Central for Research and Development for  Winning
Nobel Prize in Physics at  Indonesia
Nobel Fisika Indonesia
"The nucleus itself, lastly, has been revealed as being discontinuous and composed of hydrogen nuclei, or protons, which are possibly "cemented " by nuclear electrons."
~J. B. Perinn~
  The Nobel Prize in Physics 1926
"for his work on the discontinuous  structure of matter, and especially for his discovery of sedimentation  equilibrium"
| Jean Baptiste Perrin | |
|---|---|
| Born | 30 September 1870 Lille, France  | 
| Died | 17 April 1942 (aged 71) New York City, USA  | 
| Nationality | France | 
| Fields | Physics | 
| Institutions | École Normale Supérieure University of Paris  | 
| Alma mater | École Normale Supérieure | 
| Known for | Nature of cathode rays Brownian motion  | 
| Notable awards | Nobel Prize in Physics (1926) | 
Biography
Early years
Born in Lille, France, Perrin attended the École Normale Supérieure, the elite grande école in Paris. He became an assistant at the school during the period of 1894-97 when he began the study of cathode rays and X-rays. He was awarded the degree of docteur ès sciences (PhD) in 1897. In the same year he was appointed as a lecturer in physical chemistry at the Sorbonne, Paris. He became a professor at the University in 1910, holding this post until the German occupation of France during World War II.
Research
In 1895, Jean Perrin showed that cathode rays were made of corpuscles with negative electric charge. He computed Avogadro's number through several methods. He explainedsolar energy by the thermonuclear reactions of hydrogen.
After Albert Einstein published (1905) his theoretical explanation of Brownian motion in terms of atoms, Perrin did the experimental work to test and verify Einstein's predictions, thereby settling the century-long dispute about John Dalton's atomic theory.
Jean Perrin received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1926 for this and other work on the discontinuous structure of matter, which put a definite end to the long struggle regarding the question of the physical reality of molecules.
Perrin was the author of a number of books and dissertations. Most notable of his publications were: "Rayons cathodiques et rayons X" ; "Les Principes"; "Electrisation de contact"; "Réalité moléculaire"; "Matière et Lumière"; "Lumière et Reaction chimique".
Perrin was also the recipient of numerous prestigious awards including the Joule Prize of the Royal Society in 1896 and the La Caze Prize of the Paris Academy of Sciences. He was twice appointed a member of the Solvay Committee at Brussels in 1911 and in 1921. He also held memberships with the Royal Society of London and with the Academies of Sciences of Belgium, Sweden, Turin, Prague, Romania and China. He became a Commander of the Legion of Honour in 1926 and was made Commander of the Order of Léopold (Belgium).
In 1927, he jointly founded the Institut de Biologie Physico-Chimique and in 1937 the Palais de la Découverte, a science museum in Paris.
His notable students include Pierre Victor Auger. Perrin was the father of Francis Perrin, also a physicist.
Nobel Lecture
Nobel Lecture, December 11, 1926
Discontinuous Structure of Matter
Since I have the great honour to have to   summarize here the work which has enabled me to receive the high   international distinction awarded by the Swedish Academy of   Sciences, I shall speak of the "discontinuous structure of   matter".
Introduction
A fluid such as air or water seems to us at   first glance to be perfectly homogeneous and continuous; we can   put more water or less water into this glass, and the experiment   seems to suggest to us that the amount of water contained in it   can vary by an infinitely small amount, which is the same as   saying that water is "indefinitely divisible". Similarly, a   sphere of glass or of quartz, a crystal of alum, are received by   our senses as being perfectly continuous, and particularly when   we see this alum crystal growing in a supersaturated solution,   each of the planes bounding the crystal moves parallel to itself   in a continuous manner.
However, this can be taken for granted only   up to the degree of subtlety reached by the resolving power of   our senses which, for example, would certainly be unable to   distinguish between two positions of the crystal face one   millionth of a millimetre apart. Beyond the things which our   senses separate in this manner, our imagination remains free, and   ever since ancient times, just as the philosophers who started   from the " full" or the "void", has hesitated between two   hypotheses.
For the former, matter remains continuous:   "full", not only (as is reasonable and probable) a little beyond   this domain on our scale where our senses make it appear as such,   but indefinitely.
For the latter, who were the first   atomists, all matter consists of minute grains separated by empty   gaps; not any hypothesis has been formulated for the structure of   these grains themselves, atoms, which were considered as   indestructible constituent elements of the Universe.
Lastly, and doubtless always, but   particularly at the end of the last century, certain scholars   considered that since the appearances on our scale were finally   the only important ones for us, there was no point in seeking   what might exist in an inaccessible domain. I find it very   difficult to understand this point of view since what is   inaccessible today may becomes accessible tomorrow (as has   happened by the invention of the microscope), and also because   coherent assumptions on what is still invisible may increase our   understanding of the visible.
Indeed, increasingly numerous and strong   reasons have come to support a growing probability, and it can   finally be said the certainty, in favour of the hypothesis of the   atomists.
There is, first of all, the familiar   observation of solutions; we all say, for example, that sugar and   water are present in sugar water, although it is impossible to   distinguish the different parts in it. And similarly, we   recognize quite simply bromine in chloroform. This can be   understood if the bromine and the chloroform are formed   respectively by very small particles in continuous movement which   can intermingle with one another without losing their   individuality. Those elementary constituent particles, those   molecules, are probably of the same kind, like articles   made in series, for each pure substance (defined by its   resistance to the fractionation test) or even more surely for   each definite chemical species (experiment proves that it   is never necessary to consider a continuous sequence of chemical   species), and we come to formulate the molecular hypothesis by   saying that for a sufficient magnification any fluid appears to   us as formed by molecules in continuous movement which impinge   ceaselessly upon one another, and of which there are as many   distinct varieties as chemical species can be recognized in the   fluid under consideration.
These molecules which exist in the mixtures   are not indestructible since they must disappear (or appear) when   a chemical reaction causes the chemical species which they   constitute to disappear (or appear); when a mixture of hydrogen   and oxygen explodes to give water, the molecules of hydrogen and   oxygen certainly have to disappear at the same time as the water   molecules appear. But we know that the decomposition of chemical   species, when carried out as far as possible, has led to the   experimental definition of a small number of simple bodies   which can always be recovered, without any change in their   nature, and without loss or gain of mass, from combinations in   which they have been introduced. It is then very difficult not to   assume that, for example, one and the same substance "exists" in   all the chemical species from which the simple substance hydrogen   can be regained and which passes, disguised but indestructible,   through our various reactions. Dalton supposed, and this is the   essential point of the atomic hypothesis, that this substance is   formed by a definite variety of particles which are all identical   and which cannot be cut into pieces in the reactions which we can   produce, and which for this reason are called atoms. There   are, therefore, one or several atoms of hydrogen in each molecule   of a hydrogenated chemical species.
The fundamental laws of chemistry which are   well known to you and which are laws of discontinuity   (discontinuity between chemical species, and discontinuous   variation according to the " multiple proportions" in the   composition of species made from the same simple bodies) then   become immediately clear: they are imposed solely by the   condition that the molecule constituting a compound contains a   necessarily whole number of atoms of each of the simple bodies   combined in this compound. And I do not need to tell you that if   one admits that " analogous " bodies (alkali halides, for   example) must have analogous formulae, simple chemical analysis   will give for the elements of the same " family" the ratios of   the weights of the atoms, or "atomic weights", of these   elements.
