Visual Culture in Quantum Mechanics. Image-based knowledge making in a non-intuitive world

According to a large portion of scholars, mainly coming from the fields of theoretical and experimental physics, quantum mechanics is a particularly challenging subject both to be translated into images and to be communicated without an extensive visual apparatus. This ambiguity is directly connecte...

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Main Author: Daniele Villa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2019-10-01
Series:img journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://img-journal.unibo.it/article/view/11079
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spelling doaj-ef7c104c45304e5ebfff9d6a06eb424c2021-08-24T08:29:35ZengUniversity of Bolognaimg journal2724-24632019-10-01131833310.6092/issn.2724-2463/110799447Visual Culture in Quantum Mechanics. Image-based knowledge making in a non-intuitive worldDaniele Villa0Polytechnic University of Milan, Department of Architecture and Urban StudiesAccording to a large portion of scholars, mainly coming from the fields of theoretical and experimental physics, quantum mechanics is a particularly challenging subject both to be translated into images and to be communicated without an extensive visual apparatus. This ambiguity is directly connected to the original principles of subatomic physical theories and its peculiar knowledge making routine that, historically, associates mathematical theoretical framing with iconic modeling and analogies storytelling. This research deals with some emblematic issues of quantum theories retracing some branch of image-based quantum modeling with particular attention to the visual knowledge-making that underlie the physics of subatomic particles. These examples allow to build a rhizomatic genealogy of graphical interpretations that goes back to first the atom sketches drawn by Rutherford in 1910, at the dawn of the conceptualization of electron nucleus relationship and find its maximum expression in the huge graphic and drawing production of Nobel laureate Richard P. Feynman. We know that the great majority of the quantum phenomena are hardly describable beyond the equations and the probability calculations, however the visual languages continue to play an important role in particular within the communication, training and physics learning processes.https://img-journal.unibo.it/article/view/11079visual culturequantum mechanicsimage-thinking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniele Villa
spellingShingle Daniele Villa
Visual Culture in Quantum Mechanics. Image-based knowledge making in a non-intuitive world
img journal
visual culture
quantum mechanics
image-thinking
author_facet Daniele Villa
author_sort Daniele Villa
title Visual Culture in Quantum Mechanics. Image-based knowledge making in a non-intuitive world
title_short Visual Culture in Quantum Mechanics. Image-based knowledge making in a non-intuitive world
title_full Visual Culture in Quantum Mechanics. Image-based knowledge making in a non-intuitive world
title_fullStr Visual Culture in Quantum Mechanics. Image-based knowledge making in a non-intuitive world
title_full_unstemmed Visual Culture in Quantum Mechanics. Image-based knowledge making in a non-intuitive world
title_sort visual culture in quantum mechanics. image-based knowledge making in a non-intuitive world
publisher University of Bologna
series img journal
issn 2724-2463
publishDate 2019-10-01
description According to a large portion of scholars, mainly coming from the fields of theoretical and experimental physics, quantum mechanics is a particularly challenging subject both to be translated into images and to be communicated without an extensive visual apparatus. This ambiguity is directly connected to the original principles of subatomic physical theories and its peculiar knowledge making routine that, historically, associates mathematical theoretical framing with iconic modeling and analogies storytelling. This research deals with some emblematic issues of quantum theories retracing some branch of image-based quantum modeling with particular attention to the visual knowledge-making that underlie the physics of subatomic particles. These examples allow to build a rhizomatic genealogy of graphical interpretations that goes back to first the atom sketches drawn by Rutherford in 1910, at the dawn of the conceptualization of electron nucleus relationship and find its maximum expression in the huge graphic and drawing production of Nobel laureate Richard P. Feynman. We know that the great majority of the quantum phenomena are hardly describable beyond the equations and the probability calculations, however the visual languages continue to play an important role in particular within the communication, training and physics learning processes.
topic visual culture
quantum mechanics
image-thinking
url https://img-journal.unibo.it/article/view/11079
work_keys_str_mv AT danielevilla visualcultureinquantummechanicsimagebasedknowledgemakinginanonintuitiveworld
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