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約西亞·威拉德·吉布斯
Portrait of Josiah Willard Gibbs
約西亞·威拉德·吉布斯
出生(1839-02-11)1839年2月11日
 美國康涅狄克州紐黑文
逝世1903年4月28日(1903歲—04—28)(64歲)
 美國康涅狄克州紐黑文
居住地 美國
母校耶魯大學
知名於統計力學
系綜
吉布斯熵
相空間
吉布斯自由能
吉布斯相律
吉布斯悖論
向量分析
向量積
吉布斯現象
吉布斯-亥姆霍茲方程
吉布斯-杜安方程
吉布斯算法英語Gibbs algorithm
吉布斯測度英語Gibbs measure
吉布斯態英語Gibbs state
吉布斯-湯姆森效應英語Gibbs–Thomson effect
吉布斯等溫面英語Gibbs isotherm
吉布斯-唐南效應
吉布斯-馬倫哥尼效應
吉布斯引理英語Gibbs lemma
吉布斯不等式
獎項倫福德獎英語Rumford Prize(1880年),科普利獎章(1901年)
科學生涯
研究領域物理學化學家數學
機構耶魯大學
博士導師休伯特·安森·牛頓
博士生埃德溫·比德韋爾·威爾遜英語Edwin Bidwell Wilson歐文·費雪亨利·安德魯斯·巴姆斯特德英語Henry Andrews Bumstead林德·惠勒英語Lynde Wheeler李·德富雷斯特
受影響自魯道夫·克勞修斯赫爾曼·格拉斯曼詹姆斯·克拉克·麥克斯韋路德維希·玻爾茲曼
簽名
Gibbs's signature

約西亞·威拉德·吉布斯(英語:Josiah Willard Gibbs,1839年2月11日—1903年4月28日)是一位美國科學家。他在物理學化學以及數學領域都做出了重大的理論貢獻。通過引入熱力學的理論,他成功地將物理化學轉化為一門嚴格的演繹科學。同時,他與詹姆斯·克拉克·麥克斯韋以及路德維希·玻爾茲曼共同創建了統計力學理論。而「統計力學」這個術語也是由他引入的。這一理論將熱力學定律從統計角度解釋為由大量微觀粒子組成的系綜的性質在宏觀的表現。他還將麥克斯韋方程組引入物理光學的研究。在數學領域,他與英國科學家奧利弗·黑維塞各自獨立地創建了現代矢量分析理論。

1863年,耶魯大學授予了吉布斯美國首個工程學哲學博士學位。在歐洲度過三年後,吉布斯自1871年起擔任耶魯大學的數學物理學教授直到去世。儘管與當時科學蓬勃發展的歐洲相對孤立,他還是成為了美國首位獲得國際聲譽的理論科學家,並被阿爾伯特·愛因斯坦譽為「美國史上最為偉大的科學家」。[1]1901年,吉布斯因他在數學物理學領域的貢獻[2] 被授予了當時國際科學界最高獎項,英國皇家學會頒發的科普利獎章 [1]

吉布斯的科學貢獻在國際科學界造成的巨大衝擊與他在世紀之交的新英格蘭度過的寧靜、孤獨的一生所形成的鮮明對比,歷來為評論者和傳記作家津津樂道。儘管吉布斯做的研究都是純理論性的,但其實際應用價值在20世紀上半葉化工領域的蓬勃發展中得到了充分的展示。羅伯特·密立根稱,吉布斯「之於統計力學和熱力學,一如拉普拉斯之於天體力學以及麥克斯韋之於電動力學。他構造了這個領域完整的理論體系。」[3]

生平

家族背景

吉布斯出身於一個古老的美國北方家族。這個家族自17世紀起就湧現了一批傑出的牧師和學者。他是老約西亞·威拉德·吉布斯英語Josiah Willard Gibbs, Sr.和妻子瑪麗·安娜(娘家姓范克里夫)五個孩子中的老四,也是唯一的一個兒子。他的父系血緣可追溯至曾於1701年至1707年擔任哈佛學院校長英語President of Harvard University薩繆爾·威拉德英語Samuel Willard。而如果追溯其母系血緣的話,他則是新澤西州學院(即後來的普林斯頓大學)的首任校長喬納森·迪金森英語Jonathan Dickinson (New Jersey)牧師的後裔。而「約西亞·威拉德」這個名字則來源於他的先輩,曾任馬薩諸塞灣省布政司的約西亞·威拉德。[4]

老吉布斯一般被家人同事稱作「約西亞」,而吉布斯則被叫作「威拉德」[5]。老吉布斯是一位語言學家和神學家,自1824年至1861年其去世任耶魯大學神學院的經學(sacred literature)教授。而現今,他因 He is chiefly remembered today as the abolitionist who found an interpreter for the African passengers of the ship Amistad, allowing them to testify during the trial that followed their rebellion against being sold as slaves.[6]

早年

 
學生時代的吉布斯,大約攝於1855年

Willard Gibbs was educated at the Hopkins School and entered Yale College in 1854, aged 15. He graduated in 1858 near the top of his class, and was awarded prizes for excellence in mathematics and Latin.[7] He remained at Yale as a graduate student at the Sheffield Scientific School. At age 19, soon after his graduation from college, Gibbs was inducted into the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences, a scholarly institution composed primarily of members of the Yale faculty.[8]

Relatively few documents from the period survive and it is impossible to reconstruct the details of Gibbs's early career with precision.[9] In the opinion of biographers, Gibbs's principal mentor and champion, both at Yale and in the Connecticut Academy, was probably the astronomer and mathematician Hubert Anson Newton, a leading authority on meteors, who remained Gibbs's lifelong friend and confidant.[8][9] After the death of his father in 1861, Gibbs inherited enough money to make him financially independent.[10]

