272 --> 00:27:35,230
the colour of the light depends on
how big or small the quantum jump
the electron makes.

412
00:27:35,265 --> 00:27:40,269
So an electron jumping from the
third floor to the second floor

413
00:27:40,304 --> 00:27:42,313
might give off red light.

414
00:27:42,348 --> 00:27:46,146
And an electron jumping from the
tenth floor to the second floor,

415
00:27:46,181 --> 00:27:47,466
blue light.

416
00:27:52,186 --> 00:27:54,349
To test his new theory,

417
00:27:54,384 --> 00:27:57,063
Bohr used it to make a prediction.

418
00:27:58,064 --> 00:28:02,502
Could it explain
the mysterious signature
in the spectrum of hydrogen?

419
00:28:02,537 --> 00:28:05,199
After months of calculating
furiously,

420
00:28:05,234 --> 00:28:07,860
he finally came up with the result.

421
00:28:08,940 --> 00:28:11,900
And his prediction
was surprisingly accurate.

422
00:28:12,943 --> 00:28:14,824
For the first time ever,

423
00:28:14,859 --> 00:28:17,578
it looked like the spectrum
could be explained.

424
00:28:18,538 --> 00:28:22,097
And back in 1913, that was big news.

425
00:28:24,696 --> 00:28:30,095
But Bohr's new idea rested on
a single seriously-controversial
supposition.

426
00:28:30,130 --> 00:28:32,659
Why should the electrons
and the atom

427
00:28:32,694 --> 00:28:35,819
behave as though they were
in a multi-storey building?

428
00:28:35,854 --> 00:28:40,332
And why should they magically
perform quantum jumps
from one storey to another?

429
00:28:40,367 --> 00:28:43,748
There was no precedent for it
anywhere else in science.

430
00:28:43,783 --> 00:28:47,131
When one physicist claimed
that the jumps were nonsense,

431
00:28:47,166 --> 00:28:49,927
Bohr replied,
"Yes, you're completely right!

432
00:28:49,962 --> 00:28:52,689
"But that doesn't prove
the jumps don't happen,

433
00:28:52,724 --> 00:28:55,332
"only that you cannot
visualise them."

434
00:28:55,367 --> 00:29:00,570
But not being able to visualise
things seemed to go against
the whole purpose of science.

435
00:29:00,605 --> 00:29:06,284
Older scientists in particular
felt that science was supposed to
be about understanding the world,

436
00:29:06,319 --> 00:29:10,660
not about making up arbitrary rules
that seem to fit the data.

437
00:29:10,695 --> 00:29:15,002
Conflict between the two generations
of scientists was inevitable.

438
00:29:18,960 --> 00:29:22,644
Bohr's weird new atom
and his crazy quantum jumps

439
00:29:22,679 --> 00:29:26,959
were a shot across the bow
of traditional classical science

440
00:29:26,994 --> 00:29:29,878
and the old school reacted angrily.

441
00:29:29,913 --> 00:29:32,003
Leading the traditionalists

442
00:29:32,038 --> 00:29:34,877
was giant of the physics world
Albert Einstein.

443
00:29:34,912 --> 00:29:37,281
He hated Bohr's ideas

444
00:29:37,316 --> 00:29:39,479
and he was going to fight them.

445
00:29:39,514 --> 00:29:43,314
Anything to save the world of order
and common sense

446
00:29:43,349 --> 00:29:45,794
from this assault by madness.

447
00:29:48,193 --> 00:29:52,877
Bohr, though, was undeterred
and as the 1920s dawned,

448
00:29:52,912 --> 00:29:57,629
the battle lines for one of the
greatest conflicts in all science
were drawn.

449
00:29:58,509 --> 00:30:01,673
Einstein spent much
of the early 1920s

450
00:30:01,708 --> 00:30:05,067
arguing against Niels Bohr,
with mixed success.

451
00:30:05,102 --> 00:30:08,551
His celebrity status gave him power

452
00:30:08,586 --> 00:30:12,225
so when he said he loathed ideas
like quantum jumping

453
00:30:12,260 --> 00:30:15,864
that seemed plucked out of thin air,
people listened.

454
00:30:15,899 --> 00:30:19,668
Then in 1925, a letter landed
on his desk

455
00:30:19,703 --> 00:30:22,388
that turned out to be manna
from physics heaven.

456
00:30:22,423 --> 00:30:26,547
Here finally was an idea
that described the atomic world

457
00:30:26,582 --> 00:30:30,301
with the tried and trusted
principles of traditional science.

458
00:30:30,336 --> 00:30:32,985
Einstein was ecstatic.
He told friends,

459
00:30:33,020 --> 00:30:37,498
"Finally, a veil has been lifted
on how the universe works."

460
00:30:37,533 --> 00:30:41,977
The letter came with the PhD thesis
of a young Frenchman.

461
00:30:42,012 --> 00:30:45,777
And behind it lay
an extraordinary tale.

462
00:31:00,092 --> 00:31:03,892
During the First World War, a young
French student spent his time

463
00:31:03,927 --> 00:31:07,051
at the top of the Eiffel Tower,
as a radio operator.

464
00:31:07,086 --> 00:31:10,054
His name was Prince Louis
de Broglie.

465
00:31:10,089 --> 00:31:14,534
He came from French aristocracy
but he was devoted to physics.

466
00:31:14,569 --> 00:31:19,287
He was so wealthy he built his own
laboratory off the Champs-Elysees.

