Atoms for enquiring minds: A circus of experiments – Getting to know atoms (1979)

Eric M Rogers

In the first lecture, Eric Rogers introduces us to the world of atoms and the unusual properties of liquids.

Watch time: 55:27
A glass goblet with smoke billowing out from it
Image credit: Royal Institution

Lecture 1 – Getting to know atoms

From the 1979 lecture programme:

Atoms in solids are usually packed in a regular pattern, making crystals, which give us a hint of the existence of atoms. Molecules (which are 'family groups' of atoms) exert forces on each other when they are close, in solids and liquids. See those forces put to use in water-proofing and dishwashing.

We shall make a thin sheet of oil tell us the size of a single molecule and then the size of an atom. See the effect of water molecules bombarding a visible victim. See some strange behaviours of liquid turning to vapour: boiling and the difficulties of mountain cookery; water boiling and freezing at the same time; liquid suddenly vanishing into gas.

Atoms are far too small for us to see them, because the wavelength of the light we see by is far too large. So we should say, honestly, you can never see atoms. Yet we make a strange promise in the final lecture you shall see atoms. You must wait till then because you need to learn the method of the experiment and to understand the indirect interpretation. At the end of this first lecture you will see the largest (fake?) drop of water you could ever imagine. 

Note: If we sketch a scale of sizes, all the way from people to atoms, on an even scale of metres or inches, the labels will be hopelessly crowded at the small-size end, with bacteria, molecules, atoms, nuclei, practically on top of each other. Instead, we spread the scale by factors, making each of the 'equal' steps one-tenth of the step before.

The notes of a piano are scaled like that: as you go up in octaves, say from C to C to C... the wavelength of the sound (from crest to crest in air) goes down by a factor of 2 for each octave, from 5 metres, to 21, to 1-1, to 8 and so on. You will meet a similar 'logarithmic' scale in decay of radioactivity. Curiously enough human beings estimate the brightness of light and loudness of sound on similar logarithmic scales. 

About the 1979 CHRISTMAS LECTURES

From the 1979 lecture programme:

We build our scientific knowledge by doing experiments, by asking questions of Nature and sorting out the answers that Nature gives us. The sorting-out often involves reasoning and imagination; but without trying experiments to see what does happen we should just be guessing in the dark.

The earliest scientists, who helped our ancestors long ago to make a calendar, to navigate, and to measure and build, gathered some knowledge by watching what does happen. Nature was offering experimental knowledge all round them; and they observed and extracted general knowledge and used it. That was knowledge of man-sized things: a hand mirror to reflect rays of sunlight; the star patterns seen at night reduced to a sketch; a seesaw to balance children —leading to weighing machines; a bridge across a stream, leading to knowledge of forces; measurements for a building only a few men high; a survey of a mountain that men could climb.

Such gathering and use of scientific knowledge dates from thousands of years ago, perhaps even a million or so. That was experimental knowledge, though it was sometimes mixed with guessing or even wild imagining. But when men tried to describe the fire of the stars far out of reach, or to imagine outrageously small moving atoms in all matter, they were indeed guessing in the dark about things far above or below the scale of man-sized things.

Some early scientists did make interesting guesses about atoms, yet these were only guesses. These were clever philosophy if you like, but there were no experiments to support them.

Except for clever suggestions, our knowledge of atoms is very young compared with our older scientific knowledge. Some of it is a few centuries old but much of it is only one century old at most. There are two reasons for that late development. First: since atoms are (as we now know) far too small to be seen, all our experimental gathering of knowledge has to be indirect. Although we now know a great deal about atoms, and about the still smaller parts of atoms, we still have to describe them by imaginative pictures which we call models.

Second: even to build such knowledge indirectly, new apparatus had to be developed, such as vacuum pumps and electronic supplies for high voltage. The aid of a vast new technology was needed.

Nowadays when one learns what has been discovered about atoms one has to learn by hearsay, one has to accept the indirect methods and swallow the picturing by imaginative models. Then a keen listener must long for some experimental support or illustrations. That is what these lectures will offer in their 'circus of experiments'. The circus cannot cover all our new knowledge of atoms but it will, we trust, give visitors a feeling of friendly first-hand acquaintance, a contribution of confidence and understanding as well as a delight in seeing experiments.