Recurrent pulmonary trouble ailed the young Gibbs and his doctors were concerned that he might be susceptible to tuberculosis, which had killed his mother.[9] He also suffered from astigmatism, whose treatment was then still largely unfamiliar to oculists, so that Gibbs had to diagnose himself and grind his own lenses.[11][12] Though in later years he used glasses only for reading or other close work,[11] Gibbs's delicate health and imperfect eyesight probably explain why he did not volunteer to fight in the Civil War of 1861–65.[13] He was not conscripted and he remained at Yale for the duration of the war.[14]

 
擔任耶魯大學教授時的吉布斯[15]

In 1863, Gibbs received the first Ph.D. degree in engineering granted in the US, for a thesis entitled "On the Form of the Teeth of Wheels in Spur Gearing", in which he used geometrical techniques to investigate the optimum design for gears.[16] This was also only the fifth Ph.D. granted in the US in any subject.[16] After graduation, Gibbs was appointed as tutor at the College for a term of three years. During the first two years he taught Latin and during the third "natural philosophy" (i.e., physics).[4] In 1866 he patented a design for a railway brake[17] and read a paper before the Connecticut Academy, entitled "The Proper Magnitude of the Units of Length", in which he proposed a scheme for rationalizing the system of units of measurement used in mechanics.[18]

After his term as tutor ended, Gibbs traveled to Europe with his sisters. They spent the winter of 1866–67 in Paris, where Gibbs attended lectures at the Sorbonne and the Collège de France, given by such distinguished mathematical scientists as Joseph Liouville and Michel Chasles.[19] Having undertaken a punishing regime of study, Gibbs caught a serious cold and a doctor, fearing tuberculosis, advised him to rest on the Riviera, where he and his sisters spent several months and where he made a full recovery.[20]

Moving to Berlin, Gibbs attended the lectures taught by mathematicians Karl Weierstrass and Leopold Kronecker, as well as by chemist Heinrich Gustav Magnus.[21] In August 1867, Gibbs's sister Julia was married in Berlin to Addison Van Name, who had been Gibbs's classmate at Yale. The newly married couple returned to New Haven, leaving Gibbs and his sister Anna in Germany.[22] In Heidelberg, Gibbs was exposed to the work of physicists Gustav Kirchhoff and Hermann von Helmholtz, and chemist Robert Bunsen. At the time, German academics were the leading authorities in the natural sciences, especially chemistry and thermodynamics.[23]

Gibbs returned to Yale in June 1869 and briefly taught French to engineering students.[24] It was probably also around this time that he worked on a new design for a steam-engine governor, his last significant investigation in mechanical engineering.[25][26] In 1871 he was appointed Professor of Mathematical Physics at Yale, the first such professorship in the United States. Gibbs, who had independent means and had yet to publish anything, was assigned to teach graduate students exclusively and was hired without salary.[27] Unsalaried teaching positions were common in German universities, on which the system of graduate scientific instruction at Yale was then being modeled.[28]

中年

 
Maxwell's sketch of the lines of constant temperature and pressure, made in preparation for his construction of a solid model based on Gibbs's definition of a thermodynamic surface for water (see Maxwell's thermodynamic surface)

Gibbs published his first work in 1873, at the unusually advanced age of 34.[7] His papers on the geometric representation of thermodynamic quantities appeared in the Transactions of the Connecticut Academy. This journal had few readers capable of understanding Gibbs's work, but he shared reprints with correspondents in Europe and received an enthusiastic response from James Clerk Maxwell at Cambridge. Maxwell even made, with his own hands, a clay model illustrating Gibbs's construct. He then produced three plaster casts of his model and mailed one to Gibbs. That cast is on display at the Yale physics department.[29]

Maxwell included a chapter on Gibbs's work in the next edition of his Theory of Heat, published in 1875. He explained the usefulness of Gibbs's graphical methods in a lecture to the Chemical Society of London and even referred to it in the article on "Diagrams" that he wrote for the Encyclopædia Britannica.[30] Prospects of collaboration between him and Gibbs were cut short by Maxwell's early death in 1879, aged 48. The joke later circulated in New Haven that "only one man lived who could understand Gibbs's papers. That was Maxwell, and now he is dead."[31]

Gibbs then extended his thermodynamic analysis to multi-phase chemical systems (i.e., to systems composed of more than one kind of matter) and considered a variety of concrete applications. He described that research in a monograph titled "On the Equilibrium of Heterogeneous Substances", published by the Connecticut Academy in two parts that appeared respectively in 1875 and 1878. That work, which covers about three hundred pages and contains exactly seven hundred numbered mathematical equations,[32] begins with a quotation from Rudolf Clausius that expresses what would later be called the first and second laws of thermodynamics: "The energy of the world is constant. The entropy of the world tends towards a maximum."[33]

Gibbs's monograph rigorously and ingeniously applied his thermodynamic techniques to the interpretation of physico-chemical phenomena, explaining and relating what had previously been a mass of isolated facts and observations.[34] The work has been described as "the Principia of thermodynamics" and as a work of "practically unlimited scope".[32] Wilhelm Ostwald, who translated Gibbs's monograph into German, referred to Gibbs as the "founder of chemical energetics".[35] According to modern commentators,

It is universally recognised that its publication was an event of the first importance in the history of chemistry ... Nevertheless it was a number of years before its value was generally known, this delay was due largely to the fact that its mathematical form and rigorous deductive processes make it difficult reading for anyone, and especially so for students of experimental chemistry whom it most concerns.