467
00:31:21,167 --> 00:31:27,604
After the war, De Broglie became
gripped by the mysteries and
controversies surrounding the atom.

468
00:31:27,639 --> 00:31:31,164
And then his war-time experience
as a radio operator

469
00:31:31,199 --> 00:31:33,768
gave him an intriguing idea.

470
00:31:33,803 --> 00:31:37,527
Perhaps radio waves
could explain the atom.

471
00:31:37,562 --> 00:31:41,601
Although invisible, they behave
very much like water waves.

472
00:31:43,841 --> 00:31:46,800
Like ripples spreading out
across a pond,

473
00:31:46,835 --> 00:31:49,724
radio waves obeyed
mathematical equations

474
00:31:49,759 --> 00:31:54,437
that were reliable
and well understood and had been
worked out decades earlier.

475
00:31:54,472 --> 00:31:58,555
So for his PhD thesis, De Broglie
imagined a kind of radio wave

476
00:31:58,590 --> 00:32:00,796
pushing the electron
around the atom.

477
00:32:00,831 --> 00:32:03,399
He called it a pilot wave.

478
00:32:03,434 --> 00:32:08,193
This pilot wave would also hold
the electron tightly in its orbit,

479
00:32:08,228 --> 00:32:10,318
stopping the atom from collapsing.

480
00:32:10,353 --> 00:32:14,132
There were no strange instant
quantum jumps,

481
00:32:14,167 --> 00:32:17,876
just intuitive common sense
familiar waves.

482
00:32:17,911 --> 00:32:21,548
The relief felt by the
traditionalists was palpable.

483
00:32:21,583 --> 00:32:24,309
"The atom is all about waves",
they cried,

484
00:32:24,344 --> 00:32:26,433
and we understand what waves are.

485
00:32:26,468 --> 00:32:31,271
Einstein and the traditionalists
felt that victory was within
their grasp.

486
00:32:31,306 --> 00:32:38,346
They believed they had Bohr and the
new atomic science with its crazy
quantum jumps on the ropes.

487
00:32:38,381 --> 00:32:42,303
But Niels Bohr wasn't the kind
of man to roll over and give up.

488
00:32:44,342 --> 00:32:47,382
Even though he'd explained
the spectrum of hydrogen,

489
00:32:47,417 --> 00:32:49,506
with his new revolutionary theory,

490
00:32:49,541 --> 00:32:53,340
he had nothing like Einstein's
worldwide recognition.

491
00:32:53,375 --> 00:32:56,185
But in his native Denmark,

492
00:32:56,220 --> 00:32:58,458
his theory was enough
to make him a star.

493
00:32:59,539 --> 00:33:04,496
Flushed with success, Niels Bohr
returned to Copenhagen in 1916,
a conquering hero.

494
00:33:04,531 --> 00:33:07,022
His new-found celebrity status

495
00:33:07,057 --> 00:33:10,175
meant he found it very easy
to raise money for research.

496
00:33:10,210 --> 00:33:13,414
In fact, it was funding
from the Carlsberg brewery

497
00:33:13,449 --> 00:33:16,619
that helped build
his new research institute.

498
00:33:16,654 --> 00:33:20,812
You could say it was beer
that helped us understand
the secrets of the atom!

499
00:33:22,252 --> 00:33:28,010
This institute became a leading
centre for research in theoretical
physics that survives to this day.

500
00:33:28,045 --> 00:33:32,486
I came here in the early 1990s to
carry out research on nuclear halos.

501
00:33:32,521 --> 00:33:36,928
And even then, this was the place
to be to do that sort of research.

502
00:33:39,087 --> 00:33:42,291
This is the main lecture room
in the Niels Bohr Institute.

503
00:33:42,326 --> 00:33:46,525
It doesn't look very impressive as
far as lecture halls are concerned,

504
00:33:46,560 --> 00:33:50,020
but it's full of great
quirky details.

505
00:33:50,055 --> 00:33:53,448
I remember lecturing here
a few years back

506
00:33:53,483 --> 00:34:00,521
and I know that Niels Bohr himself
designed some of the machinery that
raised and lowered blackboards.

507
00:34:00,556 --> 00:34:05,800
There's an incredible series
of boards,

508
00:34:05,835 --> 00:34:08,365
one underneath the other,

509
00:34:08,400 --> 00:34:12,078
of boards filled with his formulae

510
00:34:13,238 --> 00:34:17,156
so that he wouldn't ever need
to rub out any of his equations.

511
00:34:17,191 --> 00:34:19,556
It sort of goes on and on.

512
00:34:24,835 --> 00:34:29,013
Bohr's reputation for radical
and unconventional ideas

513
00:34:29,048 --> 00:34:33,191
made Copenhagen a magnet for young,
ambitious physicists.

514
00:34:33,226 --> 00:34:35,877
They were keen to make their mark

515
00:34:35,912 --> 00:34:39,031
and be a part of Bohr's
innovative new science,

516
00:34:39,066 --> 00:34:42,150
which came to be known as
quantum mechanics.

517
00:34:44,909 --> 00:34:50,348
In 1924, in defiance of Einstein and
De Broglie's traditional explanation

518
00:34:50,383 --> 00:34:54,227
of the atom, the radicals revealed
a new theory,

519
00:34:54,262 --> 00:34:56,591
based on Bohr's quantum jumps.

520
00:34:56,626 --> 00:35:01,384
It was to be their most ambitious
and most controversial idea yet.

521
00:35:04,863 --> 00:35:10,421
It was first developed by Wolfgang
Pauli, one of Bohr's rising stars.

