Hecht challenged the notion of potential energy in 2003.[2] The elusive nature of a universal definition of energy was argued by Hecht in a letter to the editor of The Physics Teacher in 2004.[3] Then in 2006 he wrote "There is no really good definition of mass".[4] He continued with the topic in 2011[5] and 2016.[6]
Eugene Hecht is also widely published authority on George E. Ohr and American art pottery as well as a founding member of the American Ceramic Arts Society.
Books
His first textbook on optics was co-authored with Alfred Zajac, a colleague at Adelphi, in 1974[7] For the second edition of Optics in 1987 Hecht was the sole author.[8]
In 1975 Hecht wrote the text Theory and Problems of Optics for Schaum's Outlines. Brooks/Cole published Physics:Calculus in 1996 in which reviewers "found something intriguing on every page".[9] Hecht contributed to a celebration[10] of potter George Ohr after his workshop was consumed in fire.[11]
References
^Hecht, Eugene (1970). "Note on an Operational Definition of the Stokes Parameters". American Journal of Physics. 38 (9). American Association of Physics Teachers (AAPT): 1156–1158. Bibcode:1970AmJPh..38.1156H. doi:10.1119/1.1976574. ISSN0002-9505.
^Hecht, Eugene (2003). "An Historico-Critical Account of Potential Energy: Is PE Really Real?". The Physics Teacher. 41 (8). American Association of Physics Teachers (AAPT): 486–493. Bibcode:2003PhTea..41..486H. doi:10.1119/1.1625210. ISSN0031-921X.
^Amy J. Kolan & Amy E. Larsen (1997) "An introductory physics text that conveys the author's enthusiasm", Physics Today 50(4) 65 doi:10.1063/1.881732
^Clark, Garth; Ellison, Robert A.; Hecht, Eugene (1989). The Mad Potter of Biloxi: The Art & Life of George E. Ohr. New York: Abbeville Press. ISBN978-0-89659-927-7.
^Hecht, Eugene (1994). After the Fire: George Ohr, an American genius. Lambertville, NJ: Arts and Crafts Quarterly Press. ISBN978-0-9637896-9-3.