But in order to pass from one family to   another, from hydrogen to oxygen for example, it was necessary to   have the gas laws and Avogadro's hypothesis or law which I recall   because my researches are based on it: when one of those cases   occurs where the ratios of the weights of the molecules of the   two compounds are known, it is found that masses proportional to   these masses (which must, therefore, contain the same number of   molecules) occupy equal volumes in the gaseous state under the   same conditions of temperature and pressure. This means that as   far as these substances are concerned, equal numbers of heavy or   light molecules develop equal pressures at the same temperature   and in equal volumes. Since the mass of a molecule, and not its   nature, must affect the impact of the molecule upon the wall, I   see here a justification (not yet agreed, I must say) of the   following proposition known as Avogadro's postulate, or   hypothesis:
When gaseous masses, at the same   temperature and pressure, occupy equal volumes, they all contain   the same number of molecules.
These "equimolecular" masses are determined   for the various chemical species, as soon as one of them has been   chosen. They are called gram-molecules when the masses in   the gaseous state occupy, at the same temperature and pressure,   the same volume as 32 grams of oxygen. The number N of the   molecules constituting any gram-molecule is Avogadro's   number. For each simple substance the gram-molecule of a   compound contains as many gram-atoms as the molecule contains   atoms of this simple substance, and the gram-atom is the product   of the mass of the atom and Avogadro's number N.
In short, if molecules and atoms exist,   their relative weights are known to us, and their absolute   weights would be known at the same time as Avogadro's number.
You also know how - particularly for   understanding substitutions - it was assumed that the atoms of a   molecule are held together by valences of which each   unites only two atoms, a kind of bolt holding rigidly together   two bars or protuberances which pre-exist on the two atoms. A new   detail is thus introduced here to the concept of the atom, but   once this new hypothesis is accepted, the structural formulae can   be determined for an enormous number of compounds, and with such   success in regard to forecasting the properties that it could be   said that the hundreds of thousands of structural formulae set up   by the organic chemists constitute just as many arguments in   favour of the atomic theory.
These brilliant successes tell us,   otherwise, nothing about the absolute weights of the atoms. If   they all became at the same time a thousand times smaller, a   milliard times smaller, infinitesimal in the mathematical sense   of the word, with matter becoming again continuous at each   reduction, our chemical laws and our formulae would be unchanged,   and the idea of the atom, then driven back infinitely far beyond   all experimental reach, would lose its interest and its   reality.
It will be noted that the laws of   crystallography, which are laws of discontinuity just as   the fundamental laws of chemistry, lead to similar considerations   in regard to the dimensions of an elementary cell which is   repeated periodically along the three dimensions of a   parallelepipedic lattice and should constitute the crystal which   is homogeneous in appearance on our scale. Only in this way can   one understand how the symmetries of crystals are soley those of   reticular systems (for example, never symmetry axes of the order   of 5), and explain at the same time the law of rational indices   (a kind of laws of multiple proportions which describe what   discontinuities separate the possible faces), a law which   requires the three dimensions of the elementary parallelepiped to   be in definite ratios. Here again the grain of matter could   become infinitely small without the laws having to be   changed.
In short, in order really to establish the   Atomic Theory, it was necessary to obtain the weights and   dimensions of the atoms and not only their ratios. A remarkably   successful attempt to do this was made about fifty years ago by   the physicists who created the kinetic theory of gases by   assuming that gases are made of elastic molecules which are on   the average fairly widely separated from one another so that,   between two collisions, each molecule can move in a straight   line, the duration of the collision being negligible in relation   to that of the free path.
Furthermore, if it is agreed that the   pressure of a gas on a wall is solely due to the impacts of the   molecules upon this wall, and if we write that this (known)   pressure must consequently be numerically equal to the impulse   exerted perpendicularly on the wall by the molecules impinging   against unit surface in unit time, an equation is obtained which   shows the mean velocity of the gas molecules.
It is also known that if, in a gas, a rigid   plane is made to slide parallel to a fixed plane at a distance   D and with a constant velocity V, each intermediate   layer at a distance d from the fixed plane is involved   with a velocity equal to V(d/D), and that the fixed   and moving planes are drawn in opposite directions by forces (per   unit surface) equal to the product of the velocity gradient   V/D and a fixed factor for each gas, the latter measuring   the viscosity of this gas (at the temperature of the   experiment). This is readily understood from the kinetic theory:   the unit surface of the fixed plane is drawn in the direction of   the movement by a force numerically equal to the total excess   impulse received in this direction, this excess being   proportional to the number of impinging molecules (in other   words, both to the density and to the mean molecular velocity   which we can determine), and proportional to the mean excess   impulse of each impinging molecule; this individual mean excess   is itself proportional to the distance of the layer in which the   molecule was at the time of the previous impact, and consequently   to the mean free path. In this way it is seen how Maxwell   was able to deduce this mean free path from the   experimental determination of the viscosity.
Now, as Clausius observed, the molecules   are all the smaller as the mean free path (now known) becomes   greater (if the molecules were reduced to points, they would   never collide with one another). And it is seen, therefore, that   if the free path is known, it is possible to calculate the   total surface of the molecules which form a given mass of   gas. The total volume of these same molecules is probably   little different from the volume occupied by this mass if it were   solidified. Finally, from two obvious equations we derive both   the number and the diameter of the molecules which constitute,   let us say, a gram-molecule of the gas.
Depending on the gas, the diameters found   in this way are graded between 2 and 5 ten-millionths of a   millimetre; and the values found for Avogadro's number are   between 40 x 1022 and 120 x 1022. The   uncertainty is largely 100 per cent, both because of the   inaccuracy of certain measurements and especially because the   calculations have been simplified by making assumptions which can   only be approximate. But the order of magnitude is achieved: an   atom vanishes in our substance almost as the latter would vanish   in the sun
The sequence of reasonings which I have   just summarized deserves our profound admiration; however, they   were not sufficient to carry conviction owing to the uncertainty   which in spite of everything existed not only in the simplifying   assumptions (sphericalness of the molecules, for example), but in   the very hypotheses on which the reasoning is based. This   conviction will without doubt come to life if entirely different   paths lead us to the same values for the molecular sizes.
The Brownian movement
Let us consider a liquid in equilibrium:   the water contained in this glass, for example. It appears to us   homogeneous and continuous, and immobile in all its parts. If we   place in it a denser object, it falls, and we know quite well   that once it has arrived at the bottom of the glass, it stays   there and is unlikely to ascend again "by itself".
We could have observed this water before it   reached equilibrium, and to see how it reached it, at the moment   when we filled this glass; then we should have been able to find   (by observing the visible indicator dust which was specially   mixed with the water) that the movement of the various parts of   the water which were coordinated at first in parallel movements,   became more and more uncoordinated by scattering in all   directions between smaller and smaller parts until the whole   appeared completely immobile (nothing prevents us as yet from   assuming that this scattering will continue without limit).
It is very remarkable that these so   familiar ideas become false on the scale of the observations   which we can make under a microscope: each microscopic particle   placed in water (or any other liquid), instead of falling in a   regular manner exhibits a continuous and perfectly irregular   agitation. It goes to and fro whilst turning about, it rises,   falls, rises again, without tending in any way towards repose,   and maintaining indefinitely the same mean state of agitation.   This phenomenon which was predicted by Lucretius, suspected by   Buffon, and established with certainty by Brown, constitutes the   Brownian movement.