522
00:35:10,456 --> 00:35:14,746
Pauli took Bohr's bizarre
"quantum jumps" idea

523
00:35:14,781 --> 00:35:19,219
and turned it into one of
the most important concepts
in the whole of science.

524
00:35:19,254 --> 00:35:21,304
And I don't say that lightly.

525
00:35:21,339 --> 00:35:27,056
Pauli's idea goes by the uninspiring
title of the Exclusion Principle.

526
00:35:27,091 --> 00:35:30,976
But I think a better title would be
"God's best-kept secret"

527
00:35:31,011 --> 00:35:35,815
because it explains
the vast variety of Creation.

528
00:35:39,253 --> 00:35:42,453
The question Pauli's idea
tried to answer was this.

529
00:35:43,532 --> 00:35:46,618
Every atom is made of
the same simple components.

530
00:35:46,653 --> 00:35:50,576
So why do they appear to us
in so many different guises?

531
00:35:50,611 --> 00:35:55,209
In such a rich variety of colours,
textures and chemical properties?

532
00:35:55,244 --> 00:35:58,253
For instance, gold and mercury.

533
00:35:58,288 --> 00:36:01,853
Two very different elements.
Gold is solid,

534
00:36:01,888 --> 00:36:06,046
mercury is liquid. Gold is inert,
mercury is highly toxic.

535
00:36:06,081 --> 00:36:09,885
And yet they differ
by just one electron.

536
00:36:09,920 --> 00:36:12,724
Gold has 79 and mercury has 80.

537
00:36:14,043 --> 00:36:18,242
So how does one tiny electron
make all that difference?

538
00:36:19,242 --> 00:36:23,401
What Pauli did was pluck another
quantum rule out of thin air.

539
00:36:23,436 --> 00:36:25,797
Remember Bohr's multi-storey atom?

540
00:36:25,832 --> 00:36:28,124
The nucleus is the ground floor

541
00:36:28,159 --> 00:36:31,839
with the electrons progressively
filling the floors above.

542
00:36:31,874 --> 00:36:35,483
Pauli said there's another quantum
rule which states crudely

543
00:36:35,518 --> 00:36:40,197
that each floor can only accommodate
a fixed number of electrons.

544
00:36:40,232 --> 00:36:43,513
So if we want to add
another electron to the atom,

545
00:36:43,548 --> 00:36:46,795
it has to check for a vacancy
in the top floor.

546
00:36:46,830 --> 00:36:48,680
And if that floor is full,

547
00:36:48,715 --> 00:36:52,274
another floor or shell is created
above it for the electron.

548
00:36:52,309 --> 00:36:55,316
In this way, a single electron

549
00:36:55,351 --> 00:36:58,195
can radically change the shape
of the atom

550
00:36:58,230 --> 00:37:01,031
and this, in turn,
affects how the atom behaves

551
00:37:01,066 --> 00:37:03,927
and how it fits together
with other atoms.

552
00:37:03,962 --> 00:37:06,754
So Pauli's principle
really is the basis

553
00:37:06,789 --> 00:37:11,547
upon which the whole of chemistry,
and ultimately biology, rests.

554
00:37:15,027 --> 00:37:20,465
Pauli's Exclusion Principle
was a major breakthrough
for Bohr's quantum mechanics.

555
00:37:21,504 --> 00:37:25,223
For the first time, it seemed
to offer us a real understanding

556
00:37:25,258 --> 00:37:28,144
of the incredible variety
in the world around us

557
00:37:28,179 --> 00:37:30,142
and possibly life itself.

558
00:37:31,582 --> 00:37:35,945
Its success blew a large hole
in Einstein's defence
of the old physics.

559
00:37:35,980 --> 00:37:41,858
And like quantum jumping, it was
straight out of the weird rule book
of atomic physics.

560
00:37:41,894 --> 00:37:47,137
Pauli didn't explain why
his principle worked.
He said it just did.

561
00:37:53,096 --> 00:37:55,980
Einstein and the traditionalists
hated it.

562
00:37:56,015 --> 00:38:00,454
For them, this sounded like
arrogant, unscientific nonsense.

563
00:38:00,489 --> 00:38:03,750
But they needed to hit back,
and hit back hard.

564
00:38:03,785 --> 00:38:07,012
So far, the debates
about the new atomic physics

565
00:38:07,047 --> 00:38:09,496
had been polite and gentlemanly.

566
00:38:09,531 --> 00:38:13,570
Now the two sides wheeled out
their biggest guns.

567
00:38:13,605 --> 00:38:16,014
Two of the greatest names
in physics.

568
00:38:16,049 --> 00:38:20,689
They were two very contrasting
characters who loathed each other.

569
00:38:23,726 --> 00:38:26,093
For the new revolutionary science

570
00:38:26,128 --> 00:38:28,926
was a buttoned-up,
uber-competitive German

571
00:38:28,961 --> 00:38:30,646
called Werner Heisenberg.

572
00:38:31,685 --> 00:38:35,564
For the conservatives was
a debonair, Byronesque Austrian

573
00:38:35,599 --> 00:38:37,443
called Irwin Schroedinger.

574
00:38:50,360 --> 00:38:51,724
Irwin Schroedinger,

575
00:38:51,759 --> 00:38:55,324
passionate and poetic,
a philosopher and a romantic.

576
00:38:55,359 --> 00:38:59,238
He wrote books on the Ancient
Greeks, on philosophy, on religion,

577
00:38:59,273 --> 00:39:01,282
he was influenced by Hinduism.

