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According to the view... on the Continent, matter... included electric — Electron

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"According to the view... on the Continent, matter... included electrical corpuscles in instantaneous interaction. This approach... goes back to André-Marie Ampère and Ottaviano Mossotti in the 1830s, and can be found in a rudimentary form as early as 1759, in... Franz Æpinus. Later in the nineteenth century it was greatly developed by several German physicists, including Rudolf Clausius, Wilhelm Weber, and Karl-Friedrich Zöllner. In these theories, hypothetical electrical particles were considered to be the fundamental constituents of both matter and ether. ...with the increasing popularity of Maxwellian field theory (where electrical particles have no place), the theories were given up by most physicists. ... In 1874 Stoney proposed the "electrine" as a unit electrical charge, and in 1891 he introduced the "electron" as a measure of an atomic unit charge. ...Helmholtz argued the cause of "atoms of electricity" in his Faraday Lecture of 1881. The Stoney-Helmholtz electron could be both a positive and a negative charge and was... conceived as a unit quantity of electricity rather than a particle residing in all forms of matter. ...Stoney associated his electron not only with electrolysis but also with the emission of light. In 1891 he suggested that electrons rotating in molecules or atoms might be responsible for spectral lines..."
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The electron is a subatomic particle whose electric charge is negative one elementary charge. It is an elementary particle that comprises the ordinary matter that makes up the universe, along with up and down quarks.

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"The most precise experiments have proved the correctness of the Einsteinian laws of mechanics and...Bucherers experiment proving the increase in mass of an electron in rapid motion is a case in point. Very important differences distinguish the theory of Einstein from that of Lorentz. Lorentz also had deduced from his theory that the mass of the electron should increase and grow infinite when its speed neared that of light; but the speed in question was the speed of the electron through the stagnant ether; whereas in Einsteins theory it is merely the speed with respect to the observer. According to Lorentz, the increase in mass of the moving electron was due to its deformation of Fitzgerald contraction. The contraction modified the lay of the electromagnetic field round the electron; and it was from this modification that the increase in mass observed by Bucherer was assumed to arise. In Einsteins theory, however, the increase in mass is absolutely general and need not be ascribed to the electromagnetic field of the electron in motion. An ordinary unelectrified lump of matter like a grain of sand would have increased in mass in exactly the same proportion; and no knowledge of the microscopic constitution of matter is necessary in order to predict these effects, which result directly from the space and time transformations themselves."
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"Already in 1880... H. A. Lorentz showed that the foundations of an electromagnetic theory of dispersion could be laid in a manner quite analogous to the mechanical theory, by regarding every molecule as the origin of electric vibrations of a definite period. He says:—"Let there be in every material particle several material points charged with electricity, of which, however, only one be movable, and have the charge e and the mass μ." Lorentz derives the equations of dispersion from this fundamental assumption of vibrating charged particles."
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"Three major sorts of infinities occur in quantum electrodynamics. The first, associated with the electrons infinite energy of interaction with its own electromagnetic field, is removed by redefining its mass to be the physical value, order by order, in perturbation theory. The second can be removed by demanding that a free electron produced at a given point in space be detectable with unit probability at some distant point at a later time. The third, related to the polarization of the vacuum pairs by a test charge, can be removed by redefining the electrons charge as its value as seen by a distant observer."
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"In contemplating the papers Einstein wrote in 1905, I often find myself wondering which of them is the most beautiful. ...My favorite ...is Einstein’s paper on the blackbody radiation. ...Einstein did not try to derive the Wien law. He simply accepted it as an empirical fact and asked what it meant. By a virtuoso bit of reasoning involving statistical mechanics (of which he was a master, having independently invented the subject over a three-year period beginning in 1902), he was able to show that... the radiation in the cavity was mathematically the same as that of a dilute gas of particles. As far as Einstein was concerned, this meant that this radiation was a dilute gas of particles—light quanta. ...He realized that if the energetic light quanta were to bombard, say, a metal surface, they would give up their energies in lump sums and thereby liberate electrons from the surface in a predictable way, something that is called the photoelectric effect. ...not many physicists were even interested in the subject of blackbody radiation ...Planck, who was interested, decided that Einstein’s paper was simply wrong."
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