——J. J. O'Connor and E. F. Robertson, 1997[7]

Gibbs continued to work without pay until 1880, when the new Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland offered him a position paying $3,000 per year. In response, Yale offered him an annual salary of $2,000, which he was content to accept.[36]

晚年

 
Yale's Sloane Physical Laboratory, as it stood between 1882 and 1931 at the current location of Jonathan Edwards College. Gibbs's office was on the second floor, to the right of the tower in the picture.[37]

From 1880 to 1884, Gibbs worked on developing the exterior algebra of Hermann Grassmann into a vector calculus well-suited to the needs of physicists. With this object in mind, Gibbs distinguished between the dot and cross products of two vectors and introduced the concept of dyadics. Similar work was carried out independently, and at around the same time, by the British mathematical physicist and engineer Oliver Heaviside. Gibbs sought to convince other physicists of the convenience of the vectorial approach over the quaternionic calculus of William Rowan Hamilton, which was then widely used by British scientists. This led him, in the early 1890s, to a controversy with Peter Guthrie Tait and others in the pages of Nature.[4]

Gibbs's lecture notes on vector calculus were privately printed in 1881 and 1884 for the use of his students, and were later adapted by Edwin Bidwell Wilson into a textbook, Vector Analysis, published in 1901.[4] That book helped to popularize the "del" notation that is widely used today in electrodynamics and fluid mechanics. In other mathematical work, he re-discovered the "Gibbs phenomenon" in the theory of Fourier series (which, unbeknownst to him and to later scholars, had been described fifty years before by an obscure English mathematician, Henry Wilbraham).[38]

 
The sine integral function, which gives the overshoot associated with the Gibbs phenomenon for the Fourier series of a step function on the real line

From 1882 to 1889, Gibbs wrote five papers on physical optics, in which he investigated birefringence and other optical phenomena and defended Maxwell's electromagnetic theory of light against the mechanical theories of Lord Kelvin and others.[4] In his work on optics just as much as in his work on thermodynamics, Gibbs deliberately avoided speculating about the microscopic structure of matter,[39] which proved a wise course in view of the revolutionary developments in quantum mechanics that began around the time of his death.[40]

Gibbs coined the term statistical mechanics and introduced key concepts in the corresponding mathematical description of physical systems, including the notions of chemical potential (1876), statistical ensemble (1878), and phase space (1902).[41][42] Gibbs's derivation of the phenomenological laws of thermodynamics from the statistical properties of systems with many particles was presented in his highly-influential textbook Elementary Principles in Statistical Mechanics, published in 1902, a year before his death.[41]

Gibbs's retiring personality and intense focus on his work limited his accessibility to students. His principal protégé was Edwin Bidwell Wilson, who nonetheless explained that "except in the classroom I saw very little of Gibbs. He had a way, toward the end of the afternoon, of taking a stroll about the streets between his study in the old Sloane Laboratory and his home—a little exercise between work and dinner—and one might occasionally come across him at that time."[43] Gibbs did supervise the doctoral thesis on mathematical economics written by Irving Fisher in 1891.[44] After Gibbs's death, Fisher financed the publication of his Collected Works.[45] Another distinguished student was Lee De Forest, later a pioneer of radio technology.[46]

Gibbs died in New Haven on April 28, 1903, at the age of 64, victim of an acute intestinal obstruction.[43] A funeral was conducted two days later at his home on 121 High Street[47] and his body was buried in the nearby Grove Street Cemetery.[48] In May, Yale organized a memorial meeting at the Sloane Laboratory. The eminent British physicist J. J. Thomson was in attendance and delivered a brief address.[49]

個人生活

 
1895年左右拍攝的肖像。依據吉布斯的學生林德·惠勒描述,這幅肖像是現存肖像中最能真實展現吉布斯平時和藹面孔的一幅。[50]

Gibbs never married, living all his life in his childhood home with his sister Julia and her husband Addison Van Name, who was the Yale librarian. Except for his customary summer vacations in the Adirondacks (at Keene Valley, New York) and later at the White Mountains (in Intervale, New Hampshire),[51] his sojourn in Europe in 1866–69 was almost the only time that Gibbs spent outside New Haven.[4] He joined Yale's College Church (a Congregational church) at the end of his freshman year[51][52] and remained a regular attendant for the rest of his life.[53] He generally voted for the Republican candidate in presidential elections, but he supported Grover Cleveland, a conservative Democrat.[54] Otherwise very little is known of his religious or political views, which he kept to himself.[53]

Gibbs did not produce a substantial personal correspondence and many of his letters were later lost or destroyed.[55] Beyond the technical writings concerning his research, he published only two other pieces: a brief obituary for Rudolf Clausius, one of the founders of the mathematical theory of thermodynamics, and a longer biographical memoir of his mentor at Yale, H. A. Newton.[56] In Edward Bidwell Wilson's view,

Gibbs was not an advertiser for personal renown nor a propagandist for science; he was a scholar, scion of an old scholarly family, living before the days when research had become search ... Gibbs was not a freak, he had no striking ways, he was a kindly dignified gentleman.

——E. B. Wilson, 1931[43]

According to Lynde Wheeler, who had been Gibbs's student at Yale, in his later years Gibbs

was always neatly dressed, usually wore a felt hat on the street, and never exhibited any of the physical mannerisms or eccentricities sometimes thought to be inseparable from genius ... His manner was cordial without being effusive and conveyed clearly the innate simplicity and sincerity of his nature.

——Lynde Wheeler, 1951[50]

He was a careful investor and financial manager, and at his death in 1903 his estate was valued at $100,000.[51] For many years he served as trustee, secretary, and treasurer of his alma mater, the Hopkins School.[57] US President Chester A. Arthur appointed him as one of the commissioners to the National Conference of Electricians, which convened in Philadelphia in September 1884, and Gibbs presided over one of its sessions.[51] A keen and skilled horseman,[58] Gibbs was seen habitually in New Haven driving his sister's carriage.[59] In an obituary published in the American Journal of Science, Gibbs's former student Henry A. Bumstead referred to Gibbs's personal character:

Unassuming in manner, genial and kindly in his intercourse with his fellow-men, never showing impatience or irritation, devoid of personal ambition of the baser sort or of the slightest desire to exalt himself, he went far toward realizing the ideal of the unselfish, Christian gentleman. In the minds of those who knew him, the greatness of his intellectual achievements will never overshadow the beauty and dignity of his life.