578
00:39:01,317 --> 00:39:03,835
He was also a very flamboyant
character,

579
00:39:03,870 --> 00:39:05,921
cool, suave, sophisticated,

580
00:39:05,956 --> 00:39:08,796
a dapper dresser
and a big hit with the ladies.

581
00:39:15,352 --> 00:39:18,316
Schroedinger's promiscuity
was legendary.

582
00:39:18,351 --> 00:39:21,710
He had a string of girlfriends
throughout his married life,

583
00:39:21,745 --> 00:39:23,312
some much younger than him.

584
00:39:24,351 --> 00:39:28,115
In 1925, 38-year-old Schroedinger

585
00:39:28,150 --> 00:39:31,548
stayed at the Alpine resort of Arosa
in Switzerland

586
00:39:31,583 --> 00:39:34,625
for a secret liaison
with an old girlfriend

587
00:39:34,660 --> 00:39:37,632
whose identity remains a mystery
to this day.

588
00:39:37,667 --> 00:39:43,265
But their passion proved to be
the catalyst for Schroedinger's
creative genius.

589
00:39:46,983 --> 00:39:51,903
Another physicist said of
Schroedinger's week of
sexually-inspired physics,

590
00:39:51,938 --> 00:39:54,307
"He had two tasks that week.

591
00:39:54,342 --> 00:39:58,101
"Satisfy a woman and solve
the riddle of the atom.

592
00:39:58,136 --> 00:40:00,700
"Fortunately, he was up to both."

593
00:40:01,940 --> 00:40:07,819
He took De Broglie's idea
of mysterious pilot waves guiding
electrons around an atom

594
00:40:07,854 --> 00:40:10,102
one crucial step further.

595
00:40:10,137 --> 00:40:14,776
He argued that the electron
actually was a wave of energy

596
00:40:14,811 --> 00:40:19,414
vibrating so fast it looked like
a cloud around the atom,

597
00:40:19,449 --> 00:40:22,735
a cloud-like wave of pure energy.

598
00:40:23,653 --> 00:40:27,572
What's more, he came up with
a powerful new equation

599
00:40:27,607 --> 00:40:30,251
which completely described
this wave

600
00:40:30,286 --> 00:40:33,228
and so described the whole atom

601
00:40:33,263 --> 00:40:36,136
in terms of traditional physics.

602
00:40:36,171 --> 00:40:40,848
The equation he came up with we now
call Schroedinger's wave equation.

603
00:40:41,929 --> 00:40:43,728
It's incredibly powerful.

604
00:40:43,763 --> 00:40:45,493
What's unique about it

605
00:40:45,528 --> 00:40:48,851
is that it features a new quantity
called the wave function

606
00:40:48,886 --> 00:40:53,886
which Schroedinger claimed
completely described the behaviour
of the sub-atomic world.

607
00:41:03,842 --> 00:41:07,901
Schroedinger's equation and
the picture of the atom it painted,

608
00:41:07,936 --> 00:41:11,960
created during a sexually-charged
holiday in the Swiss Alps,

609
00:41:11,995 --> 00:41:15,959
once again allowed scientists
to visualise the atom

610
00:41:15,994 --> 00:41:17,643
in simple terms.

611
00:41:17,678 --> 00:41:21,718
It's hard to over-estimate the
relief Schroedinger's idea brought

612
00:41:21,753 --> 00:41:24,242
to the traditional physics
community.

613
00:41:24,277 --> 00:41:27,115
Strange though his picture
of the atom was,

614
00:41:27,150 --> 00:41:29,691
at least it was a picture

615
00:41:29,726 --> 00:41:32,198
and scientists love pictures.

616
00:41:32,233 --> 00:41:34,555
They allowed them to use
their intuition.

617
00:41:40,512 --> 00:41:43,236
But there was still a deep nagging
problem,

618
00:41:43,271 --> 00:41:47,554
one that the radicals felt
Schroedinger just couldn't
reconcile.

619
00:41:47,589 --> 00:41:54,109
His new theory still couldn't
account for Bohr's strange,
instantaneous quantum jumps.

620
00:41:54,144 --> 00:41:57,707
The time had come for the radicals
to hit back.

621
00:42:06,304 --> 00:42:08,230
In the summer of the same year,

622
00:42:08,265 --> 00:42:11,788
one of Niels Bohr's protegees,
Werner Heisenberg,

623
00:42:11,823 --> 00:42:15,621
was travelling to an obscure island
off the north coast of Germany.

624
00:42:16,861 --> 00:42:21,861
He was fiercely competitive
and took Schroedinger's ideas
as a personal affront.

625
00:42:22,701 --> 00:42:26,619
He felt strongly that
the strangeness of the instant
quantum jumps

626
00:42:26,654 --> 00:42:29,658
was actually the key
to understanding the atom.

627
00:42:30,777 --> 00:42:33,582
He thought the atom was so unique
and unusual,

628
00:42:33,617 --> 00:42:36,696
it shouldn't be compromised
through a simple analogy

629
00:42:36,731 --> 00:42:38,420
like a wave or an orbit,

630
00:42:38,455 --> 00:42:40,980
or even a multi-storey building.

631
00:42:41,015 --> 00:42:45,774
He believed it was time to give up
any picture of the atom at all.

632
00:42:49,813 --> 00:42:54,791
Werner Heisenberg, one of the true
geniuses of the 20th century.

