Published in 1901,
Max Planck deduced the existence and value of the constant now bearing his name from considering only
Wien's displacement law,
statistical mechanics, and
electromagnetic theory. Four years later in 1905,
Albert Einstein went further to elucidate this constant and its deep connection to the stopping potential of electrons emitted in the
photoelectric effect. The energy in the photoelectric effect depended not only on the number of incident photons (the intensity of light) but also the frequency of light, a novel phenomenon at the time. (This work would earn Einstein the 1921
Nobel Prize in Physics.) It can then be concluded that this was a key onset of quantization, that is the discretization of matter into fundamental constituents. About eight years later
Niels Bohr in 1913, published his famous three part series where, essentially by fiat, he posits the quantization of the angular momentum in hydrogen and hydrogen like metals. Where in effect, the orbital angular momentum L of the (valence) electron, takes the form L = l \hbar, where l, referred to as a quantum number, is presumed a whole number 0,\,1,\,2,\,3,\,\ldots\,. In the original presentation, the orbital angular momentum of the electron was named M, the
Planck constant divided by two pi as M_0, and the quantum number or "counting of number of passes between stationary points", as stated by Bohr originally as, \tau. See references above for more detail. While it would be later shown that this assumption is not entirely correct, it in fact ends up being rather close to the correct expression for the orbital angular momentum operator's (eigenvalue) quantum number for large values of the quantum number l, and indeed this was part of Bohr's own assumption. Regard the consequence of Bohr's assumption L^2 = l^2 \hbar^2, and compare it with the correct version known today as L^2 = l(l+1)\hbar^2. Clearly for large l, there is little difference, just as well as for l=0, the equivalence is exact. Without going into further historical detail, it suffices to stop here and regard this era of the history of quantization to be the "
old quantum theory", meaning a period in the history of physics where the corpuscular nature of subatomic particles began to play an increasingly important role in understanding the results of physical experiments, whose mandatory conclusion was the discretization of key physical observable quantities. However, unlike the era below described as the era of
first quantization, this era was based solely on purely classical arguments such as
Wien's displacement law,
thermodynamics,
statistical mechanics, and the
electromagnetic theory. In fact, the observation of the
Balmer series of hydrogen in the history of spectroscopy dates as far back as 1885. Nonetheless, the watershed events that would come to denote the era of
first quantization took place in the vital years spanning 1925–1928. Simultaneously the authors
Max Born and
Pascual Jordan in December 1925, together with
Paul Dirac also in December 1925, then
Erwin Schrödinger in January 1926, following that,
Werner Heisenberg together with Born and Jordan in August 1926, and finally Dirac in 1928. The results of these publications were three theoretical formalisms, two of which proved to be equivalent; that of Born, Heisenberg and Jordan was equivalent to that of Schrödinger, while Dirac's 1928 theory came to be regarded as the relativistic version of the prior two. Lastly, it is worth mentioning the publication of Heisenberg and Pauli in 1929, which can be regarded as the first attempt at "
second quantization", a term used verbatim by Pauli in a 1943 publication of the
American Physical Society. For purposes of clarification and understanding of the terminology as it evolved over history, it suffices to end with the major publication that helped recognize the equivalence of the
matrix mechanics of Born, Heisenberg, and Jordan 1925–1926 with the wave equation of Schrödinger in 1926. The collected and expanded works of
John von Neumann showed that the two theories were mathematically equivalent, and it is this realization that is today understood as
first quantization. == Qualitative mathematical preliminaries ==