BOOK REVIEW: The Legacy of Albert Einstein: A Collection of Essays in Celebration of the Year of Physics

Physics – Condensed Matter – Strongly Correlated Electrons

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During the 'World Year of Physics' much has been written on the epoch-making 1905 papers of Albert Einstein and his later great contributions to physics. Why another book on the enormous impact of Einstein's work on 20th-century physics? The short answer is that the present collection of 13 relatively short essays on the legacy of Einstein by outstanding scientists is very pleasant to read and should be of interest to physicists of all branches. Beside looking back, most articles present later and topical developments, whose initiation began with the work of Einstein.
During the year 2005, the growing recognition among physicists, historians, and philosophers of Einstein's revolutionary role in quantum theory was often emphasized. It is truly astonishing that most active physicists were largely unaware of this before. Fortunately, the article 'Einstein and the quantum' by V Singh puts the subject in perspective and describes all the main steps, beginning with the truly revolutionary 1905 paper on the light-quantum hypothesis and ending with Einstein's extension of the particle-wave duality to atoms and other particles in 1924 1925. The only point which, in my opinion, is not sufficiently emphasized in the discussion of the 1916 1917 papers on absorption and emission of radiation is the part on the momentum transfer in each elementary process. Einstein's result that there is a directed recoil hν/c—also for spontaneous emission—in complete contrast to classical theory, was particularly important to him.
I enjoyed reading the articles on Brownian motion (S Majumdar), Bose Einstein condensation (N Kumar) and strongly correlated electrons (T Ramakrishnan), which are all written for non-experts.
Connected with Einstein's most lasting work—general relativity—there are two articles on cosmology. The one by J Narlikar gives a brief historical account of the development that was initiated by the 1917 paper of Einstein. S Sarkar's essay emphasizes the remarkable recent observational progress in cosmology and the emergence of the 'cosmic concordance model', with dark matter and dark energy as the dominant components of the current universe. Their discovery is widely considered as the most direct evidence for fundamental physics beyond the standard model of particle physics. In an introductory section Sarkar recalls the main reasons why the cosmological constant (vacuum energy) problem is of a very profound nature. In spite of some interesting ideas, no satisfactory solution is in sight.
The article by B Sathyapakhash on gravitational radiation provides a readable introduction to the status of current detectors and astronomical sources of gravitational radiation. Of great cosmological interest are planned searches for a stochastic background of gravitational waves that is expected to have been produced by quantum processes in the very early universe.
More than the first third of the book is devoted to current speculative attempts at creating a quantum theory of gravity, possibly within a unified coherent description of the known four fundamental interactions. Thanks to the enormously large value of the Planck energy in comparison to elementary particle masses, physicists may maintain for a long time, with success, a schizophrenic attitude in working within the framework of our present understanding, based on quantum field theory and classical general relativity. That physics cannot stay with that was already pointed out by Einstein in 1916, as A Ashtekar recalls in his essay. 'Einstein and the search for unification' by D Gross is the first article of the present book. In this he describes the reasons why, for those working in speculative areas, 'Einstein remains an inspiration for his foresight, and his unyielding determination and courage'. This inspiration is also manifest in the essays by M Atiyah, A Sen, and A Dabholkar on string theory.
Hopefully, this book will find many readers, especially among graduate students, who can get valuable impressions of what is interesting in physics and what some of the main open problems for future research are.

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