633
00:42:54,826 --> 00:42:59,770
Young, athletic, a great mountain
climber, an excellent pianist,

634
00:42:59,805 --> 00:43:02,015
he was also an exceptional student.

635
00:43:02,050 --> 00:43:06,129
At the age of just 20, he was well
on his way to finishing his PhD

636
00:43:06,164 --> 00:43:09,566
and being courted by the great
universities across Europe.

637
00:43:09,601 --> 00:43:12,211
Now, in the summer of 1925,

638
00:43:12,246 --> 00:43:15,565
he was suffering from a particularly
bad bout of hay fever.

639
00:43:15,600 --> 00:43:19,004
His face was swollen up
almost beyond recognition.

640
00:43:19,039 --> 00:43:22,048
He decided to escape alone, here,

641
00:43:22,083 --> 00:43:26,607
to this beautiful but isolated
island of Helgeland.

642
00:43:26,642 --> 00:43:31,241
He walked along the beaches,
he swam, he climbed the rocks

643
00:43:31,276 --> 00:43:33,040
and he pondered.

644
00:43:39,119 --> 00:43:41,642
Ever since he'd encountered
atomic physics,

645
00:43:41,677 --> 00:43:46,556
Heisenberg felt in his bones
that all human attempts
to visualise the atom,

646
00:43:46,591 --> 00:43:49,835
to model it with familiar images,
would always fail.

647
00:43:50,915 --> 00:43:53,874
The atom, he believed,
was too capricious,

648
00:43:53,909 --> 00:43:56,833
too strange to ever be explained
that simply.

649
00:43:57,753 --> 00:44:00,972
So he decided to abandon
all pictures of it

650
00:44:01,007 --> 00:44:04,191
and describe it using
pure mathematics alone.

651
00:44:05,671 --> 00:44:11,229
But as he pondered, he realised the
atom didn't just defy visualisation,

652
00:44:11,264 --> 00:44:14,989
it even defied
traditional mathematics.

653
00:44:22,307 --> 00:44:24,751
It was while he was here
on Helgeland

654
00:44:24,786 --> 00:44:28,111
that Heisenberg had
an incredible revelation.

655
00:44:28,146 --> 00:44:32,384
He realised that in order
to describe certain properties
of atoms,

656
00:44:32,419 --> 00:44:34,982
He had to use a strange new type
of mathematics.

657
00:44:36,022 --> 00:44:42,021
It seems that certain properties
like where an electron is at a given
time and how fast it's moving,

658
00:44:42,056 --> 00:44:46,419
when multiplied together, the order
in which you multiply them matters.

659
00:44:46,454 --> 00:44:47,944
Let me try and explain.

660
00:44:47,979 --> 00:44:52,378
If we multiply two numbers together,
it doesn't matter which order
we do it in.

661
00:44:52,413 --> 00:44:55,977
So three times four is clearly
the same as four times three.

662
00:44:56,012 --> 00:44:58,061
But when it came to atoms,

663
00:44:58,096 --> 00:45:04,214
Heisenberg realised that the order
in which he multiplied quantities
together gave a different answer.

664
00:45:04,249 --> 00:45:06,578
This quickly led him
to other discoveries

665
00:45:06,613 --> 00:45:09,872
and he was convinced that
he'd cracked a code in the atom,

666
00:45:09,907 --> 00:45:13,132
that he'd somehow found
the hidden mathematics within.

667
00:45:13,167 --> 00:45:15,769
He was so excited.
He was also very scared.

668
00:45:15,804 --> 00:45:18,371
That night, he climbed
to the top of a rock

669
00:45:18,406 --> 00:45:20,334
and sat there waiting till dawn.

670
00:45:20,369 --> 00:45:22,929
He called it his
"Night of Helgeland".

671
00:45:23,968 --> 00:45:28,128
Back at university in Goettingen, he
told his colleague Max Born about it

672
00:45:28,163 --> 00:45:31,687
and they then worked together
intensely for several months

673
00:45:31,721 --> 00:45:35,463
developing a whole new theory
of the atom.

674
00:45:35,498 --> 00:45:39,205
A theory that today we call
matrix mechanics.

675
00:45:44,523 --> 00:45:48,162
Matrix mechanics uses complex arrays
of numbers,

676
00:45:48,197 --> 00:45:50,258
rather like a spreadsheet.

677
00:45:50,293 --> 00:45:52,285
By manipulating these arrays,

678
00:45:52,320 --> 00:45:56,400
Heisenberg and his mentor
the brilliant physicist Max Born

679
00:45:56,435 --> 00:45:59,279
could accurately predict
atomic behaviour.

680
00:46:00,318 --> 00:46:02,758
But for Einstein
and the traditionalists,

681
00:46:02,793 --> 00:46:05,643
this was pure scientific heresy.

682
00:46:05,678 --> 00:46:09,596
An atom can't actually be
a matrix of numbers.

683
00:46:09,631 --> 00:46:12,556
Surely we're made of atoms,
not numbers?

684
00:46:17,195 --> 00:46:19,598
Back in Copenhagen,

685
00:46:19,633 --> 00:46:22,638
Bohr and Pauli were thrilled with
matrix mechanics.

686
00:46:22,673 --> 00:46:26,151
So what if we couldn't imagine
the atom as a physical object?

687
00:46:26,186 --> 00:46:29,195
They exalted in the purity
of the mathematics

688
00:46:29,230 --> 00:46:34,794
and launched into vicious attacks
against Schroedinger's
vulgar sensual waves.

