A brief history of quantum mechanics
At the end of the 19th century, physics was considered to be the most perfect of all sciences. There were only a few unexplored problems that were soon to be solved, although these results were not expected to have a significant impact on the physical picture of the world. Very few understood the importance of unsolved problems, which included in particular the problem of explaining the phenomenon of heat radiation from the perfect black body. Closer examination of perfectly black body radiation, the photoelectric effect and the Compton effect completely changed the way physicists thought about the world. The pioneer of quantum physics was Max Planck. In 1900, after years of trying to explain the phenomenon of heat radiation from bodies based on classical physics, he assumed - contrary to Maxwell's theory - that the energies of electromagnetic waves emitted by bodies are sudden (quantified). Similarly, when the body absorbs electromagnetic waves, it absorbs energy impulses. He also assumed that the quantity of energy is proportional to the frequency of the wave (later called the Planck constant) and insisted that the theory was consistent with the results of measurements of thermal radiation.