——H. A. Bumstead, 1903[4]

主要科學貢獻

化學熱力學

 
Graphical representation of the free energy of a body, from the latter of the papers published by Gibbs in 1873. This shows a plane of constant volume, passing through the point A that represents the body's initial state. The curve MN is the section of the "surface of dissipated energy". AD and AE are, respectively, the energy (ε) and entropy (η) of the initial state. AB is the "available energy" (now called the Helmholtz free energy) and AC the "capacity for entropy" (i.e., the amount by which the entropy can be increased without changing the energy or volume).

Gibbs's papers from the 1870s introduced the idea of expressing the internal energy U of a system in terms of the entropy S, in addition to the usual state-variables of volume V, pressure p, and temperature T.[41] He also introduced the concept of the chemical potential   of a given chemical species, defined to be the rate of the increase in U associated with the increase in the number N of molecules of that species (at constant entropy and volume). Thus, it was Gibbs who first combined the first and second laws of thermodynamics[41] by expressing the infinitesimal change in the energy of a system in the form:

 

where the sum in the last term is over the different chemical species. By taking the Legendre transform of this expression, he defined the concepts of enthalpy and "free energy", including what is now known as the "Gibbs free energy" (a thermodynamic potential which is especially useful to chemists since it determines whether a reaction will proceed spontaneously at a fixed temperature and pressure). In a similar way, he also obtained what later came to be known as the "Gibbs–Duhem equation".[34][41]

The publication of the paper "On the Equilibrium of Heterogeneous Substances" (1874–78) is now regarded as a landmark in the development of physical chemistry.[7] In it, Gibbs developed a rigorous mathematical theory for various transport phenomena, including adsorption, electrochemistry, and the Marangoni effect in fluid mixtures.[34] He also formulated the phase rule

 

for the number F of variables that may be independently controlled in an equilibrium mixture of C components existing in P phases. Awareness of this rule led to the widespread use of phase diagrams by chemists.[60]

統計力學

吉布斯與詹姆斯·克拉克·麥克斯韋路德維希·玻爾茲曼共同創建了統計力學理論。而「統計力學」這個術語也是由他引入的。統計力學旨在利用統計方法,從大量微觀粒子的運動角度解釋宏觀的熱力學現象。他還引入了相空間的概念,並在這一概念基礎上建立了系綜的概念,並由此給出了麥克斯韋和玻爾茲曼提出的粒子系統的統計性質的理論的更為普遍的表述。[41][42]

According to Henri Poincaré, writing in 1904, even though Maxwell and Boltzmann had previously explained the irreversibility of macroscopic physical processes in probabilistic terms, "the one who has seen it most clearly, in a book too little read because it is a little difficult to read, is Gibbs, in his Elementary Principles of Statistical Mechanics."[61] Gibbs's analysis of irreversibility, and his formulation of Boltzmann's H-theorem and of the ergodic hypothesis, were major influences on the mathematical physics of the 20th century.[40][62]

Gibbs was well aware that the application of the equipartition theorem to large systems of classical particles failed to explain the measurements of the specific heats of both solids and gases, and he argued that this was evidence of the danger of basing thermodynamics on "hypotheses about the constitution of matter".[42] Gibbs's own framework for statistical mechanics was so carefully constructed that it could be carried over almost intact after the discovery that the microscopic laws of nature obey quantum rules, rather than the classical laws known to Gibbs and to his contemporaries.[7] His resolution of the so-called "Gibbs paradox", about the entropy of the mixing of gases, is now often cited as a prefiguration of the indistinguishability of particles required by quantum physics.[63]

矢量分析

 
兩個向量的向量積的大小和方向。這一概念由吉布斯引入。

British scientists, including Maxwell, had relied on Hamilton's quaternions in order to express the dynamics of physical quantities, like the electric and magnetic fields, having both a magnitude and a direction in three-dimensional space. Gibbs, however, noted that the product of quaternions always had to be separated into two parts: a one-dimensional (scalar) quantity and a three-dimensional vector, so that the use of quaternions introduced mathematical complications and redundancies that could be avoided in the interest of simplicity and to facilitate teaching. He therefore proposed defining distinct dot and cross products for pairs of vectors and introduced the now common notation for them. He was also largely responsible for the development of the vector calculus techniques still used today in electrodynamics and fluid mechanics.

While he was working on vector analysis in the late 1870s, Gibbs discovered that his approach was similar to the one that Grassmann had taken in his "multiple algebra".[64] Gibbs then sought to publicize Grassmann's work, stressing that it was both more general and historically prior to Hamilton's quaternionic algebra. To establish Grassmann's priority, Gibbs convinced Grassmann's heirs to seek the publication in Germany of the essay on tides that Grassmann had submitted in 1840 to the faculty at the University of Berlin, in which he had first introduced the notion of what would later be called a vector space.[65]

As Gibbs had advocated in the 1880s and 1890s, quaternions were eventually all but abandoned by physicists in favor of the vectorial approach developed by him and, independently, by Oliver Heaviside. Gibbs applied his vector methods to the determination of planetary and comet orbits. He also developed the concept of mutually reciprocal triads of vectors that later proved to be of importance in crystallography.[66]

物理光學

 
A calcite crystal produces birefringence (or "double refraction") of light, a phenomenon which Gibbs explained using Maxwell's equations for electromagnetic phenomena.