The nature of the grains is not important,   but the smaller a grain is, the more violently does it become   agitated. There is also complete independence between the   movements of two grains, even if they are very close together,   which excludes the hypothesis of collective convection produced   by the impacts or temperature differences. We are, finally,   forced to think that each grain only follows the portion of   liquid surrounding it, in the same way that an indicating buoy   indicates and analyses the movement all the better if it is   smaller: a float follows the movement of the sea more faithfully   than a battleship.
We obtain from this an essential property   of what is called a liquid in equilibrium: its repose is only   an illusion due to the imperfection of our senses, and what we   call equilibrium is a certain well-defined permanent system of a   perfectly irregular agitation. This is an experimental fact   in which no hypothesis plays any part.
Since this agitation remains on an average   constant (it would be possible to make this "impression" accurate   by measurements), the movement possessed by a part of the liquid   does not scatter without limit in all directions between smaller   and smaller parts, in spite of what observations made on our   scale suggest to us; this spreading does not go beyond a certain   limit for which, at each moment, just as much movement is   coordinated as becomes uncoordinated.
This is explainable if the liquid consists   of elastic grains, and I do not see how it can be understood if   the structure is continuous. Moreover, it is seen that the   agitation for a given observable particle must increase with the   size of the molecules: the magnitude of the Brownian movement,   therefore, will probably enable us to calculate the molecular   sizes.*
In short, the Brownian movement (an   experimental fact) leads us to the hypothesis of the molecules;   and we then understand quite well how each particle that is   situated in a liquid and is being bombarded ceaselessly by   neighbouring molecules, receives shocks which on the whole have   all the less change of coming to equilibrium as the particle   becomes smaller, with the result that this particle must be   tossed to and fro irregularly.
This applies to absolutely whatever kind of   particle. If it has been possible to bring into suspension in a   liquid a large number of particles all of the same nature, we say   that an emulsion has been produced. This emulsion is stable if   the particles in suspension do not stick together when the   hazards of the Brownian movement bring them into contact, and if   they re-enter the liquid when these hazards bring them against   the walls or to the surface. From this two-fold point of view   such a stable emulsion is comparable to a solution.   It is precisely by pursuing this analogy that I have been able to   obtain a simple determination of the molecular sizes.
Extension of the gas laws to emulsions
I must, first of all, recall how the gas   laws and particularly Avogadro's law came to be regarded, thanks   to Van 't Hoff, as applicable to dilute solutions.
The pressure exerted by a gas on the walls   limiting its expansion becomes, for a dissolved substance, the   osmotic pressure exerted on semi-permeable walls   which allow the solvent to pass, but hold back this dissolved   substance. Such is a membrane of copper ferrocyanide which   separates sugared water from pure water.
Now, the measurements of Pfeffer show that   in fact the equilibrium exists only if there is a certain excess   pressure from the side on which the sugar is, and Van 't Hoff has   pointed out that the value of this excess pressure or osmotic   pressure is precisely that of the pressure which would be   exerted, in accordance with Avogadro's law, on the wall of the   container containing the sugared water if the sugar present could   occupy the entire container alone and in the gaseous state. It is   then probable that the same would occur with every dissolved   substance, but we do not need to recall the thermodynamic   reasoning with which Van 't Hoff justified this generalization   nor to make other measurements of the osmotic pressure: Arrhenius   has indeed shown that every substance which, in solution,   confirms the well-known Raoult laws through its freezing   temperature and its vapour pressure, necessarily exerts through   this very fact the pressure predicted by Van 't Hoff on every   wall which halts it without halting the solvent. In short, the   Raoult laws which were established by a very large number of   measurements, are logically equivalent to the law of Van't Hoff   which consists in the extension of Avogadro's law to solutions,   and we can now say:
Equal numbers of molecules, regardless   of the kind, in the gaseous state or dissolved, exert - at the   same temperature and in equal volumes - equal pressures on the   walls detaining them.
This law applies equally to heavy or light   molecules, in such manner that, for example, the molecule of   quinine which contains more than one hundred atoms, has neither a   greater nor a lesser effect when it impinges against the wall   than the light molecule of hydrogen which contains two atoms.
I have thought that it was perhaps valid   for stable emulsions with visible grains, in such manner that   each of these grains which is agitated by the Brownian movement,   counts as a molecule when it collides with a wall.
Let us assume then that we can measure the   osmotic pressure which equal grains exert, through their Brownian   movement, against a unit of a wall which holds them up and allows   water to pass (let us say blotting paper). Let us also assume   that we can count these grains in the immediate vicinity of the   wall unit, that is to say that we know the "abundance" of the   grains per unit volume near this wall unit. This number n   also measures the abundance of molecules in any gas (let us say   hydrogen) which would exert the same pressure on the walls of the   container in which it would be enclosed. If, for example, the   osmotic pressure measured is the hundred-millionth of a barye, we   shall know that a cubic centimetre of hydrogen under normal   conditions (pressure equal to a million baryes) contains 100   million million times n molecules (1014 n). And   the gram-molecule (22,412 c.c. in the gaseous state under normal   conditions) will contain 22,412 times more molecules: this number   will be Avogadro's number.
This is very simple; but how to measure the   stupendously weak osmotic pressure that an emulsion exerts?
This will, in fact, not be necessary nor,   as we have just explained, will it be necessary to measure the   osmotic pressure of a solution to make sure that this solution   obeys the gas laws. And it will be sufficient for us to find an   experimentally accessible property for emulsions which would be   logically equivalent to the gas laws.
I found such a property (1908) by extending   to emulsions the fact that is qualitatively well known to you,   that in a vertical column of a gas in equilibrium the density   decreases as the altitude increases.
Law of the vertical distribution of an emulsion
We all know that air is more rarefied at   the top of a mountain than at sea level and, generally speaking,   he pressure of air has to diminish as one goes higher since this   pressure has then to carry only a smaller part of the atmosphere   which applies its weight against the earth.
If we specify this slightly vague reasoning   in the Laplace manner, we shall say that each horizontal slice of   a gas in equilibrium in a large vertical pump would remain in   equilibrium if it were imprisoned between two rigid pistons   (which would no longer allow exchange of molecules between this   slice and the neighbouring slices of the gas) and these pistons   would exert respectively the pressures existing at the lower face   and at the upper face of the slice; with the result that, per   unit surface, the difference of these pressures is equal to the   weight of the gas supported. That is to say that if the thickness   dh of the slice is sufficiently small so that the   abundance of molecules near the upper face differs little from   the abundance n near the lower face, the pressure   difference dp between the two faces will be equal to   n p dh, where   p denotes the weight of a   molecule.
This very simple equation expresses two   important facts: first of all, as the abundance n of   molecules is proportional to the pressure p at each given   temperature, we see that for a column of a given gas (for a given   p) and of uniform temperature, the   relative reduction of the pressure dp/p, or also the   relative reduction of the abundance dn/n which can be said   to measure the rarefaction, always has the same value for the   same difference in level dh, whatever this level may be.   For example, each time that you climb a flight of stairs, the   pressure in the air (or the abundance of molecules) is reduced by   one forty-thousandth of its value. Adding these effects for each   step, we see that at whatever level we were originally, each time   we ascend by the same height, the pressure (or the density) in   air at a uniform temperature will be divided by the same number;   for example, in oxygen at 0° the rarefaction will be doubled   for each rise of 5 kilometres.
