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Richard C Tolman

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Name
  
Richard Tolman

Siblings
  
Edward C. Tolman

Role
  
Physicist

Notable students
  
Linus Pauling

Richard C. Tolman httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons11
Born
  
March 4, 1881 West Newton, Massachusetts, U.S. (
1881-03-04
)

Died
  
September 5, 1948, Pasadena, California, United States

Education
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Books
  
Relativity - Thermodynamics and Cos, The Principles of Statisti, The Theory of the Relativity, The Theory of the Relativity

Similar People
  
Edward C Tolman, Linus Pauling, Albert Einstein, Hans Albert Einstein, Lieserl Einstein

Richard C. Tolman | Wikipedia audio article


Richard Chace Tolman (March 4, 1881 – September 5, 1948) was an American mathematical physicist and physical chemist who was an authority on statistical mechanics. He also made important contributions to theoretical cosmology in the years soon after Einstein's discovery of general relativity. He was a professor of physical chemistry and mathematical physics at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).

Contents

Biography

Tolman was born in West Newton, Massachusetts and studied chemical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, receiving his bachelor's degree in 1903 and Ph.D. in 1910 under A. A. Noyes.

In 1912, he conceived of the concept of relativistic mass by writing that "the expression m0(1 - v2/c2)−1/2 is best suited for the mass of a moving body."

In a 1916 experiment, Tolman demonstrated that electricity consists of electrons flowing through a metallic conductor. A by-product of this experiment was a measured value of the mass of the electron. Overall, however, he was primarily known as a theorist.

Tolman was a member of the Technical Alliance in 1919, a forerunner of the Technocracy movement where he helped conduct an energy survey analyzing the possibility of applying science to social and industrial affairs.

Tolman was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1922. The same year, he joined the faculty of the California Institute of Technology, where he became professor of physical chemistry and mathematical physics and later dean of the graduate school.

One of Tolman's early students at Caltech was the theoretical chemist Linus Pauling, to whom Tolman taught pre-Schrodinger quantum theory.

In 1927, Tolman published a text on statistical mechanics whose background was the old quantum theory of Max Planck, Niels Bohr and Arnold Sommerfeld. In 1938, he published a new detailed work that covered the application of statistical mechanics to classical and quantum systems. It was the standard work on the subject for many years and remains of interest today.

In the later years of his career, Tolman became increasingly interested in the application of thermodynamics to relativistic systems and cosmology. An important monograph he published in 1934 demonstrated how black body radiation in an expanding universe cools but remains thermal – a key pointer toward the properties of the cosmic microwave background. His investigation of the oscillatory universe hypothesis, which Einstein had proposed in 1930, drew attention to difficulties as regards entropy and resulted in its demise until the late 1960s.

During World War II, Tolman served as scientific advisor to General Leslie Groves on the Manhattan Project. At the time of his death in Pasadena, he was chief advisor to Bernard Baruch, the U.S. representative to the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission.

Each year, the southern California section of the American Chemical Society honors Tolman by awarding its Tolman Medal "in recognition of outstanding contributions to chemistry."

Family

Tolman's brother was the behavioral psychologist Edward Chace Tolman.

Books by Tolman

  • Statistical mechanics with applications to physics and chemistry. New York: The Chemical Catalog Company. 1927. 
  • Relativity, Thermodynamics, and Cosmology. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1934. LCCN 340-32023.  Reissued (1987) New York: Dover ISBN 0-486-65383-8.
  • The Principles of Statistical Mechanics. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1938.  Reissued (1979) New York: Dover ISBN 0-486-63896-0.
  • References

    Richard C. Tolman Wikipedia