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It may be objected that the above is nothing more than a series of imp — Ludwig Boltzmann

"It may be objected that the above is nothing more than a series of imperfectly proved hypotheses. But granting its improbability, it suffices that this explanation is not impossible. For then I have shown that the problem is not insoluble, and nature will have found a better solution than mine."
Ludwig Boltzmann
Ludwig Boltzmann
Ludwig Boltzmann
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Ludwig Eduard Boltzmann was an Austrian mathematician and theoretical physicist. His greatest achievements were the development of statistical mechanics and the statistical explanation of the second law of thermodynamics. In 1877, he provided the current definition of entropy, , where Ω is the number of microstates whose energy equals the system's energy, interpreted as a measure of the statistica

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"But how can the molecules of a behave as rigid bodies? Are they not composed of smaller atoms? Probably they are; but the of their internal s is transformed into progressive and rotatory motion so slowly, that when a gas is brought to a lower temperature the molecules may retain for days, or even for years, the higher vis viva of their internal vibrations corresponding to the original temperature. This transference of energy... takes place so slowly that it cannot be perceived amid the fluctuations of temperature of the surrounding bodies."
Ludwig BoltzmannLudwig Boltzmann
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"When Lord Salisbury says that nature is a mystery, he means... that this simple conception of Boscovich is refuted almost in every branch of science, the Theory of Gases not excepted. The assumption that the molecules are aggregates of material points, in the sense of Boscovich, does not agree with the facts. But what else are they? And what is the ether through which they move? Let us again hear Lord Salisbury. He says"What the atom of each element is, whether it is a movement, or a thing, or a vortex, or a point having inertia, all these questions are surrounded by profound darkness. I dare not use any less pedantic word than entity to designate the ether, for it would be a great exaggeration of our knowledge if I were to speak of it as a body, or even as a substance.""
Ludwig BoltzmannLudwig Boltzmann
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"It is curious to see that in Germany, where till lately the theory of was much more cultivated than in Newton’s native land itself, where Maxwell’s theory of electricity was not accepted, because it does not start from quite a precise hypothesis, at present every special theory is old-fashioned, while in England interest in the Theory of Gases is still active; vide, ...the excellent papers of Mr. Tait, of whose ingenious results I cannot speak too highly, though I have been forced to oppose them in certain points."
Ludwig BoltzmannLudwig Boltzmann
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"But in actually ing one gram of gas, the ether always flows freely through the walls of the vessel. It comes from the universe, and is not at all in thermal equilibrium with the molecules of the gas. It is true that it always carries off energy, if the outside space is colder than the gas; but this energy may be so small as to be quite negligible in comparison with the energy which the gas loses by heat-conduction, and which must be experimentally determined and subtracted in measuring the specific heat. Only certain transverse s of the ether can transfer sensible energy from one ponderable body to another, and therefore a correction for radiant heat must be applied to observations of specific heats."
Ludwig BoltzmannLudwig Boltzmann
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"If this be so—and hardly any physicist will contradict this—then neither the Theory of Gases nor any other physical theory can be quite a congruent account of facts, and I cannot hope with Mr. Burbury, that Mr. Bryan will be able to deduce all the phenomena of spectroscopy from the electromagnetic theory of light. Certainly, therefore, Hertz is right when he says: "The rigour of science requires, that we distinguish well the undraped figure of nature itself from the gay-coloured vesture with which we clothe it at our pleasure." But I think the predilection for nudity would be carried too far if we were to forego every hypothesis. Only we must not demand too much from hypotheses."
Ludwig BoltzmannLudwig Boltzmann