The other fact which emerges immediately   from our equation relates to the weight p  of the molecule; for the same value of level   dh, the rarefaction dp/p (or dn/n) varies in   inverse ratio with the weight of the molecule. Adding here again   the effects for each step, we see that in two different gases at   the same temperature, the rises producing the same rarefaction   are in inverse ratio to the molecular weights. For example, as we   know that the oxygen molecule (if it exists, and in accordance   with the laws summarized above) must weigh 16 times more than the   hydrogen molecule, it is necessary to rise 16 times higher in   hydrogen than in oxygen, i.e. 80 kilometres, for the rarefaction   to be doubled.
You can appreciate the influence of the   altitude, and of the molecular weight, on the rarefaction by   looking at this schematic picture where I have drawn three   gigantic vertical test tubes (the highest is 300 kilometers)   containing equal numbers of hydrogen molecules, helium molecules,   and oxygen molecules. At a uniform temperature the molecules   would be distributed as shown in the drawing, being more numerous   near the bottom as they increase in weight.
Let us now admit that Avogadro's law   applies to emulsions as it does to gases.
We assume, therefore, that we have a stable   emulsion made of equal grains which is left to itself at a   constant temperature, being only under the influence of its own   weight. We can repeat the previous reasoning with the only change   that the intergranular space, instead of being void, is now a   liquid which exerts on each grain, in an opposite direction to   its weight, a push in accordance with Archimedes' principle.   Consequently, the effective weight z of the gram to which this   reasoning is applied, is its actual weight reduced by this   push.
If now our generalization is justified,   once the emulsion is in equilibrium it will produce a   miniature atmosphere of visible molecules where equal rises   will be accompanied by equal rarefactions. But if, for example,   the rise in the emulsion to double the rarefaction is a milliard   times less than in oxygen, it means that the effective weight of   the grain is a milliard times greater than that of the oxygen   molecule. It will, therefore, be sufficient to determine the   effective weight of the visible grain (which forms links between   the magnitudes on our scale and the molecular magnitudes) in   order to obtain by a simple ratio the weight of any molecule, and   consequently Avogadro's number.
It is in this sense that I carried out my   experiments which I was able to do successfully.
I first prepared stable emulsions made from   solid (vitreous) spheres of various resins in suspension in a   liquid (generally water). This was done by dissolving the resin   in alcohol and adding to this limpid solution a large amount of   water. The resin is quite insoluble in the water and is then   precipitated as microscopic spherules of all sizes. By means of   prolonged centrifuging similar to those in which the red blood   corpuscles are separated from the blood serum, it is possible to   collect these grains as a consistent deposit which splits up   again as a stable emulsion of distinct spherules when it is   agitated in the pure water after the supernatant alcohol solution   has been removed.
It was then necessary, starting with an   emulsion where the grains are of very different size, to succeed   in separating these grains according to size in order to have   uniform emulsions (consisting of equal grains). The   process which I used can be compared with fractional   distillation: just as, in a distillation, the fractions which   come off first are richer in the most volatile constituents, so   in a centrifuging of a pure emulsion (spherules of the   same substance), the parts which settle out first are richer in   coarse grains, and this is a method of separating the grains   according to size by proceeding according to rules which it would   be unnecessary to elaborate here. It is also necessary to be   patient: I treated in my most careful fractionation one kilogram   of gamboge and obtained after several months of daily operations   a fraction containing several decigrams of grains with a diameter   of approximately three-quarters of a thousandth of a millimetre   which was appreciably equal to what I had wanted to obtain.
If a droplet of a very dilute emulsion made   with such equal grains is allowed to evaporate on the slide under   a microscope, the grains are seen, when the evaporation is almost   complete (and doubtless as a result of capillary action), to run   and join together in regular lines just as cannon-balls in a   horizontal row of a pile of cannon-balls.
You can see this on the photograph which is   now projected. And you will understand how it is possible   simultaneously to obtain a successful centrifuging and to measure   the mean diameter of the grain of the emulsion. (Other processes   are, moreover, possible.)
On the other hand, there is no difficulty   in determining the density of the glass constituting the   spherules (several processes: the most correct consists in   suspending the grains in a solution which is just so dense that   the centrifuging cannot separate the grains).
We then know everything necessary for   calculating the effective weight of the grain of the   emulsion.
On the other hand, we shall have studied   the equilibrium distribution of the emulsion under the action of   gravity. For this we imprison a drop of the emulsion in a   well-closed dish (evaporation must be impossible) arranged for   microscopic observation. The distribution of the grains is at   first uniform, but it is found that the grains accumulate   progressively in the lower layers until a limiting distribution   is reached with reversible settling or expansion depending on   whether the temperature is lowered or raised. There are two   possible methods of observation, as shown in the drawing   projected here. In one method (the horizontal microscope) the   rarefaction of the emulsion is obtained immediately from the   height, and the resemblance to a miniature atmosphere is   extremely striking, precise measurements being possible from   instantaneous photographs. But it is then difficult to give the   emulsion a height lower than, shall we say, one millimetre, and   the time needed for establishing a permanent state becomes long   (several days) which involves complications and difficulties.
In the other method of observation the   microscope is vertical, and the emulsion imprisoned between the   slide and the cover-glass has now a thickness only of the order   of a tenth of a millimetre. We take an objective of high   magnifying power and weak focal depth so that a very thin   horizontal layer of the emulsion (of the order of 2 microns) is   clearly seen, and an instantaneous photograph is taken. We thus   have the abundance at a certain level (as an aviator could take   the density of air at every level). The abundances at different   levels are then compared at our leisure.
The success is complete. Before insisting   that it is so, I can show a cinematographic film on which you   will see for yourselves the equilibrium distribution of an   emulsion formed from spherules which are agitated by the Brownian   movement.
The observations and the countings which   this film summarizes for you prove that the laws of ideal gases   apply to dilute emulsions. This generalization was predicted as a   consequence of the molecular hypothesis by such simple reasoning   that its verification definitely constitutes a very strong   argument in favour of the existence of molecules. In particular,   it was necessary - it can be verified effectively, and it is very   remarkable - that the various emulsions studied lead, within the   limit of the possible errors, to the same value for Avogadro's   number. In fact, I changed (with the valuable assistance of   Bjerrum, Dabrovski, and Bruhat) the mass of the grains (from 1 to   50), their nature (gamboge, mastic), their density (1.20 to   1.06), the nature of the intergranular liquid (water, strongly   sugared water, glycerol in the upper layers of which the grains   of mastic, being lighter, accumulated) and lastly the temperature   (from -9° to +60°). My most careful measurements made   with an emulsion the rarefaction of which doubled with each rise   of 6 microns, gave a value for N of 68 X   1022.
The accuracy of such determinations, so far   of several hundredths, can certainly be improved: the same does   not apply to values obtained from the kinetic theory of gases,   because here perfecting the measurements would not diminish the   uncertainties inherent in the simplifying assumptions which were   introduced to facilitate the calculations.
Non-diluted emulsions
Proceeding then further in tracing the   similarities between liquids and emulsions, I was able to show   (1913) that a non-diluted emulsion is comparable to a compressed   liquid of which the molecules would be visible.