689
00:46:34,829 --> 00:46:40,187
Heisenberg wrote, "The more
I reflect on the physical portion
of Schroedinger's equation,

690
00:46:40,222 --> 00:46:42,245
"the more disgusting I find it.

691
00:46:42,280 --> 00:46:44,232
"In fact, it's just bullshit."

692
00:46:44,267 --> 00:46:47,350
But Schroedinger was equally
scathing of Heisenberg,

693
00:46:47,385 --> 00:46:51,864
saying he was repelled by his
methods and found his mathematics
monstrous.

694
00:47:00,142 --> 00:47:06,059
In Munich in 1926, their enmity
began to reach boiling point.

695
00:47:06,094 --> 00:47:09,504
Schroedinger was to give a lecture
on his wave equation.

696
00:47:09,539 --> 00:47:14,258
Heisenberg scraped together
the money to travel to Munich
for the lecture.

697
00:47:14,293 --> 00:47:17,257
To finally come face to face
with his rival.

698
00:47:21,096 --> 00:47:24,976
What was at stake was more than
just Heisenberg's reputation.

699
00:47:25,011 --> 00:47:28,094
He believed Schroedinger's
simplistic approach

700
00:47:28,129 --> 00:47:31,459
wasn't just misguided,
but totally wrong.

701
00:47:31,494 --> 00:47:36,133
And his intention
was nothing less than
to destroy Schroedinger's theory.

702
00:47:40,571 --> 00:47:44,009
Schroedinger delivers his lecture
on the new wave mechanics

703
00:47:44,044 --> 00:47:47,066
to a packed audience.
Standing room only.

704
00:47:47,101 --> 00:47:50,089
He writes down
his new wave equation.

705
00:48:01,844 --> 00:48:07,403
To Schroedinger, this describes
a real physical picture of the atom.

706
00:48:07,438 --> 00:48:11,682
with electrons as waves
surrounding the atomic nucleus.

707
00:48:11,717 --> 00:48:14,800
24-year-old Werner Heisenberg
is in the audience.

708
00:48:14,835 --> 00:48:16,725
He can hardly contain himself.

709
00:48:16,760 --> 00:48:22,320
At the end of the lecture he
stands up and delivers a monologue
attacking Schroedinger's approach.

710
00:48:22,355 --> 00:48:25,519
For Heisenberg it's impossible to
ever have a picture

711
00:48:25,554 --> 00:48:27,483
of what the atom is really like.

712
00:48:27,518 --> 00:48:29,802
The audience is on
Schroedinger's side.

713
00:48:29,837 --> 00:48:33,375
They much prefer his simple
physical interpretation

714
00:48:33,410 --> 00:48:36,880
to Heisenberg's abstract,
complicated mathematics.

715
00:48:36,915 --> 00:48:40,393
Heisenberg is booed. He's told
to sit down and be quiet.

716
00:48:40,428 --> 00:48:43,392
He leaves the lecture sad
and depressed.

717
00:48:47,831 --> 00:48:52,990
Heisenberg returned to Copenhagen
with his confidence severely dented.

718
00:48:53,025 --> 00:48:58,829
There at the institute, he and Bohr
reached their darkest moment.

719
00:48:58,864 --> 00:49:03,152
Almost all of the scientific
community was against them.

720
00:49:03,187 --> 00:49:08,986
They felt isolated, desperate.
Their backs were against the wall.

721
00:49:10,825 --> 00:49:16,344
Despite this, they stubbornly
refused to give up
their controversial theory.

722
00:49:18,944 --> 00:49:22,303
This attic room was Heisenberg's
study back in 1926.

723
00:49:23,382 --> 00:49:26,145
Bohr would come up here
night after night

724
00:49:26,180 --> 00:49:30,460
where he and Heisenberg
would argue about the meaning
of quantum mechanics.

725
00:49:30,495 --> 00:49:32,984
They would argue so passionately,

726
00:49:33,019 --> 00:49:36,703
that on one occasion
Heisenberg was reduced to tears.

727
00:49:36,738 --> 00:49:40,857
And then, as Heisenberg stared
out of his attic window in despair

728
00:49:40,892 --> 00:49:42,301
at the park below,

729
00:49:42,336 --> 00:49:45,141
an extraordinary thought
occurred to him.

730
00:49:45,176 --> 00:49:49,094
It struck him why an atom
can't be visualised,

731
00:49:49,129 --> 00:49:52,139
why it can't be understood
intuitively.

732
00:49:52,174 --> 00:49:56,013
It's not just because it's tiny,
tricky and difficult.

733
00:49:56,048 --> 00:49:59,291
It's because it's inherently
unknowable.

734
00:50:00,371 --> 00:50:06,129
He realised that there was
a fundamental limit to how much we
can know about the sub-atomic world.

735
00:50:06,164 --> 00:50:11,009
For instance, if we know where
an electron is at a particular
moment in time,

736
00:50:11,044 --> 00:50:13,572
then we cannot know
how fast it's moving.

737
00:50:13,607 --> 00:50:17,886
But if we knew its speed,
we wouldn't know its position.

738
00:50:17,921 --> 00:50:22,130
This ambiguity isn't a shortcoming
in the theory itself.

739
00:50:22,165 --> 00:50:26,163
Nor is it due to the clumsiness
of the way we carry out
our measurements,

740
00:50:26,198 --> 00:50:30,284
but a fundamental truth
about the way Nature behaves

741
00:50:30,319 --> 00:50:32,328
at the sub-atomic scale.

