02 One Punch Man Eddington

After getting off work, Chen Muwu went to the Great Northern Telegraph Office on Edoya Road and took a telegram for Eddington.

The price of a word for five cents a piece made him feel painful.

But this money had to be spent, because his second paper was sent to the editorial office of the Journal of Philosophy.

Chen Muwu didn't know why the first paper was rejected, and if it was really because the editor discriminated against Chinese people, then the second paper would not have been published either.

So he had no choice but to send Eddington a telegram thanking him for his help in publishing his first paper, and informing him that his second paper on relativity had been sent to the editorial office of the Journal of Philosophy.

Chen Muwu did not dare to make a direct request, and asked Eddington to go to the editorial office again, withdraw the paper from the "Journal of Philosophy", and transfer it to the "Bulletin of the Natural Science Society".

Because although Einstein is the matchmaker, after all, he and Eddington are not familiar with each other, and even the communication between them is the first time, and Eddington is his predecessor in physics, so it is neither appropriate nor polite to rashly ask an old-timer to run around.

I can only hope that Eddington can read the voiceover of his telegram, and don't let his dozens of dollars of ocean go to waste.

Eddington never imagined that this young man from the Far East, named Chen Muwu, would send a telegram to him.

In the story he envisioned, his good friend Albert Einstein, while lecturing in the Far East, discovered a genius of physics in the slums described in the newspapers and selflessly helped him.

Of course, this young genius lived up to expectations, and his first paper set off a bloody storm in the physics community in Europe and the Americas.

Eddington just finished reading the February issue of the Annals of Physics yesterday, and many of the papers on it have raised questions about whether light is a wave or a particle, and the intensity can be described as a fairy fight.

Bot of Humboldt University of Berlin, Compton of the University of Chicago in the United Statesใ€...... All qualified university laboratories have published their experimental data and results on it, and these results are all the same as those of Cavendish Laboratory, and they are exactly the same as predicted by Chen Muwu in his paper.

De Bai of ETH Zurich wrote a paper to strongly support Chen Muwu's theory.

The vision of his old friend Albert Einstein is really good!

Of course, there are also many objections to this, such as a newsletter received by the Bulletin of the Natural Sciences just sent by the Royal Society today, from Bohr, the newly minted Nobel laureate in physics at the University of Copenhagen.

In his correspondence, he sharply criticized the absurdity of the photon theory proposed by Einstein and Chen Muwu, saying that if light were particles, it would inevitably destroy the electromagnetism system created by Maxwell. And then he raised it to a philosophical level, saying something that he didn't know what to say.

Eddington had long been dissatisfied with Bohr because of his speech at the Nobel Prize ceremony.

Now, in this newsletter, he is seen again making irresponsible remarks about Einstein's theories, and Eddington pouts even more contemptuously.

If he is familiar with Tang poetry, then he should have jumped out at this time, "Er Cao's body is split with the famous tool, and the rivers and rivers will not be wasted".

Eddington was fond of challenging authority, and during the First World War, he refused the British government's request for military service, and he had some resentment in his bones.

Otherwise, he would not have been the first to jump out and support the correctness of the theory of relativity with great fanfare.

Because he had listened to several lectures by Lord Kelvin in his youth, and had studied thermal radiation in the Cavendish laboratory after graduation, one of the laws of physics that Eddington admired most was the second law of thermodynamics.

He once said: "I believe that the principle of entropy increase, the second law of thermodynamics, is supreme of all the laws of nature.

"If someone points out that your theory of the universe doesn't match Maxwell's equations, then there may be something wrong with Maxwell's equations;

"If your theory of the universe contradicts observations, well, the people who observe sometimes get things wrong;

"But if your theory violates the second law of thermodynamics, I dare to say that you have no hope, and your theory will only lose face and collapse."

So Eddington didn't care if light was a particle, as Bohr said, if it was a particle, it would break Maxwell's equations, as long as it didn't break the second law of thermodynamics.

Eddington was shocked to receive the telegram from the postman.

This telegram fee worth a few pounds, he has to think carefully before sending it himself, how can this descendant surnamed Chen be so generous!

However, seeing the contents of the telegram made Eddington excited.

The genius of relativity, praised by Albert Einstein, finally sent his paper on relativity!

It was only when I saw the name "Philosophical Journal" again that Eddington was vaguely unhappy.

He still vividly remembers the last time he went to the newsroom in London to inquire about the situation, and how embarrassed he was by the editor who had no one in his sights.

Now it's okay, I missed a paper that caused a sensation in the academic world, and I don't know whose loss it was!

Eddington thought about it and decided to make another trip to London.

Since this young man sent a telegram to himself, it shows that he trusts himself very much, not to mention that it is a high-quality article on relativity, and he can't let Mingzhu secretly invest in it.

The next day, Eddington returned to the editorial office of the Journal of Philosophy.

The road is narrow, and the one who received him this time was still the editor who looked at people with his nostrils last time.

Even if he missed a phenomenal paper, he showed no signs of repentance, and still looked like a child.

When he learned that Eddington had come to find the Chinese paper again, he said even more angrily: "Fellow Eddington, we have received the Chinese paper again, and out of respect, we have specially invited relevant experts to review the manuscript this time."

It's a pity that he may have just written his first paper in a flash of inspiration, and now this one has been completely revealed, and experts have commented that the content of the paper does not make sense.

"If you want this paper, look for it on the shelves labeled 'Monkey'.

"I really don't know why you went to our editorial office again and again for the sake of a Chinese. Could it be that this Chinese monkey is the illegitimate child who stayed after you ran to Chinatown when you were young and ignorant? Hahaha...... Oops! โ€

No matter how gentle a person's temper and demeanor are gentlemanly, he can't stand such ridicule and ridicule.

What's more, Eddington was not too mild-mannered yet.

He directly smashed the editor's glasses with a punch, then took out a white five-pound note and threw it on the editor's face: "Reward you with five pounds to look at your eyes, and the rest of the money, you'd better take it and look at your brain!" โ€

With that, Eddington, who was furious, strode out of the office of the Philosophy Journal.