For this purpose it was necessary to   determine the osmotic pressure as a function of the concentration   when the gas laws cease to be applicable. Let us, therefore,   consider a vertical column of emulsion which extends upwards   practically without limit. At each level the osmotic pressure can   be regarded as supporting the whole of the grains above it, and   we shall, therefore, know it by counting all these grains. The   emulsion will be imprisoned between two vertical plate glasses   only several microns apart so that all the grains can be taken by   an instantaneous photograph. The concentration of the grams at   each level is, on the other hand, fixed by the known number of   grains present in a small known volume near this level. In short,   we shall in this way know the pressure corresponding to a known   concentration: this will give experimentally the law of   compressibility which can then be compared with Van der Waals'   law.
Rene Costantin made these measurements   under my direction and confirmed that Van der Waals' law applies   to emulsions which are already too concentrated to conform to the   gas laws. The resulting value for Avogadro's number is 62 x   1022.
Even Van der Waals' law is no longer   suitable for concentrations above 3 per cent, but the   compressibility remains measurable, consequently the law of   compressibility remains known empirically.
This enables - and this idea was due   entirely to René Costantin who died for France in 1915 - a   theory of Smoluchovski to be checked on the density fluctuations   which the molecular agitation should produce in a liquid in   equilibrium. According to this theory, the fluctuation   (n'-n)/n in a volume containing accidentally n'   molecules whilst it should contain only n if the   distribution were uniform, has a mean value which can be   calculated if the compressibility of the liquid is known, and   which includes Avogadro's number.
For our emulsions of equal grains,   considered as fluids with visible molecules, the measurements of   osmotic compressibility, carried out as far as a content of 7 per   cent, have confirmed Smoluchovski's theory by giving   approximately 60 X 1022 for Avogadro's number.
Measurements of the Brownian movement
The equilibrium distribution of an emulsion   is due to the Brownian movement, and the more rapidly as this   movement is more active. But this rapidity is not important for   the final distribution. In fact, as we have just seen, I also   studied the distribution first on the permanent state without   making any measurement on the Brownian movement. But by means of   such measurements it is possible, though in a less obvious   manner, to demonstrate the discontinuous structure of matter and   to obtain a determination of Avogadro's number.
It is due to Einstein  and   Smoluchovski that we have a kinetic theory of the Brownian   movement which lends itself to verification.
Without being disturbed by the intricate   path described by a grain within a given time, these physicists   characterize the agitation by the rectilinear segment joining the   point of departure with the point of arrival, the segment being   on an average greater as the agitation is livelier. This segment   will be the displacement of the grain during the time   considered.
If we then admit that the Brownian movement   is perfectly irregular at right angles to the vertical, we   prove that the mean horizontal displacement of a grain is doubled   when the duration of the displacement is quadrupled, and is   tenfold if that duration becomes a hundredfold, and so forth.   This means that the mean square of the horizontal displacement is   proportional to the duration t of this displacement. This can   easily be verified.
Now, this mean square is equal to twice the   mean square 
   of the projection of the displacement on an arbitrary horizontal   axis. Consequently, the mean value of the quotient 
 for a given grain   remains constant. Obviously, since it increases as the grain is   more agitated, this mean quotient characterizes the activity   of the Brownian movement.
Having said this, there must be a   diffusion for the grains of an emulsion just as for the   molecules of a solution; Einstein shows that the coefficient of   diffusion should be equal to the half of the number which   measures the activity of the agitation.
On the other hand, the steady state in a   vertical column of emulsion is produced and maintained by the   interplay of two opposing actions, gravity and the Brownian   movement; this can be expressed by writing that at each level the   flow through diffusion towards the poor regions is equal to that   which gravity produces towards the rich regions.
In order to calculate the flow by diffusion   it must be admitted, as we have done, that grains or molecules   are equivalent to each other in regard to the osmotic pressures;   in order to calculate the flow produced by gravity, in the case   of spherules of radius a, it must be admitted, though at   first it appeared uncertain, that the (very weak) mean velocity   of fall of a grain animated by a very active Brownian movement   can still be calculated by "Stokes' law" which applies to the   uniform fall in a viscous liquid of a large sphere which is   practically not animated by a Brownian movement. In fact, I have   since shown experimentally that this is so.
Having admitted this hypothesis, Einstein   finds that the diffusion coefficient 
 is equal to (RT/N)   (6paz)-1 (R   being the gas constant, T the absolute temperature, and   z the viscosity).
So far we have thought of the   translational Brownian movement only. Now a grain rotates   at the same time as it is displaced. Einstein was able to show   that if 
   denotes the mean square in a time t of the component of   the angle of rotation around an axis, the agitation coefficient   of rotation 
   is fixed for the same grain and should be equal to (RT/N)   (4pa3z)-1.  His   reasoning implies equality between the mean energy of   translation and the mean energy of rotation which was   predicted by Boltzmann and which we shall make more probable if   we succeed in confirming this equation.
These theories can be judged by experiment   if we know how to prepare spherules of a measurable   radius. I was, therefore, in a position to attempt this check   as soon as I knew, thanks to Langevin, of the work of   Einstein.
I must say that, right at the beginning,   Einstein and Smoluchovski had pointed out that the order of   magnitude of the Brownian movement seemed to correspond to their   predictions. And this approximate agreement gave already much   force to the kinetic theory of the phenomenon, at least in broad   outline.
It was impossible to say anything more   precise so long as spherules of known size had not been prepared.   Having such grains, I was able to check Einstein's formulae by   seeing whether they led always to the same value for Avogadro's   number and whether it was appreciably equal to the value already   found.
This is obtained for the displacements by   noting on the camera lucida (magnification known) the horizontal   projections of the same grain at the beginning and at the end of   an interval of time equal to the duration chosen, in such a   manner as to measure a large number of displacements, for example   in one minute.
In several series of measurements I varied,   with the aid of several collaborators, the size of the grains (in   the ratio of I to 70,000) as well as the nature of the liquid   (water, solutions of sugar or urea, glycerol) and its viscosity   (in the ratio of 1 to 125). They gave values between 55 x   1022 and 72 x 1022, with differences which   could be explained by experimental errors. The agreement is such   that it is impossible to doubt the correctness of the kinetic   theory of the translational Brownian movement.
It must otherwise be observed that although   it is didactically of comparable difficulty to the kinetic theory   of the viscosity of gases, Einstein's theory does not introduce   simplifying approximations and, like the measurement of height   distribution, lends itself to a precise determination of   Avogadro's number.
My most careful measurements which gave me   N equal to 69 x 1022 had been made on grains   which, for reasons which are no longer of interest, had their   initial position at 6 µ from the bottom of the   preparation. In the course of the verifications which I had asked   René Costantin to make on preparations which were only   several microns thick, he found that the vicinity of a wall   slowed down the Brownian movement. The measurements made at a   distance from the walls gave a value for N of 64 x   1022.
With regard to the rotational   Brownian movement, Einstein's formula predicts a mean rotation of   approximately 8° per hundredth of a second for spheres of 1   µ diameter, a rotation which is too rapid to be   perceived and which - with greater reason - escapes measurement.   And, in fact, this rotation had not been made the subject of any   experimental study, at least not quantitatively. (Einstein did   not suppose that his formula could be verified.)