742
00:50:32,363 --> 00:50:36,927
It became known as Heisenberg's
Uncertainty Principle.

743
00:50:36,962 --> 00:50:43,159
And it's probably the most profound,
incredible, yet unsettling concepts

744
00:50:43,194 --> 00:50:45,000
in the whole of science.

745
00:50:50,517 --> 00:50:55,836
What Heisenberg had uncovered
through his abstract
matrix mechanics

746
00:50:55,871 --> 00:50:59,636
was a deep and shocking truth
about the atomic world.

747
00:50:59,671 --> 00:51:03,319
Atoms are wilfully obscure.

748
00:51:03,354 --> 00:51:08,791
We can never fully know an atom's
position and speed simultaneously.

749
00:51:08,826 --> 00:51:13,272
The atomic world just refuses
to allow that to happen.

750
00:51:13,307 --> 00:51:16,110
It was completely mind-boggling.

751
00:51:16,145 --> 00:51:18,515
But once they accepted it,

752
00:51:18,550 --> 00:51:24,192
Heisenberg and Bohr found the boost
of confidence to be even more bold.

753
00:51:24,227 --> 00:51:30,986
They realised uncertainty
forced them to put paradox right
at the very heart of the atom.

754
00:51:34,585 --> 00:51:39,623
Atoms are not just unimaginable.
They're self-contradictory.

755
00:51:39,658 --> 00:51:42,623
They behave both like particles
and waves.

756
00:51:42,657 --> 00:51:44,667
And it gets weirder.

757
00:51:44,702 --> 00:51:48,581
When you're not looking at an atom,
it behaves like a spread-out wave.

758
00:51:48,616 --> 00:51:50,620
But when you look to see
where it is,

759
00:51:50,655 --> 00:51:52,219
it behaves like a particle.

760
00:51:52,254 --> 00:51:53,905
This is insane!

761
00:51:53,940 --> 00:51:56,585
First, atoms couldn't be visualised
at all,

762
00:51:56,620 --> 00:52:01,778
now they change completely
in character depending on whether
or not you're looking at them.

763
00:52:03,616 --> 00:52:07,260
The Uncertainty Principle
had changed everything.

764
00:52:07,295 --> 00:52:11,534
It revealed a shocking contradiction
at the heart of Nature.

765
00:52:12,614 --> 00:52:15,339
Everything we see is made of atoms.

766
00:52:15,374 --> 00:52:19,138
And yet atoms themselves
are unknowable.

767
00:52:19,173 --> 00:52:22,331
They can only be understood
through mathematics.

768
00:52:23,451 --> 00:52:30,089
For the first time for Bohr and
Heisenberg everything about the atom
fell into place.

769
00:52:31,728 --> 00:52:34,892
By the autumn of 1927,

770
00:52:34,927 --> 00:52:37,651
full of confidence
and smarting for a fight,

771
00:52:37,686 --> 00:52:41,806
they knew they were finally ready
to take on the conservatives.

772
00:52:51,003 --> 00:52:53,088
For this physics showdown,

773
00:52:53,123 --> 00:52:56,168
they chose the Solvay Conference
in Brussels.

774
00:52:56,203 --> 00:53:00,920
All the world's leading atomic
physicists would attend.

775
00:53:00,955 --> 00:53:03,644
If Bohr and Heisenberg
were successful,

776
00:53:03,679 --> 00:53:07,278
they would lead a total
scientific revolution.

777
00:53:07,313 --> 00:53:10,855
This is amazing.
I'm looking at original footage

778
00:53:10,890 --> 00:53:14,361
of the Solvay delegates
coming out of these doors.

779
00:53:14,396 --> 00:53:19,035
There's Bohr talking to Schroedinger
and there's Heisenberg behind them.

780
00:53:20,994 --> 00:53:24,040
There's Pauli, strange-looking guy.

781
00:53:24,075 --> 00:53:27,719
There's Einstein coming down
with a big smile on his face.

782
00:53:27,754 --> 00:53:32,672
For the week of the conference,
all that the delegates could think
and talk about

783
00:53:32,707 --> 00:53:34,995
was Bohr's quantum mechanics.

784
00:53:35,030 --> 00:53:38,071
With uncertainty now a central
plank,

785
00:53:38,106 --> 00:53:41,035
it was a truly formidable theory.

786
00:53:41,070 --> 00:53:45,308
And over the week,
the final showdown played out

787
00:53:45,342 --> 00:53:49,546
between Bohr and his arch-rival,
Albert Einstein.

788
00:53:49,581 --> 00:53:51,751
Einstein hated quantum mechanics.

789
00:53:51,786 --> 00:53:54,666
Every morning he'd come to Bohr
with an argument

790
00:53:54,701 --> 00:53:57,070
he felt picked a hole
in the new theory.

791
00:53:57,105 --> 00:54:00,709
Bohr would go away, very disturbed,
and think very hard about it,

792
00:54:00,744 --> 00:54:05,742
and later he'd come back with
a counter-argument that dismissed
Einstein's criticism.

793
00:54:05,777 --> 00:54:09,261
This happened day after day until
by the end of the conference,

794
00:54:09,296 --> 00:54:12,358
Bohr had brushed aside
all of Einstein's criticisms

795
00:54:12,393 --> 00:54:15,420
and Bohr was regarded
as having been victorious.