Though Gibbs's research on physical optics is less well known today than his other work, it made a significant contribution to classical electromagnetism by applying Maxwell's equations to the theory of optical processes such as birefringence, dispersion, and optical activity.[4][39] In that work, Gibbs showed that those processes could be accounted for by Maxwell's equations without any special assumptions about the microscopic structure of matter or about the nature of the medium in which electromagnetic waves were supposed to propagate (the so-called luminiferous ether). Gibbs also stressed that the absence of a longitudinal electromagnetic wave, which is needed to account for the observed properties of light, is automatically guaranteed by Maxwell's equations (by virtue of what is now called their "gauge invariance"), whereas in mechanical theories of light, such as Lord Kelvin's, it must be imposed as an ad hoc condition on the properties of the aether.[39]

In his last paper on physical optics, Gibbs concluded that

it may be said for the electrical theory [of light] that it is not obliged to invent hypotheses, but only to apply the laws furnished by the science of electricity, and that it is difficult to account for the coincidences between the electrical and optical properties of media unless we regard the motions of light as electrical.

——J. W. Gibbs, 1889[4]

Shortly afterwards, the electromagnetic nature of light was demonstrated by the experiments of Heinrich Hertz in Germany.[67]

科學界對於其貢獻的認知

Gibbs worked at a time when there was little tradition of rigorous theoretical science in the United States. His research was not easily understandable to his students or his colleagues and he made no effort to popularize his ideas or to simplify their exposition to make them more accessible.[7] His seminal work on thermodynamics was published mostly in the Transactions of the Connecticut Academy, a journal edited by his librarian brother-in-law, which was little read in the USA and even less so in Europe. When Gibbs submitted his long paper on the equilibrium of heterogeneous substances to the Academy, both Elias Loomis and H. A. Newton protested that they did not understand Gibbs's work at all, but they helped to raise the money needed to pay for the typesetting of the many mathematical symbols in the paper. Several Yale faculty members, as well as business and professional men in New Haven, contributed funds for that purpose.[68]

Even though it had been immediately embraced by Maxwell, Gibbs's graphical formulation of the laws of thermodynamics only came into widespread use in the mid 20th century, with the work of László Tisza and Herbert Callen.[69] According to James Gerald Crowther,

in his later years [Gibbs] was a tall, dignified gentleman, with a healthy stride and ruddy complexion, performing his share of household chores, approachable and kind (if unintelligible) to students. Gibbs was highly esteemed by his friends, but American science was too preoccupied with practical questions to make much use of his profound theoretical work during his lifetime. He lived out his quiet life at Yale, deeply admired by a few able students but making no immediate impress on American science commensurate with his genius.

——J. G. Crowther, 1937[7]
 
英國皇家學會所在地,伯林頓府

On the other hand, Gibbs did receive the major honors then possible for an academic scientist in the US. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1879 and received the 1880 Rumford Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences for his work on chemical thermodynamics.[70] He was also awarded honorary doctorates by Princeton University and Williams College.[4]

In Europe, Gibbs was inducted as honorary member of the London Mathematical Society in 1892 and as a foreign member of the Royal Society in 1897. He was elected as corresponding member of the Prussian and French Academies of Science and received honorary doctorates from the universities of Erlangen and Christiania (now Oslo).[4] The Royal Society further honored Gibbs in 1901 with the Copley Medal, then regarded as the highest international award in the natural sciences,[1] remarking that he had been "the first to apply the second law of thermodynamics to the exhaustive discussion of the relation between chemical, electrical and thermal energy and capacity for external work."[35] Gibbs, who remained in New Haven, was represented at the award ceremony by Commander Richardson Clover, the US naval attaché in London.[71]

In his autobiography, mathematician Gian-Carlo Rota tells of casually browsing the mathematical stacks of Sterling Library and stumbling on a handwritten mailing list, attached to some of Gibbs's course notes, which listed over two hundred notable scientists of his day, including Poincaré, Boltzmann, David Hilbert, and Ernst Mach. From this, Rota concluded that Gibbs's work was better known among the scientific elite of his day than the published material suggests.[72] Lynde Wheeler reproduces that mailing list in an appendix to his biography of Gibbs.[73] That Gibbs succeeded in interesting his European correspondents in his work is demonstrated by the fact that his monograph "On the Equilibrium of Heterogeneous Substances" was translated into German (then the leading language for chemistry) by Wilhelm Ostwald in 1892 and into French by Henri Louis Le Châtelier in 1899.[74]

影響

Gibbs's most immediate and obvious influence was on physical chemistry and statistical mechanics, two disciplines which he greatly helped to found. During Gibbs's lifetime, his phase rule was experimentally validated by Dutch chemist H. W. Bakhuis Roozeboom, who showed how to apply it in a variety of situations, thereby assuring it of widespread use.[75] In industrial chemistry, Gibbs's thermodynamics found many applications during the early 20th century, from electrochemistry to the development of the Haber process for the synthesis of ammonia.[76]

When Dutch physicist J. D. van der Waals received the 1910 Nobel Prize "for his work on the equation of state for gases and liquids" he acknowledged the great influence of Gibbs's work on that subject.[77] Max Planck received the 1918 Nobel Prize for his work on quantum mechanics, particularly his 1900 paper on Planck's law for quantized black-body radiation. That work was based largely on the thermodynamics of Kirchhoff, Boltzmann, and Gibbs. Planck declared that Gibbs's name "not only in America but in the whole world will ever be reckoned among the most renowned theoretical physicists of all times."[78]

 
1902年出版的吉布斯的專著《統計力學的基本原理》(Elementary Principles in Statistical Mechanics)的扉頁。這部專著是奠定統計力學基礎的文獻之一。

The first half of the 20th century saw the publication of two influential textbooks that soon came to be regarded as founding documents of chemical thermodynamics, both of which used and extended Gibbs's work in that field: these were Thermodynamics and the Free Energy of Chemical Processes (1923), by Gilbert N. Lewis and Merle Randall, and Modern Thermodynamics by the Methods of Willard Gibbs (1933), by Edward A. Guggenheim.[79] Under the influence of Lewis, William Giauque (who had originally wanted to be a chemical engineer) went on to become a professor of chemistry at Berkeley and won the 1949 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his investigations into the properties of matter at temperatures close to absolute zero, studies guided by the third law of thermodynamics.[80]

Gibbs's work on statistical ensembles, as presented in his 1902 textbook, has had a great impact in both theoretical physics and in pure mathematics.[40][62] According to mathematical physicist Arthur Wightman,

It is one of the striking features of the work of Gibbs, noticed by every student of thermodynamics and statistical mechanics, that his formulations of physical concepts were so felicitously chosen that they have survived 100 years of turbulent development in theoretical physics and mathematics.