I overcame the difficulty by preparing   large spherules of mastic. I arrived at them by making pure water   pass slowly under an alcohol solution of resin. A passage zone is   produced where the grains form which then have generally a   diameter of some twelve microns. They are limpid spheres, like   glass balls. They frequently seem to be perfect, and then their   rotation is not observable. But they also frequently contain   small vacuoles, guide marks by means of which the rotational   Brownian movement is easily perceived.
But the weight of these large grains keeps   them very close to the bottom which disturbs their Brownian   movement. I, therefore, tried to give the intergranular liquid   the density of the grains by dissolving suitable substances in   it. A complication soon arose in that at the amount necessary for   keeping the grains suspended between the two waters, almost all   these substances agglutinated the grains into bunches of   grapes, showing thus in the nicest way possible the   phenomenon of coagulation which is not easy to obtain on   ordinary suspensions or colloidal solutions (of ultramicroscopic   grains). Coagulation failed to occur in a single substance,   urea.
In water containing 27 per cent urea I was,   therefore, able to follow the agitation of the grains and to   measure their rotation. For this I noted at equal intervals of   time the successive positions of certain vacuoles from which it   was then possible, at one's leisure, to find again the   orientation of the sphere at each of these moments and to   calculate its rotation from one moment to the next. The   calculations were made on approximately 200 (fairly rough) gl an   e measurements on spheres having a diameter of 13 µ,   and gave me for N the value of 65 x 1022 This   agreement with the previous . determinations is all the more   striking as even the order of magnitude of the phenomenon was not   known (1910).
The molecular reality
Briefly, and in spite of the variety of   experimental conditions and techniques, the study of the   emulsions gave me for Avogadro's number:
68 x 1022 by means of the distribution of emulsions analogous to gases;
62 x 1022 by means of that of emulsions analogous to liquids;
60 x 1022 by means of the fluctuations in concentrated emulsions;
64 x 1022 by means of the translational Brownian movement;
65 x 1022 by means of the rotational Brownian movement;
or, as a crude average, 64 x   1022.
I can recall here that on the other hand,   considering gases as consisting of molecules which diffract light   (Rayleigh,   Smoluchovski, Einstein) it was possible to obtain (somewhat after   my first experiments) Avogadro's number by means of measurements   relating to the critical opalescence (Keesom: 75 x   1022 ), the blueness of the sky (Bauer and L.   Brillouin, then Fowler: 65 x 1022), and relating in a   particularly precise manner to light that was laterally diffused   by gases (Cabannes: 65 x 1022; 1921).
The theory of black-body radiation, where   the reasoning is allied to that of the kinetic theory, gives   again the same value (64 x 1022).
Along other lines, the measurements of the   electric charges of charged microscopic dust, which should be   whole multiples of the elementary charge of ions, led - by stages   with Townsend, J.J.    Thomson, Harold A. Wilson, Ehrenhaft, and finally Millikan  (1909) - to the   same result (61 x 1022).
Lastly, radioactivity which enables the   atoms forming a given mass of helium to be counted one by one,   has given in a totally different manner proofs of the   discontinuity of matter by imposing once again the same value (62   x 1022 to 70 x 1022) on Avogadro's   number.
Such a collection of agreements between the   various pieces of evidence according to which the molecular   structure is translated to the scale of our observations, creates   a certitude at least equal to that which we attribute to the   principles of thermodynamics. The objective reality of   molecules and atoms which was doubted twenty years ago, can   today be accepted as a principle the consequences of which   can always be proved.
Nevertheless, however sure this new   principle may be, it would still be a great step forward in our   knowledge of matter, and for all that a certitude of a different   order, if we could perceive directly these molecules the   existence of which has been demonstrated.
Without having arrived there, I have at   least been able to observe a phenomenon where the discontinuous   structure of matter can be seen directly.
Monomolecular films
I encountered this phenomenon (1913) by   observing under the microscope small laminae of "soapy water",   and in such simple conditions that it is surprising it was not   discovered earlier.
You know the properties of thin   laminae: each ray reflected from such a lamina is formed by   the superposition of a ray reflected from the front side of the   lamina on a ray reflected from the rear side. For each elementary   colour these rays add together or subtract from one another   according to a classical formula, depending on whether they are   in phase or out of phase; in particular, there is extinction when   the thickness of the lamina is an even multiple of one quarter of   the wavelength, and there is maximum reflection when it is an odd   multiple.
If, therefore, white light strikes a lamina   which has a thickness increasing continuously from zero, the   reflected light is at first non-existent (black lamina), then   weak (grey lamina), then lively and still almost white, becoming   successively straw yellow, orange yellow, red, violet, blue   (tints of the first order), then again (but with different tints)   yellow, red, violet, blue, green (second order); and so on, the   reflected colour becoming continuously more complex and more   off-white up to the "white of a higher order" (the spectrum is   furrowed with black grooves the number of which increases with   the thickness of the lamina). All these tints will be present at   the same time on a lamina which has not a uniform thickness and   which will be black or grey in its thinnest region, straw yellow   in a thicker region, red in an even thicker region, and so   forth.
It is the same with ordinary soap bubbles,   with their magnificent colours. The gradation of these colours   seems to us perfectly continuous, from the lowest part of the   bubble where the wall is thicker, to its upper part, which   thinning progressively, becomes white and then grey, after   passing through the "first-order" tints. At that moment, just   before the bubble bursts, this thin region: begins to show one or   several black spots, quite round, which contrast strongly   with the neighbouring grey tone (I mistook them for holes when I   was a child) and the very sharp edge of which marks a strong   discontinuity in the thickness. In fact, they are not completely   black, but reflect so little light that their thickness is   certainly small in relation to the wavelengths of white light. In   an enclosed space that is free from dust, these black spots may   extend over areas of the order of one square decimetre, and   remain for several months (Dewar).
A more careful examination has long since   shown that in the first black spot may form even blacker circles,   therefore thinner ones, again with a sharp periphery. In   measurements which were at the time very remarkable, although not   very accurate, Reinold and Rücker, and then Johonnott had   shown that the darkest spot could have a thickness of 6   mµ (milli-microns), and the other roughly twice this.   No interpretation had been given: it was simply thought that the   surface tension which is variable below a certain thickness,   became equal again for the thickness of the two black spots to   what it is for large thicknesses. In the light of subsequent   observations we shall understand that the black spot represents a   kind of carpet formed by two layers or perhaps even by a single   layer of molecules held together parallel with one another.
Without indicating here the intermediate   stages which I passed through, let us say straightaway that, by   observing in the microscope in bright light a small horizontal   lamina of a given soapy water (approximately 5 per cent pure   alkali oleate), I have seen the discontinuities multiplying of   which the black spots were the first example.
The observation is made as for a metal   surface: the light emitted through a lateral aperture in the tube   of the microscope and reflected towards the objective, passes it   and is reflected on the thin lamina, returning to the eye through   the objective and the eye-piece to give a clear image of the   lamina.
We then see, first of all, the colours in   continuous gradation of the ordinary laminae of soapy water; then   the lamina quivers; liquid gathers together in globules; at the   same time, uniform bands, with flat tints separated from one   another by arcs of a circle, appear in the whole lamina which   becomes a kind of mosaic. These arcs terminate at the globules   around which they radiate like stars. Once this stratification is   organized, a very slow evolution takes place by displacement of   the contours and the globules, giving (according to circumstances   over which I had no control) more or less importance to one band   or the other or a series of bands which is the reason for the   extraordinary variety of stepped laminae which are observed. Very   frequently kinds of flat bulges are seen protruding from the   globules or from the non-stratified peripheral liquid and   spreading over bands which have already formed.
