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Realism, Physical Meaningfulness, and Molecular Spectroscopy

Teru Miyake, George Smith

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Abstract

Abstract Although the realism debate has focused on the work of Jean Perrin on Brownian motion, this chapter claims that the best place to look for a resolution of this debate is the period after the late 1920s, when stable theory-mediated measurement of molecular parameters first became possible through the application of quantum mechanics to spectroscopy. The chapter first examines how stable measurement of the molecular parameters of diatomic molecules was achieved in spectroscopy and then gauges what evidence there is that this stable measurement is giving spectroscopists access to the real properties and structure of molecules. It argues that an evaluation of the latter question requires a distinction to be made between physically meaningful representations and those that are not, and a full answer requires the deployment of that distinction in the analysis of scientific research on atoms and molecules in the period after 1950.

Topics & Concepts

Diatomic moleculeRealismMolecular spectroscopySpectroscopyEpistemologyTheoretical physicsMoleculePhysicsQuantum mechanicsChemistryPhilosophyHistory and advancements in chemistryHistory of Science and MedicinePhilosophy and History of Science
Realism, Physical Meaningfulness, and Molecular Spectroscopy | Litcius