Presentation Speech by Professor E. Hulthén, member of the Nobel Committee for Physics
Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies
and Gentlemen.
The Royal Academy of Sciences has this year awarded the Nobel
Prize for Physics to Professor Frits Zernike, Groningen, for the
phase-contrast method devised by him, and particularly for his
invention of the phase-contrast microscope.
Zernike's discovery falls within that part of optics in which one
operates with the notion of light as a wave motion. From this it
follows, amongst other things, that light may be extinguished by
light through interference, and is diffracted and scattered by
small particles such as the microscopic objects. All this, as far
as the principles involved are concerned, belongs to a closed
chapter that is generally referred to as classical physics.
When on this occasion a Nobel Prize is awarded for contributions
in classical physics, the fact is so remarkable that we must go
back to the very earliest Nobel Prizes to find a counterpart. All
later Nobel Prizes, with the exception of a couple of awards
where the stress was rather upon the technical aspect, have been
awarded for discoveries in atomic and nuclear physics, the
physics of this century.
It would scarcely be an exaggeration to claim that the microscope
is one of our most important instruments of research. Every
improvement, even a slight sharpening of this eye towards the
microcosmos, may pave the way to great advances in the natural
sciences, medicine, and the technical sciences.
Probably no other instrument has been the object of so much
technical and theoretical study as the microscope. The thorough
theoretical foundation that we owe to the genius of Ernst Abbe of
the famous Zeiss concern was followed at the end of the last
century by a development of the microscope that brought its
optical and illumination system very close to perfection.
But even Abbe's theory had a gap, for it took into account only
those conditions in which the microscopic objects appear against
the background as a result of their contrasts in colour and
intensity. Many microscopic objects, however, micro-organisms
such as bacteria and cells, are colourless and transparent, and
for this reason difficult to distinguish from their surroundings.
Attempts have been made to overcome this difficulty with various
methods of staining or with a special illumination system, the
so-called darkfield illumination. The staining methods are not
always suitable, as for example when we are dealing with living
objects; and dark-field illumination easily leads to a
misinterpretation of the finer details in the structural
picture.
It was this gap in Abbe's theory that in the 1930's led Zernike
to re-investigate the refraction processes in the light that give
rise to the image in a microscope. Even if the eye is not able to
discern the change undergone by a beam of light when it passes
through a transparent object, the change does nonetheless exist
as a phase-difference of a quarter of a wavelength relative to
the direct beam that does not pass through the object. The
problem was thus to transform these otherwise imperceptible phase
differences to visible contrasts in intensity. Zernike was able
to show that this was possible, thanks to the fact that the two
rays of light take different routes through the microscope before
being reunited in the image. By interposing in the paths of the
direct ray a so-called "phase-plate" which either further
increases the phase-displacement to half a light-wavelength or
smooths it out completely, Zernike attained the desired effect,
so that the two rays either extinguish or reinforce each other.
In this way the formerly invisible particle appears in dark or
light contrast to the surroundings.
I have deliberately dwelt upon the description of the
phase-contrast microscope as the result of Zernike's method which
is, so far, the most valuable. The phase-contrast method has,
however, many other and increasingly important applications in
optics. In addition to its capacity to render colourless and
transparent objects visible in the microscope, it also enables
one to detect slight flaws in mirrors, telescope lenses, and
other instruments indispensable for research. In this connection,
Zernike's phase-plate serves as an indicator which locates and
measures small surface irregularities to a fraction of a
light-wavelength. This sharpness of depth is so great that it
penetrates to the point at which the atomic structure of the
substance begins to become manifest.
Professor Zernike. The Royal Academy of
Sciences has awarded you the Nobel Prize in Physics for your
eminent "method of phase contrast" and especially for your
invention of the "phase-contrast microscope".
I now ask you to receive the prize from the hands of His
Majesty.
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1953