We thus observe, in order of increasing   thickness, black bands which do not seem to differ from the "   black spots" which we just mentioned; then grey, white, yellow,   red, blue bands; and then bands having second-order tints, and so   on, up to higher-order white. Each band has a uniform colour   standing out clearly and discontinuously against adjacent bands.   The richness of the colours can be extreme as you see from the   colour photographs (Lumiere autochrome plates) which are here   projected. The richness pertaining partly to a transitional tint   - e.g. some purple - represented by an insignificant region on a   lamina of ordinary soap, may extend here as a flat tint over an   important area.
These bands are definitely liquids; this is   shown by the existence of exactly circular contours (when   solidification occurs, the areas become like dried skins with a   dentated contour), by the mobility of these contours which change   by blowing without breaking the lamina, by the existence finally   of a " two-dimensional " Brownian movement which is found (for   droplets, or for small flat discs, pieces detached from the   bands), on grey or coloured bands (the Brownian movement is all   the less lively when these bands are thicker which is natural in   view of the fact that the frictions then become more   important).
Let me add that I have also been able to   obtain such stepped laminae with alkali oleate in glycerol, and   also with alkali colophonates and resinates in water.
Having examined a large number of   stratified laminae, it occurred to me, before I made any   measurement, that the difference in thickness between two   adjacent bands cannot fall below a certain value and that this   elementary minimum difference, a kind of "step of a staircase",   is included a whole number of times in each band. Similarly, if   we throw playing-cards on the table, the thickness at each point   is that of a whole number of cards, without all possible   thicknesses being necessarily present, since two or three cards   may remain stuck together. The stratified liquid strips would,   therefore, be formed by the piling up of identical sheets, more   or less overlapping each other, their liquid state imposing on   the free contours the form of arcs of a circle (which are fixed   at their extremities on globules or on the non-stratified   periphery, according to conditions so far unknown).
The measurements confirmed this impression.   From 1913 onwards I found a value ranging between 4.2 and 5.5   mµ. And since then, precise photometric   determinations made under my direction in 1921 by P.V. Wells, who   otherwise had to overcome serious experimental difficulties, have   fully established what we can call a law of multiple   thicknesses.
We first of all applied simply the   classical relationship between the thickness of the lamina and   the intensity of the reflected light, using monochromatic   lighting.
On the first-order band 120 measurements   were made, giving thicknesses grouped according to the law of   chances around 4.4 mµ. It is certainly the best   measurement made so far of the thickness of the "black spot " for   which Johonnott gave 6 mµ. The extreme thinness of   this band, the faintness of the reflected light, and the   difficulties due to parasitic lights make this determination   particularly interesting.
The set of the measurements for the first   fifteen bands give similarly thicknesses which are, within   several hundredths, of the successive multiples of 4.5   mµ.
As this elementary thickness is not known   with a precision greater than 4 per cent, it seems impossible to   verify the law above a certain thickness. For example, at this   accuracy any thickness greater than 120 mµ would be a   multiple of 4.5 mµ. But if the law exists, the   thickness should always vary in the same way between two adjacent   areas; or again the "step of the stairs" should remain the same,   and this can be verified.
This is, in fact, what Wells saw, operating   this time in white light and using a method which René   Marcelin had suggested to me in 1914, by obtaining tints   identical to those of the lamina by means of a quartz compensator   of variable thickness which was placed between crossed nicols.   (The difference between the thicknesses of quartz which gave the   tints of the two adjacent liquid bands, determines the difference   in thickness of these bands.) He obtained in this way 4.2   mµ near the first-order violet and 4.3 near the   second-order violet.
In short, the "step of the staircase" has   the same value near the first, the fiftieth or the hundredth   band, i.e. approximately 4.4 mµ; and we can be sure   that:
In a stratified liquid lamina the   thickness of each band is a whole multiple of the same elementary   thickness;
in other words, it is very probable   that:
The bands of the stratified laminae are   formed by the overlapping, in any number, of identical   fundamental "sheets".
This is how a "discontinuous and periodic   structure" of matter is perceived quite directly, at least in a   certain group of cases.
Similar experiments, suggested precisely by   these observations of stratified laminae of soapy water, were   made on mica at the beginning of 1914 by René Marcelin (who   died for France in 1914). We know that if we pour selenium on to   mica, and if we try to tear off this mica, thin laminae of mica   remain adhering to the selenium. These laminae exhibit bright   colourations which are divided into completely flat tints   separated by clear rectilinear contours which mark   discontinuities of thickness. The minimum difference of thickness   measured with the Michel Levy comparator was found to be equal to   0.7 mµ which would, therefore, be the thickness of a   monomolecular layer in the crystal. But the measuring accuracy   becomes low for such a small thickness.
Let us return to the stratified laminae of   soapy water for which the size of the discontinuities is such   that we have readily accessible the elementary sheet the periodic   repetition of which forms the bands. We shall want to know what   this elementary sheet is. I see in it a monomolecular film of   hydrated bioleate.
We know, in fact (Rayleigh, A. Marcelin,   Langmuir) that water on which float globules of oleic acid, is   covered between these globules with a veil of oleic acid 1.9   mµ thick. According to its known density, this veil   can be formed only by a single layer of molecules arranged   perpendicularly to the surface and probably glued to the water by   their (hygroscopic) acid groups. The surface of a soapy water is   greasy (low surface tension, arrest of the movements of camphor);   it is, therefore, covered at least by a similar layer of oleic   acid or oleate, as can be shown by analysing a known quantity of   soapy water drawn in the form of laminae having a known total   surface area (Jean Perrin, Mouquin). The black spot corresponding   to the maximum possible thinning would, therefore, be a kind of   sandwich containing a layer of water molecules against each side   of which, and glued to it by their acid groups, parallel   molecules of oleic acid or oleate are arranged, the whole forming   an anisotropic lamina or liquid crystalline sheet. The piling-up   of such sheets, easily sliding over each other - with weak   cohesion forces existing between them - would give the successive   bands.
In remarkable agreement with this   conception is the fact that the molecular length as calculated   for oleic acid from X-ray diffraction measurements recently made   in the laboratories of Bragg and Friedel agrees with the   thickness of our fundamental sheet.
I do not think that there is any more to be   said, at the moment, on the direct visibility of molecules.
The discontinuous structure of the atom
Even whilst evidence continued to   accumulate on the still disputed atomic reality, a start was made   to penetrate the interior structure of these atoms, a research in   which Rutherford  and   Bohr  obtained   marvellous results, as we know. And I must summarize here my   contribution to this research.
It was known that when an electric   discharge passes in a glass tube through a sufficiently rarefied   gas, the part facing the cathode is illuminated by a fluorescence   on which the shadow of any obstacle placed in front of the   cathode is outlined; and that the cathode rays definable   in this way, are deflected by the magnetic field, describing a   circular trajectory when they are thrown at right angles to a   uniform field (Hittorf). Crookes had had the intuition that these   rays were trajectories of negative particles emitted by the   cathode and violently repelled by it (1886), but he did not   succeed in establishing this electrification. And this emission   theory was abandoned when Hertz  on the one hand   failed in his attempts to manifest the negative electricity of   the rays, and on the other hand showed that they were able to   pass through glass foil or aluminium foil several microns thick.   It was assumed since then that the cathode rays were   immaterial and had a wave-like nature similar to light. This   opinion was held principally by Lenard (1894) who showed that   these rays can leave the tube where they are formed, through a   "window" made of a fairly thick foil to support the atmospheric   pressure, and that they can be studied in this way in any gas or   in an absolute vacuum.
