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Einstein Links submitted by visitors
Ask someone who the most famous physicist is and the answer will
most probably be "Albert Einstein." In 1905, Einstein wrote three
papers (on light quanta, Brownian motion and the special theory of
relativity), which would change the way we looked at physics. Given
his iconic status in modern physics, the U.S. decided on "Einstein
in the 21st Century" as its theme for the World Year of Physics
2005-the hundredth anniversary of those papers. While looking
forward to physics in the 21st century, we also want to honor
Einstein, the man.
We are grateful to the American Institute of Physics's Center for
History of Physics for permission to use the text reproduced below.
For a comprehensive look at Einstein's life, visit their online
exhibit at: http://www.aip.org/history/einstein/
The Early Years
1879
Albert Einstein was born to a middle-class German Jewish family.
His parents were concerned that he scarcely talked until the age of
three, but he was not so much a backward as a quiet child. He would
build tall houses of cards and hated playing soldier. At the age of
twelve he was fascinated by a geometry book.
"It is almost a miracle that modern teaching methods have not yet
entirely strangled the holy curiousity of inquiry; for what this
delicate little plant needs more than anything, besides stimulation,
is freedom."
1895
At the age of fifteen Albert quit high school disgusted by rote
learning and martinet teachers, and followed his family to Italy
where they had moved their failing electrotechnical business. After
half a year of wandering and loafing, he attended a congenial Swiss
school. The next year he entered the Federal Institute of Technology
in Zurich.
1900
After working hard in the laboratory but skipping lectures,
Einstein graduated with an unexceptional record. For two grim years
he could find only odd jobs, but he finally got a post as a patent
examiner. He married a former classmate.
Breakthrough to Relativity
1905
Einstein wrote three fundamental papers, all in a few months. The
first paper claimed that light must sometimes behave like a stream
of particles with discrete energies, "quanta." The second paper
offered an experimental test for the theory of heat. The third paper
addressed a central puzzle for physicists of the day - the
connection between electromagnetic theory and ordinary motion - and
solved it using the "principle of relativity."
"I want to know how God created this world. I am not interested
in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element.
I want to know His thoughts; the rest are details."
1909
Einstein became an assistant professor at the University of
Zurich, his first full-time physics job. In 1911 he moved on to the
German University of Prague. He continued to publish important
physics papers, and was beginning to meet fellow scientists, for
example, at the exclusive Solvay Conference. The next year he
returned to the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich as
Professor.
World War I
1914
Einstein moved to Berlin, taking a research
post that freed him from teaching duties. He separated from his wife
and two sons. When the First World War broke out, Einstein rejected
Germany's aggressive war aims, supporting the formation of a
pacifist group.
1915
After a decade of thought, with entire years spent in blind
alleys, Einstein completed his general theory of relativity.
Overturning ancient notions of space and time, he reached a new
understanding of gravity. Meanwhile he continued to sign petitions
for peace.
"The years of anxious searching in the dark, with their intense
longing, their alternations of confidence and exhaustion and the
final emergence into the light - only those who have experienced it
can understand it."
1918
As Germany collapsed, Einstein became more involved in politics
and supported a new progressive party. The next year he remarried.
And his general theory of relativity received stunning confirmation
from British astronomers: as Einstein had predicted, gravity bends
starlight. In the popular eye he became a symbol of science and of
thought at its highest.
The Twenties
1921
Aided by his fame, Einstein championed the fledgling German
republican government and other liberal causes. Partly as a result
of this, he and his theory of relativity came under vicious attack
from anti-Semites. He began travelling, attended an International
Trade Union Congress in Amsterdam, and visited the United States to
help raise funds for the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. The
following year he received the Nobel Prize.
1924
Einstein contributed to the struggling new quantum theory.
Meanwhile, he searched for a way to unify the theories of
electromagnetism and gravity. In 1929 he announced a unified field
theory, but the mathematics could not be compared with experiments;
his struggle toward a useful theory had only begun. Meanwhile he
argued with his colleagues, challenging their belief that quantum
theory can give a complete description of phenomena.
The Thirties
1933
Unwilling to live in Germany under the new Nazi government,
Einstein joined the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New
Jersey. He turned away from strict pacifism, and warned world
political leaders to prepare for German aggression. He also worked
to rescue Jewish and other political victims of the Nazis.
1939
Einstein signed a letter that informed President F. D. Roosevelt
of the possibility of nuclear bombs, warning that the Germans might
try to build them. The next year Einstein became an American
citizen.
"How I wish that somewhere there existed an island for those who
are wise and of goodwill! In such a place even I would be an ardent
patriot."
The Last Years
1952
Einstein was asked to become the second President of the State of
Israel, but declined. He was supporting many causes, such as the
United Nations and world government, nuclear disarmament, and civil
liberties.
"The feeling for what ought and ought not to be grows and dies
like a tree, and no fertilizer of any kind will do much good. What
the individual can do is give a fine example, and have the courage
to firmly uphold ethical convictions in a society of cynics. I have
for a long time tried to conduct myself this way, with varying
success."
1955
The search for a true unified field theory for a more profound
understanding of nature continued to fill Einstein's days. While
corresponding about a new anti-war project and writing a speech for
Israel, he was stricken and died.
"One thing I have learned in a long life: that all our science,
measured against reality, is primitive and childlike-and yet it is
the most precious thing we have."
Text Copyright © 1996-2004 American Institute of Physics http://www.aip.org/history/einstein/
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