——A. S. Wightman, 1990[40]

Initially unaware of Gibbs's contributions in that field, Albert Einstein wrote three papers on statistical mechanics, published between 1902 and 1904. After reading Gibbs's textbook (which was translated into German by Ernst Zermelo in 1905), Einstein declared that Gibbs's treatment was superior to his own and explained that he would not have written those papers if he had known Gibbs's work.[81]

Gibbs's early papers on the use of graphical methods in thermodynamics reflect a powerfully original understanding of what mathematicians would later call "convex analysis",[82] including ideas that, according to Barry Simon, "lay dormant for about seventy-five years".[83] Important mathematical concepts based on Gibbs's work on thermodynamics and statistical mechanics include the Gibbs lemma in game theory, the Gibbs inequality and Gibbs algorithm in information theory, as well as Gibbs sampling in computational statistics.

The development of vector calculus was Gibbs's other great contribution to mathematics. The publication in 1901 of E. B. Wilson's textbook Vector Analysis, based on Gibbs's lectures at Yale, did much to propagate the use of vectorial methods and notation in both mathematics and theoretical physics, definitively displacing the quaternions that had until then been dominant in the scientific literature.[84]

At Yale, Gibbs was also mentor to Lee De Forest, who went on to invent the triode amplifier and has been called the "father of radio".[85] De Forest credited Gibbs's influence for the realization "that the leaders in electrical development would be those who pursued the higher theory of waves and oscillations and the transmission by these means of intelligence and power."[46] Another student of Gibbs who played a significant role in the development of radio technology was Lynde Wheeler.[86]

Gibbs also had an indirect influence on mathematical economics. He supervised the thesis of Irving Fisher, who received the first Ph.D. in economics from Yale in 1891. In that work, published in 1892 as Mathematical Investigations in the Theory of Value and Prices, Fisher drew a direct analogy between Gibbsian equilibrium in physical and chemical systems, and the general equilibrium of markets, and he used Gibbs's vectorial notation.[44][87] Gibbs's protegé Edwin Bidwell Wilson became, in turn, a mentor to leading American economist and Nobel Laureate Paul Samuelson.[88] In 1947, Samuelson published Foundations of Economic Analysis, based on his doctoral dissertation, in which he used as epigraph a remark attributed to Gibbs: "Mathematics is a language." Samuelson later explained that in his understanding of prices his "debts were not primarily to Pareto or Slutsky, but to the great thermodynamicist, Willard Gibbs of Yale."[89]

Mathematician Norbert Wiener cited Gibbs's use of probability in the formulation of statistical mechanics as "the first great revolution of twentieth century physics" and as a major influence on his conception of cybernetics. Wiener explained in the preface to his book The Human Use of Human Beings that it was "devoted to the impact of the Gibbsian point of view on modern life, both through the substantive changes it has made to working science, and through the changes it has made indirectly in our attitude to life in general."[90]

後世對于吉布斯的紀念

 
吉布斯的青銅紀念像,原於1912年安放在斯隆物理實驗室,現位於耶魯大學約西亞·威拉德·吉布斯實驗室的入口處

When the German physical chemist Walther Nernst visited Yale in 1906 to give the Silliman lecture, he was surprised to find no tangible memorial for Gibbs. He therefore donated his $500 lecture fee to the university to help pay for a suitable monument. This was finally unveiled in 1912, in the form of a bronze bas-relief by sculptor Lee Lawrie, installed in the Sloane Physics Laboratory.[91] In 1910, the American Chemical Society established the Willard Gibbs Award for eminent work in pure or applied chemistry.[92] In 1923, the American Mathematical Society endowed the Josiah Willard Gibbs Lectureship, "to show the public some idea of the aspects of mathematics and its applications".[93]

 
位於耶魯大學科學山英語Science Hill (Yale University)的約西亞·威拉德·吉布斯實驗室

In 1945, Yale University created the J. Willard Gibbs Professorship in Theoretical Chemistry, held until 1973 by Lars Onsager. Onsager, who much like Gibbs focused on applying new mathematical ideas to problems in physical chemistry, won the 1968 Nobel Prize in chemistry.[94] In addition to establishing the Josiah Willard Gibbs Laboratories and the J. Willard Gibbs Assistant Professorship in Mathematics, Yale has hosted two symposia dedicated to Gibbs's life and work, one in 1989 and another on the centenary of his death, in 2003.[95] Rutgers University endowed a J. Willard Gibbs Professorship of Thermomechanics, held as of 2014 by Bernard Coleman.[96]

Gibbs was elected in 1950 to the Hall of Fame for Great Americans.[97] The oceanographic research ship USNS Josiah Willard Gibbs (T-AGOR-1) was in service with the United States Navy from 1958 to 1971.[98] The Gibbs crater, near the eastern limb of the Moon, was named in the scientist's honor in 1964.[99]

Edward Guggenheim introduced the symbol G for the Gibbs free energy in 1933, and this was used also by Dirk ter Haar in 1966.[100] This notation is now universal and is recommended by the IUPAC.[101] In 1960, William Giauque and others suggested the name "gibbs" (abbreviated gbs.) for the unit of entropy, calorie / Kelvin,[102] but this usage did not become common and the corresponding SI unit, Joule / Kelvin, carries no special name.