796
00:54:19,379 --> 00:54:22,223
And with that,
his vision of the atom,

797
00:54:22,258 --> 00:54:26,036
which became known as
the Copenhagen Interpretation,

798
00:54:26,071 --> 00:54:29,816
was suddenly at the very heart
of atomic physics.

799
00:54:31,135 --> 00:54:34,853
At the end of the conference, they
all gathered for the team photo.

800
00:54:34,888 --> 00:54:39,652
Never before or since have so many
great names of physics

801
00:54:39,687 --> 00:54:41,658
been together in one place.

802
00:54:41,693 --> 00:54:46,110
At the front, the elder statesman
of physics, Hendrik Lorentz,

803
00:54:46,145 --> 00:54:50,178
flanked on either side by
Madame Curie and Albert Einstein.

804
00:54:50,213 --> 00:54:54,209
Einstein's looking rather glum
because he's lost the argument.

805
00:54:55,289 --> 00:55:00,606
Louis de Broglie has also failed
to convince the delegates
of his views.

806
00:55:00,641 --> 00:55:03,331
Victory goes to Niels Bohr.

807
00:55:03,366 --> 00:55:05,770
He's feeling very pleased
with himself.

808
00:55:05,805 --> 00:55:09,484
Next to him, one of the unsung
heroes of quantum mechanics,

809
00:55:09,519 --> 00:55:13,163
the German Max Born who developed
so much of the mathematics.

810
00:55:13,198 --> 00:55:16,442
And behind them, the two
young disciples of Bohr,

811
00:55:16,477 --> 00:55:18,647
Heisenberg and Pauli.

812
00:55:18,682 --> 00:55:22,042
Pauli is looking rather smugly
across as Schroedinger,

813
00:55:22,077 --> 00:55:24,081
a bit like the cat
who's got the milk.

814
00:55:25,121 --> 00:55:28,000
This was the moment in physics
when it all changed.

815
00:55:28,998 --> 00:55:31,682
The old guard was replaced
by the new.

816
00:55:31,717 --> 00:55:37,317
Chance and probability became
interwoven into the fabric
of Nature itself

817
00:55:37,352 --> 00:55:41,356
and we could no longer describe
atoms in terms of simple pictures

818
00:55:41,391 --> 00:55:44,992
but only using pure abstract
mathematics.

819
00:55:45,027 --> 00:55:48,593
The Copenhagen view
had been victorious.

820
00:55:53,633 --> 00:55:58,350
Although Einstein went to his grave
never believing quantum mechanics,

821
00:55:58,385 --> 00:56:02,514
Solvay 1927 was the turning point

822
00:56:02,549 --> 00:56:05,728
at which the rest of
the science establishment

823
00:56:05,763 --> 00:56:09,454
came to embrace
the Copenhagen Interpretation.

824
00:56:09,489 --> 00:56:13,146
And that interpretation
is still accepted today.

825
00:56:14,466 --> 00:56:17,390
All the physics that I use
in my research,

826
00:56:17,425 --> 00:56:20,704
certainly the quantum mechanics
that I teach my students

827
00:56:20,739 --> 00:56:23,188
and that fills the text books
on my shelves

828
00:56:23,223 --> 00:56:30,342
is based on ideas that were hammered
out and crystallised here at the
Solvay Conference in October 1927.

829
00:56:31,542 --> 00:56:36,659
In a sense, everything I know
about the way the world around me
is made up

830
00:56:36,694 --> 00:56:38,539
started here.

831
00:56:42,578 --> 00:56:45,381
The quantum mechanical description
of the atom

832
00:56:45,416 --> 00:56:49,181
is one of the crowning glories
of human creativity.

833
00:56:49,216 --> 00:56:54,814
Over the last 80 years, it has been
proven right, time after time

834
00:56:54,849 --> 00:56:58,091
and its authority has never been
in doubt.

835
00:56:58,126 --> 00:57:01,334
It's a monumental
scientific achievement.

836
00:57:03,253 --> 00:57:06,897
Between 1905 and 1927,

837
00:57:06,932 --> 00:57:09,335
science changed our view
of the world.

838
00:57:09,370 --> 00:57:12,335
It also changed our view
of science itself.

839
00:57:12,370 --> 00:57:16,588
As scientists probed the tiniest
building blocks of matter,

840
00:57:16,623 --> 00:57:20,807
they created the most successful
and powerful theory ever -

841
00:57:20,842 --> 00:57:22,532
quantum mechanics.

842
00:57:22,567 --> 00:57:26,806
It allows us to describe
what everything in the universe
is made of,

843
00:57:26,841 --> 00:57:29,486
how it interacts
and how it all fits together.

844
00:57:29,521 --> 00:57:32,045
But it comes at a huge price.

845
00:57:33,164 --> 00:57:35,009
At its most fundamental level,

846
00:57:35,044 --> 00:57:38,763
we have to accept that Nature is
ruled by chance and probability.

847
00:57:38,798 --> 00:57:41,206
Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle

848
00:57:41,241 --> 00:57:46,561
dictates that there are certain
limits on the sorts of questions
we can ask the atomic world.

849
00:57:46,596 --> 00:57:50,120
Most crucially, while we now know
so much more

850
00:57:50,155 --> 00:57:52,523
about what an atom is
and how it behaves,

851
00:57:52,558 --> 00:57:57,041
we have to give up any possibility
of imagining what it looks like.

852
00:57:57,076 --> 00:58:03,515
Our human nature has forced us
to ask questions of everything
we see around us in the world.

853
00:58:03,550 --> 00:58:08,113
What we've discovered has been
beyond our wildest imagination.

