c. 340 BC – Aristotle in his work Meteorology, expand on the classical elements and describes the water cycle. His cycle includes evaporation of water, formation of clouds, snow and rain.[2]
c. 439 AD – Proclus in his Commentary on Plato's Timaeus, categorizes the four elements using three binary qualities sharp/blunt, subtle/dense and mobile/inmobile.[3]
Before 18th century
7th century – Jabir ibn Hayyan (Geber) proposes four primary qualities: hotness, coldness, dryness, moistness. The classical elements can hold only two of these qualities. Metals internal qualities are different from their external qualities.[4]
1471 – Alchemist George Ripley describes 12 main alchemical processes including congelation and sublimation.[6]
1530 – Alchemist Paracelsus proposes his theory of tria prima were primary elements being: a combustible element (sulfur), a liquid changeable element (mercury) and solid element (salt).[7]
1637. – René Descartes rejects the hypothesis that water vapor is the same as air.[2]
c. 1660 – Otto von Guericke carries experiment to demonstrate the artificial formation of fog.[2]
1669 – Johann Joachim Becher, influenced by Paracelsus, proposes a model in his Physica subterranea, where all matter is composed of the elements air, water and three earths: terra lapidea (vitrieous earth) related to its fusibility, terra fluida (mercurial earth) contributing to fluidity and volatility, and terra pinguis (fatty earth) related to combustibility and flammability.[9]
1742 – Anders Celsius develops the Celsius scale, calibrated where its 0°C are defined at the freezing point of water and 100°C at the boiling point of water.[12]
1861 – Dmitri Mendeleev establishes the critical temperature, he calls de la Tour point, the absolute boiling point.[15]
1869 – Thomas Andrews studies of liquefaction of gases. He standardizes and coins the term critical point, critical temperature and critical pressure.[16][15][19] He also discovers critical opalescence.[20]
^Russell, Bertrand (1993). History of western philosophy: and its connection with political and social circumstances from the earliest times to the present day. London: Routledge. ISBN978-0-415-07854-2.
^
Curie, Pierre (1895). Propriétés magnétiques des corps à diverses températures [Magnetic properties of bodies at various temperatures] ([Presented to FACULTÉ DES SCIENCES DE PARIS] PhD thesis) (in French). Paris, France: Gauthier-Villars et fils. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
^Einstein, Albert (10 July 1924). "Quantentheorie des einatomigen idealen Gases"(PDF). Königliche Preußische Akademie der Wissenschaften. Sitzungsberichte (in German): 261–267. Archived(PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
^
Ising, Ernst (9 December 1924). Beitrag zur Theorie des Ferromagnetismus [Contribution to the Theory of Ferromagnetism]. Zeitschrift für Physik (PhD thesis). Vol. 31. Hamburg, Germany (published 1925). pp. 253–258.
^Bloch, Felix (1928). Über die Quantenmechanik der Elektronen in Kristallgittern [On the quantum mechanics of electrons in crystal lattices] (PhD thesis) (in German). Universität Leipzig. OCLC43394732.
^Heisenberg, Werner (September 1928). "Zur Theorie des Ferromagnetismus" [On the theory of ferromagnetism]. Zeitschrift für Physik (Journal of Physics) (in German). 49 (9): 619–636. Bibcode:1928ZPhy...49..619H. doi:10.1007/BF01328601.
^Onsager, Lars (1 February 1944), "Crystal statistics. 1. A Two-dimensional model with an order disorder transition", Physical Review, 65 (3–4): 117–149, Bibcode:1944PhRv...65..117O, doi:10.1103/PhysRev.65.117
^Landau, Lev D. (January 1957). "The theory of the Fermi liquid". Soviet Physics JETP. 3 (6). Translated by Kruglak, H.: 920. Original: € Zh. Eksp. Teor. Fiz., J. Exptl. Theoret. Phys. (U.S.S.R.) Vol. 30, 1956, pp. 1058-1064.
^Anderson, Philip Warren (10 October 1957). "Absence of Diffusion in Certain Random Lattices". Physical Review. 109 (5) (published 1 March 1958): 1492. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.109.1492.
^Osheroff, Douglas Dean; Richardson, Robert Coleman; Lee, David M. (10 February 1972). "Evidence for a New Phase of Solid He3". Physical Review Letters. 28 (14) (published 3 April 1972): 885–888. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.28.885.
^
Bednorz, J. G.; Müller, K. A. (1 June 1986). "Possible highT c superconductivity in the Ba−La−Cu−O system". Zeitschrift für Physik B Condensed Matter. 64 (2): 189–193. doi:10.1007/BF01303701.