文學作品中

In 1909, the American historian and novelist Henry Adams finished an essay entitled "The Rule of Phase Applied to History", in which he sought to apply Gibbs's phase rule and other thermodynamic concepts to a general theory of human history. William James, Henry Bumstead, and others criticized both Adams's tenuous grasp of the scientific concepts that he invoked, as well as the arbitrariness of his application of those concepts as metaphors for the evolution of human thought and society.[103] The essay remained unpublished until it appeared posthumously in 1919, in The Degradation of the Democratic Dogma, edited by Henry Adams's younger brother Brooks.[104]

In the 1930s, feminist poet Muriel Rukeyser became fascinated by Willard Gibbs and wrote a long poem about his life and work ("Gibbs", included in the collection A Turning Wind, published in 1939), as well as a book-length biography (Willard Gibbs, 1942).[105] According to Rukeyser:

Willard Gibbs is the type of the imagination at work in the world. His story is that of an opening up which has had its effect on our lives and our thinking; and, it seems to me, it is the emblem of the naked imagination—which is called abstract and impractical, but whose discoveries can be used by anyone who is interested, in whatever "field"—an imagination which for me, more than that of any other figure in American thought, any poet, or political, or religious figure, stands for imagination at its essential points.

——Muriel Rukeyser, 1949[106]

In 1946, Fortune magazine illustrated a cover story on "Fundamental Science" with a representation of the thermodynamic surface that Maxwell had built based on Gibbs's proposal. Rukeyser had called this surface a "statue of water"[107] and the magazine saw in it "the abstract creation of a great American scientist that lends itself to the symbolism of contemporary art forms."[108] The artwork by Arthur Lidov also included Gibbs's mathematical expression of the phase rule for heterogeneous mixtures, as well as a radar screen, an oscilloscope waveform, Newton's apple, and a small rendition of a three-dimensional phase diagram.[108]

Gibbs's nephew, Ralph Gibbs Van Name, a professor of physical chemistry at Yale, was unhappy with Rukeyser's biography, in part because of her lack of scientific training. Van Name had withheld the family papers from her and, after her book was published in 1942 to positive literary but mixed scientific reviews, he tried to encourage Gibbs's former students to produce a more technically oriented biography.[109] Rukeyser's approach to Gibbs was also sharply criticized by Gibbs's former student and protégé Edwin Wilson.[110] With Van Name's and Wilson's encouragement, physicist Lynde Wheeler published a new biography of Gibbs in 1951.[111][112]

Both Gibbs and Rukeyser's biography of him figure prominently in the poetry collection True North (1997) by Stephanie Strickland.[113] In fiction, Gibbs appears as the mentor to character Kit Traverse in Thomas Pynchon's novel Against the Day (2006). That novel also prominently discusses the birefringence of Iceland spar, an optical phenomenon that Gibbs investigated.[114]

吉布斯紀念郵票

In 2005, the United States Postal Service issued the American Scientists commemorative postage stamp series designed by artist Victor Stabin, depicting Gibbs, John von Neumann, Barbara McClintock, and Richard Feynman. The first day of issue ceremony for the series was held on May 4 at Yale University's Luce Hall and was attended by John Marburger, scientific advisor to the President of the United States, Rick Levin, president of Yale, and family members of the scientists honored, including physician John W. Gibbs, a distant cousin of Willard Gibbs.[115]

Kenneth R. Jolls, a professor of chemical engineering at Iowa State University and an expert on graphical methods in thermodynamics, consulted on the design of the stamp honoring Gibbs.[116][117][118] The stamp identifies Gibbs as a "thermodynamicist" and features a diagram from the 4th edition of Maxwell's Theory of Heat, published in 1875, which illustrates Gibbs's thermodynamic surface for water.[117][118] Microprinting on the collar of Gibbs's portrait depicts his original mathematical equation for the change in the energy of a substance in terms of its entropy and the other state variables.[119]

主要研究領域概覽

相關條目

參考資料

內文注引

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  4. ^ 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 Bumstead 1928
  5. ^ Cropper 2001, p. 121
  6. ^ Linder, Douglas. Biography of Prof. Josiah Gibbs. Famous American Trials: Amistad Trial. University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law. [16 Jun 2012]. 
  7. ^ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F. Josiah Willard Gibbs. The MacTutor History of Mathematics archive. University of St Andrews, Scotland. School of Mathematics and Statistics. 1997 [16 Jun 2012]. 
  8. ^ 8.0 8.1 Rukeyser 1988, p. 104
  9. ^ 9.0 9.1 9.2 Wheeler 1998, pp. 23–24
  10. ^ Rukeyser 1998, pp. 120, 142
  11. ^ 11.0 11.1 Wheeler 1998, pp. 30–31
  12. ^ Rukeyser 1988, p. 143
  13. ^ Wheeler 1998, p. 30
  14. ^ Rukeyser 1998, p. 134
  15. ^ Wheeler 1998, p. 44
  16. ^ 16.0 16.1 Wheeler 1998, p. 32
  17. ^ US Patent No. 53,971, "Car Brake", Apr. 17, 1866. See The Early Work of Willard Gibbs in Applied Mechanics, (New York: Henry Schuman, 1947), pp. 51–62.
  18. ^ Wheeler 1998, appendix II
  19. ^ Wheeler 1998, p. 40
  20. ^ Wheeler 1998, p. 41
  21. ^ Wheeler 1998, p. 42
  22. ^ Rukeyser 1988, p. 151
  23. ^ Rukeyser 1988, pp. 158–161
  24. ^ Klein, Martin J. The Physics of J. Willard Gibbs in His Time. Proceedings of the Gibbs Symposium. 1990: 1–22. 
  25. ^
    Please expand by hand
  26. ^ Wheeler 1998, pp. 54–55
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  28. ^ Wheeler 1998, pp. 57–59
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  30. ^ Rukeyser 1988, p. 201
  31. ^ Rukeyser 1988, p. 251
  32. ^ 32.0 32.1 Cropper 2001, p. 109
  33. ^ Quoted in Rukeyser 1988, p. 233
  34. ^ 34.0 34.1 34.2 Wheeler 1998, ch. V
  35. ^ 35.0 35.1   Chisholm, Hugh (編). Gibbs, Josiah Willard. Encyclopædia Britannica (第11版). London: Cambridge University Press. 1911. 
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  39. ^ 39.0 39.1 39.2 Wheeler 1998, ch. VIII
  40. ^ 40.0 40.1 40.2 40.3 Wightman, Arthur S. On the Prescience of J. Willard Gibbs. Proceedings of the Gibbs Symposium. 1990: 23–38. 
  41. ^ 41.0 41.1 41.2 41.3 41.4 41.5 Klein 2008
  42. ^ 42.0 42.1 42.2 Wheeler 1998, ch. X
  43. ^ 43.0 43.1 43.2 Wilson 1931
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  52. ^ Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University, 1901–1910. New Haven: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor. 1910: 238. 
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  58. ^ Rukeyser 1988, p. 191
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  73. ^ Wheeler 1998, appendix IV
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    Please expand by hand
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  111. ^ Wheeler 1998, pp. ix–xiii
  112. ^
    Please expand by hand
  113. ^ Strickland, Stephanie. True North. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press. 1997. ISBN 978-0-268-01899-3. 
  114. ^ Pynchon, Thomas. Against the Day. New York: Penguin. 2006. ISBN 978-1-59420-120-2. 
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參考書目

