A FEYN BALANCE
One of the most influential and colourful physicists of the 20th century? On his birth centenary, meet the pacifist who developed the atomic bomb, the Nobel Prize winner who solved physics problems in topless bars, and the safecracker who broke science f
With physics, the closer you get, the harder it becomes to see. Zoom past atoms and electrons into the nucleus, and you’ll find quarks. Actually you won’t. No one’s seen them; only data proves they exist. It takes a genius to understand what’s going on. But it takes a genius of truly epic proportions to understand why, and then turn that knowledge into something useful, while also finding ways to explain it to non-geniuses without the use of complicated equations.
Richard Feynman, the American Nobel Prize-winning physicist who would have been 100 this month, is precisely that kind of genius. He helped solve some of the toughest problems of the post-war years with work in low-temperature physics, quantum computing, nanotechnology and electrodynamics. He’s also one of the last of a generation of rockstar scientists (Einstein, Oppenheimer, Hawking) — eccentric experts who lived by their own rules and changed the way we think of science. Take a look at Feynman’s incredible life. Feynman earned his Nobel Prize in 1965 for helping develop a theory of quantum electrodynamics (QED) which describes how light and matter interact. But in his 70 years (he died of cancer in 1988) he contributed to varied fields. Biographers tend to mention his knack for being able to pick the right problem at the right time. Feynman described it as “just being curious”.
With QED alone, Feynman made life easier for physicists, inventing a new branch of maths that incorporated figures and illustrations instead of complicated equations for calculations. Those diagrams – squiggles, arrows and shapes – are today the standard notations for work on everything from the behaviour of subatomic particles to the way galaxies evolve.
“He basically taught us how light works,” says Amol Dighe, dean of graduate studies at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research deemed university. “But he roamed free across so many branches of physics — path integral formulation, nanotechnology and thermodynamics — and successfully made connections between them. That kind of genius comes only once every few decades.”
It’s no surprise that at 24, Feynman was among the top minds recruited to the topsecret Manhattan Project to build an atomic bomb for use against the Germans. He helped engineers calculate safety procedures to avoid accidents with stored radioactive material and watched the first nuclear weapon detonate as part of the US Army’s Trinity test in 1945.
By the ’50s Feynman was deeply interested in why liquid helium, at temperatures near zero, behaved so oddly — it would leak through molecule-thin cracks, remain still when its container was spun. What resulted was a quantum-mechanical explanation for the theory of superfluidity, when a liquid flows without friction.
He worked on a theory about the force that governs radioactive decay; took a break from physics to work on viruses; and offered potential applications for nanotechnology by watching ant behaviour. By 1968, he’d worked out what goes on inside an atom’s nucleus. He called the hypothetical particles partons, which helped physicists later understand quarks.
In 1986, Feynman began work on what would be his final project. He was the only scientist on an official team investigating why NASA’s Challenger space shuttle exploded seconds after take-off, killing all seven astronauts on board. Losing patience with bureaucracy, he flew across the
US, doing his own digging, and presented his answer on TV. Feynman dropped a ring-shaped rubber gasket into a glass of ice water to demonstrate that the material would not show resilience, much like the shuttle’s O-rings on that freezing day. NASA managers had ignored their engineers’ warnings to abort the launch due to the cold. His conclusion: “For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled.” American physicist and author Leonard Mlodinow, Feynman’s colleague in his final years, looks at his friendship with the physicist in his 2003 book, Feynman’s Rainbow. “He himself behaved much like an electron,” Mlodinow says.
At the California Institute of Technology, he was a regular at local strip clubs, seeing them as ideal places to clear his head as he worked out theories on napkins.
That he played the bongos is legendary. But Feynman played them well enough to accompany performers at a ballet. A few years after he’d developed his diagrams, he bartered physics coaching for art lessons with the artist Jirayr Zorthian. His work covered everything from portraits to sketches of strippers and female nudes.
During the Manhattan Project, he passed the time at the remote New Mexico facility by learning to crack open safes containing sensitive material about bomb building. They installed better locks but he just got smarter, leaving notes inside signed ‘Feynman the Safecracker’. He was eventually banned from entering several offices. After the war, he pursued his love for puzzles by becoming an expert on Mayan hieroglyphics.
He’s used probability theories to chat up women, he experimented with drugs, he was probably the only Nobel laureate to have gatecrashed a wedding reception. And on campus, he drove a van decorated in his famous diagrams, bearing vanity license plates that spelt QUANTUM. Feynman was destined for the lab. “If he’s a boy I want him to be a scientist,” his father, Melville, a salesman, is rumoured to have said to his pregnant wife Lucille.
By age 10, Feynman had his own laboratory, perfect for pranks. Feynman once put sodium ferrocyanide in the bathroom towels and an iron salt in the soap to give his mother blue hands from the ink they’d create when combined. She was horrified and screamed — but only about her good linen.
He taught himself trigonometry, analytic geometry and calculus, ultimately getting a perfect score in the maths and physics entrance exams at Princeton.
Life changed when his childhood sweetheart and wife Arline died of TB four years into their marriage, the same year the bomb Feynman helped develop was dropped on Japan. He says in Feynman’s Rainbow, “I didn’t get mad... Who was there to be mad at? I couldn’t get mad at God because I don’t believe in God. And you can’t get mad at bacteria, can you?”
Still, he lost focus, womanising and frequenting Vegas for the show girls. Then one day, in the university canteen, a plate thrown by a student at lunchtime clattered to the floor. Feynman observed that it rotated faster than it wobbled, making him wonder if the two motions were related. It broke the spell and got him thinking again. The story goes that when a reporter phoned him in the middle of the night to say he’d won the Nobel Prize, Feynman told him to call back at a decent hour, and hung up. The pleasure, he said, was not in awards but in finding things out and seeing that knowledge applied.
If scientists see Feynman as an uncommon mind, the rest of us see him as the scientist with the uncommon voice. In his pursuit of breakthroughs, he pushed for reforms in science education so it was about exploring ideas rather than learning definitions. “His insightfulness, I think came from being able to understand the ideas so well himself,” says Dighe.
For Dighe, the physicist has helped in remarkable and unexpected ways. “His investigation into the Challenger disaster made everyone realise that there were real-life applications to the complicated calculations that represent physics,” he says. “He also spoke about how learning the names of things, bird species for example, is not the same as understanding them. I’ve always used it as an excuse for not remembering names.”