It seemed to me, however, that the   electrified projectiles imagined by Crookes might differ   sufficiently, in size and in velocity, from ordinary molecules,   to pass through walls which were impermeable to these   molecules, and seeking to apply without complication the very   definition of the electric charge, I made cathode rays penetrate   into a "Faraday cylinder" contained inside a protective chamber.   As soon as the rays (which can, first, be drawn aside by a   magnetic field which is just strong enough to do so) enter the   cylinder, the latter presents phenomena which give precisely the   definition of a negative electric charge, and which enable it to   be measured (1895). This experiment was successful even when the   protective chamber was entirely closed, the rays penetrating it   through a thin metal foil. Almost at the same time I showed   (1896) that cathode rays are deflected by an electric field, and   that there is a method here for measuring the drop in potential   which had until then been unknown and from which they obtained   their energy.
These experiments were at once repeated,   and confirmed, by Lenard himself (whose theory they ruined), by   Wiechert, by Wien,  and by J.J.   Thomson.
I had begun to make measurements which were   intended to give the velocity (obviously variable according to   the circumstances) of the cathode projectiles and the e/m ratio   of its charge to its mass, supplementing the measurement of the   drop in potential with that of the magnetic field capable of   producing a given deflection. I was anticipated here by J. J.   Thomson who in the very paper in which he published the   confirmation of my experiments showed that once the   electrification of the rays had been demonstrated, it was easy to   obtain the velocity and the charge of the projectiles from the   action of the electrical field and the magnetic field. He found   that the e/m ratio, independently of all the   circumstances, is approximately 2,000 times greater than it is   for hydrogen in electrolysis, and consequently he had the honour   of proving that the cathode projectile is much lighter than the   hydrogen atom (1897). The experimental idea of the   electron as a universal subatomic constituent was   therefore reached, and my experiments had played a certain part   in this growth of our knowledge of the manner in which matter is   discontinuous.
The problem of the structure of the atom   was immediately raised as it ceased to be the ultimate unit of   matter. J. J. Thomson assumed that whilst the atom as a whole was   neutral, it consisted of a homogeneous sphere of positive   electricity inside which the electrons were held in such   positions that the attractions and repulsions were in   equilibrium.
I was, I believe, the first to assume that   the atom had a structure reminding to that of the solar system   where the "planetary" electrons circulate around a positive   "Sun", the attraction by the centre being counterbalanced by the   force of inertia (1901). But I never tried or even saw any means   of verifying this conception. Rutherford (who had doubtless   arrived at it independently, but who also had the delicacy to   refer to the short phrase dropped during a lecture in which I had   stated it) understood that the essential difference between his   conception and that of J.J. Thomson was that there existed near   the positive and quasi-punctual Sun, enormous electrical fields   as compared with those which would exist inside or outside a   homogeneous positive sphere having the same charge, but embracing   the whole atom.
The result was that if a positive charge   which is itself quasi-punctual, is sufficiently fast to be able   to pass near such a nucleus, it will be strongly deflected just   as a comet can be deflected when it comes from the infinite and   passes near the Sun. It was in this way (1911), that Rutherford   discovered and explained that certain a  rays (rays described by helium atoms projected   by radioactive substances) undergo very strong deflections when   they pass through a thin film, producing on a phosphorescent   screen, really far from the mean impact of the bundle of rays,   scintillations which mark their individual arrivals. All these   deflections are explained quantitatively on condition that the   nucleus is credited with a charge such that the number of   planetary electrons is equal to the "rank number" of the atom in   Mendeleev's series. In this way each atom consists of an   unimaginably small positive nucleus where almost the entire mass   of the atom is concentrated and around which the planetary   electrons, the presence of which determines the physical and   chemical properties of the corresponding element. revolve at   relatively colossal distances.
The nucleus itself, lastly, has been   revealed as being discontinuous and composed of hydrogen nuclei,   or protons, which are possibly "cemented " by nuclear   electrons.
As Prout had predicted, each atom can, in   fact, be regarded as resulting from the condensation on a whole   number of hydrogen atoms (the deviating elements having proved to   be mixtures of isotopes, which confirm the law   separately); the small differences which exist are explained (by   applying Einstein's law of the mass of energy) by the large   variations of internal energy which may accompany these   condensations (Langevin). And I have pointed out (1920) that the   loss of energy which must then accompany the condensation of   hydrogen into helium suffices alone to account for approximately   one hundred milliard years of solar radiation at the present rate   (the first theory to allow the understanding of the stupendous   antiquity of climatic conditions only slightly different from the   present conditions: the Helmholtz-Kelvin theory explained only a   maximum of 50 million-years, a grossly insufficient figure as far   as geology is concerned).
This led me to think that the atoms of   hydrogen, and then of helium (the only ones revealed by spectrum   analysis in the non-resolvable nebulae) condense progressively,   in the course of stellar evolution, into heavier and heavier   atoms, radioactive disintegration being the exception and atomic   integration being the rule.
However, Rutherford succeeded in proving,   in admirable experiments (1922), that when a nucleus of nitrogen,   aluminium, or phosphorus is struck forcefully by an a projectile   (sufficiently fast to "hit" it in spite of the electrical   repulsion), a proton is expelled (a   ray) with an energy which may exceed that of the a projectile,   and Rutherford interpreted this transmutation as being the   effect of an explosive disintegration (similar to that of a shell   which is exploded by an impact). I maintained, on the contrary   (1923), that there was then an integration, that the helium   nucleus at first combines with the nucleus that it has hit, to   form a radioactive atom (of a species as yet unknown) which soon   expels a proton, and that there finally remains an atom which is   three units heavier than the atom that has been hit. This has   since been confirmed by Blackett (1925) in the very laboratory of   Rutherford: three converging rays are counted (by the method of   C.T.R. Wilson) when a Rutherford transmutation occurs, instead of   the four which would exist if the striking projectile retained   its individuality after the impact.
But this refers rather to the evolution of   Matter than to its discontinuity; if I were to say any more, I   should be departing from the subject on which I came here to   speak.
*Similarly,  the fact that there exists a definite   isothermal radiation for each temperature, and that even a   temperature is definable without the energy present in the form   of radiation continuously gliding towards colours of increasingly   smaller wavelengths, requires a structure to be discontinuous   (Planck).
From Nobel  Lectures, Physics 1922-1941, Elsevier Publishing Company,  Amsterdam, 1965   
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1926
Sumber:
1. Wikipedia
2. Nobel Prize Org.
Ucapan Terima Kasih:
Ucapan Terima Kasih:
1. DEPDIKNAS Republik Indonesia
2. Kementrian Riset dan Teknologi Indonesia
3. Lembaga Ilmu Pengetahuan Indonesia (LIPI)
4. Akademi Ilmu Pengetahuan Indonesia
5. Tim Olimpiade Fisika Indonesia
Disusun Ulang Oleh: 
Arip Nurahman
Pendidikan Fisika, FPMIPA, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia
&
Follower Open Course Ware at MIT-Harvard University, USA.
Semoga Bermanfaat dan Terima Kasih