第一手材料

  • L. P. Wheeler, E. O. Waters and S. W. Dudley (eds.),The Early Work of Willard Gibbs in Applied Mechanics, (New York: Henry Schuman, 1947). ISBN 1-881987-17-5. This contains previously unpublished work by Gibbs, from the period between 1863 and 1871.
  • J. W. Gibbs, On the Equilibrium of Heterogeneous Substances, Transactions of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences, 3, 108–248, 343–524, (1874–1878). Reproduced in both The Scientific Papers (1906), pp. 55–353 and The Collected Works of J. Willard Gibbs (1928), pp. 55–353.
  • E. B. Wilson, Vector Analysis, a text-book for the use of students of Mathematics and Physics, founded upon the Lectures of J. Willard Gibbs, (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1929 [1901]).
  • J. W. Gibbs, Elementary Principles in Statistical Mechanics, developed with especial reference to the rational foundation of thermodynamics, (New York: Dover Publications, 1960 [1902]).

吉布斯的其他科學論文可以從以下來源查詢:

  • The Scientific Papers of J. Willard Gibbs, in two volumes, eds. H. A. Bumstead and R. G. Van Name, (Woodbridge, CT: Ox Bow Press, 1993 [1906]). ISBN 0-918024-77-3, ISBN 1-881987-06-X. For scans of the 1906 printing, see vol. I and vol. II.
  • The Collected Works of J. Willard Gibbs, in two volumes, eds. W. R. Longley and R. G. Van Name, (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1957 [1928]). For scans of the 1928 printing, see vol. I and vol. II.

第二手材料

  • H. A. Bumstead, "Josiah Willard Gibbs", American Journal of Science (ser. 4) 16, 187–202 (1903) doi:10.2475/ajs.s4-16.93.187. Reprinted with some additions in both The Scientific Papers, vol. I, pp. xiii–xxviiii (1906) and The Collected Works of J. Willard Gibbs, vol. I, pp. xiii–xxviiii (1928). Also available here.
  • D. G. Caldi and G. D. Mostow (eds.), Proceedings of the Gibbs Symposium, Yale University, May 15–17, 1989, (American Mathematical Society and American Institute of Physics, 1990).
  • W. H. Cropper, "The Greatest Simplicity: Willard Gibbs", in Great Physicists, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001), pp. 106–123. ISBN 0-19-517324-4
  • M. J. Crowe, A History of Vector Analysis: The Evolution of the Idea of a Vectorial System, (New York: Dover, 1994 [1967]). ISBN 0-486-67910-1
  • J. G. Crowther, Famous American Men of Science, (Freeport, NY: Books for Libraries Press, 1969 [1937]). ISBN 0-8369-0040-5
  • F. G. Donnan and A. E. Hass (eds.), A Commentary on the Scientific Writings of J. Willard Gibbs, in two volumes, (New York: Arno, 1980 [1936]). ISBN 0-405-12544-5. Only vol I. is currently available online.
  • P. Duhem, Josiah-Willard Gibbs à propos de la publication de ses Mémoires scientifiques, (Paris: A. Herman, 1908).
  • C. S. Hastings, "Josiah Willard Gibbs", Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences, 6, 373–393 (1909).
  • M. J. Klein, "Gibbs, Josiah Willard", in Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography, vol. 5, (Detroit: Charles Scriber's Sons, 2008), pp. 386–393.
  • M. Rukeyser, Willard Gibbs: American Genius, (Woodbridge, CT: Ox Bow Press, 1988 [1942]). ISBN 0-918024-57-9
  • R. J. Seeger, J. Willard Gibbs, American mathematical physicist par excellence, (Oxford and New York: Pergamon Press, 1974). ISBN 0-08-018013-2
  • L. P. Wheeler, Josiah Willard Gibbs, The History of a Great Mind, (Woodbridge, CT: Ox Bow Press, 1998 [1951]). ISBN 1-881987-11-6
  • A. S. Wightman, "Convexity and the notion of equilibrium state in thermodynamics and statistical mechanics". Published as an introduction to R. B. Israel, Convexity in the Theory of Lattice Gases, (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1979), pp. ix–lxxxv. ISBN 0-691-08209-X
  • E. B. Wilson, "Reminiscences of Gibbs by a student and colleague", Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society, 37, 401–416 (1931).

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