Albert einstein
Early
Life
Born on March 14, 1879 in Ulm,
Württemberg, Germany, Albert Einstein grew up in a secular, middle-class Jewish
family. His father, Hermann Einstein, was a salesman and engineer who, with his
brother, founded Elektrotechnische Fabrik J. Einstein & Cie, a company that
manufactured electrical equipment in Munich, Germany. His mother, the former
Pauline Koch, ran the family household. Einstein had one sister, Maja, born two
years after him.
Einstein attended elementary school
at the Luitpold Gymnasium in Munich, where he excelled in his studies. He
enjoyed classical music and played the violin. However, he felt alienated and
struggled with the rigid Prussian education he received there. He also
experienced a speech difficulty, a slow cadence in his speaking where he’d
pause to consider what to say next. In later years, Einstein would write about
two events that had a marked effect on his childhood. One was an encounter with
a compass at age five, where he marveled at the invisible forces that turned
the needle. The other was at age 12, when he discovered a book of geometry
which he read over and over.
In 1889, the Einstein family invited
a poor medical Polish medical student, Max Talmud to come to their house for
Thursday evening meals. Talmud became an informal tutor to young Albert,
introducing him to higher mathematics and philosophy. One of the books Talmud
shared with Albert was a children’s science book in which the author imagined
riding alongside electricity that was traveling inside a telegraph wire.
Einstein began to wonder what a light beam would look like if you could run
alongside it at the same speed. If light were a wave, then the light beam
should appear stationary, like a frozen wave. Yet, in reality, the light beam is
moving. This paradox led him to write his first "scientific paper" at
age 16, "The Investigation of the State of Aether in Magnetic
Fields." This question of the relative speed to the stationary observer
and the observer moving with the light was a question that would dominate his
thinking for the next 10 years.
In 1894, Hermann Einstein’s company
failed to get an important contract to electrify the city of Munich and he was
forced to move his family to Milan, Italy. Albert was left at a boarding house
in Munich to finish his education at the Luitpold Gymnasium. Alone, miserable,
and repelled by the looming prospect of military duty when he turned of age,
Albert withdrew from school using a doctor’s note to excuse him and made his
way to Milan to join his parents. His parents sympathized with his feelings,
but were concerned about the enormous problems that he would face as a school
dropout and draft dodger with no employable skills.
Fortunately, Einstein was able to
apply directly to the Eidgenössische Polytechnische Schule (Swiss Federal
Polytechnic School) in Zürich, Switzerland. Lacking the equivalent of a high
school diploma, he failed much of the entrance exam but got exceptional marks
in mathematics and physics. Because of this, he was admitted to the school
provided he complete his formal schooling first. He went to a special high
school run by Jost Winteler in Aarau, Switzerland, and graduated in 1896 at age
17. He became lifelong friends with the Winteler family, with whom he had been
boarding, and fell in love with Wintelers' daughter, Marie. At this time,
Einstein renounced his German citizenship to avoid military service and
enrolled at the Zurich school.
Einstein would recall that his years
in Zurich were some of the happiest of his life. He met many students who would
become loyal friends, such as Marcel Grossmann, a mathematician, and Michele
Besso, with whom he enjoyed lengthy conversations about space and time. He also
met his future wife, Mileva Maric, a fellow physics student from Serbia.
After graduating from the
Polytechnic Institute, Albert Einstein faced a series of life crises over the
next few years. Because he liked to study on his own, he cut classes and earned
the animosity of some of his professors. One in particular, Heinrich Weber,
wrote a letter of recommendation at Einstein’s request that led to him being
turned down for every academic position that he applied to after graduation.
Meanwhile, Einstein's relationship with Maric deepened, but his parents
vehemently opposed the relationship citing her Serbian background and Eastern
Orthodox Christian religion. Einstein defied his parents and continued to see
Maric. In January, 1902, the couple had a daughter, Lieserl, who either died of
sickness or was given up for adoption—the facts are unkown.
At this point, Albert Einstein
probably reached the lowest point in his life. He could not marry Maric and
support a family without a job, and his father's business had gone bankrupt.
Desperate and unemployed, Einstein took lowly jobs tutoring children, but he
was unable to hold on to any of them. A turning point came later in 1902, when
the father of his lifelong friend, Marcel Grossman, recommended him for a
position as a clerk in the Swiss patent office in Bern, Switzerland. About this
time, Einstein’s father became seriously ill and just before he died, gave his
blessing for him to marry. With a small but steady income, Einstein married
Maric on Jan. 6, 1903. In May, 1904 they had their first son, Hans Albert.
Their second son, Eduard, were born in 1910.
Miracle Year
At the patent office, Albert
Einstein evaluated patent applications for electromagnetic devices. He quickly
mastered the job, leaving him time to ponder on the transmission of electrical
signals and electrical-mechanical synchronization, an interest he had been
cultivating for several years. While at the polytechnic school he had studied
Scottish physicist James Maxwell's electromagnetic theories which describe the
nature of light, and discovered a fact unknown to Maxwell himself, that the
speed of light remained constant. However, this violated Isaac Newton's laws of
motion because there is no absolute velocity in Newton's theory. This insight
led Einstein to formulate the principle of relativity.
In 1905—often called Einstein's
"miracle year"—he submitted a paper for his doctorate and had four
papers published in the Annalen der Physik, one of the best known physics
journals. The four papers—the photoelectric effect, Brownian motion, special
relativity, and the equivalence of matter and energy—would alter the course of
modern physics and bring him to the attention of the academic world. In his
paper on matter and energy, Einstein deduced the well-known equation E=mc2,
suggesting that tiny particles of matter could be converted into huge amounts
of energy, foreshadowing the development of nuclear power. There have been
claims that Einstein and his wife, Maric, collaborated on his celebrated 1905
papers, but historians of physics who have studied the issue find no evidence
that she made any substantive contributions. In fact, in the papers, Einstein
only credits his conversations with Michele Besso in developing relativity.
At firstm Einstein's 1905 papers
were ignored by the physics community. This began to change when he received
the attention of Max Planck, perhaps the most influential physicist of his
generation and founder of quantum theory. With Planck’s complimentary comments
and his experiments that confirmed his theories, Einstein was invited to
lecture at international meetings and he rose rapidly in the academic world. He
was offered a series of positions at increasingly prestigious institutions,
including the University of Zürich, the University of Prague, the Swiss Federal
Institute of Technology, and finally the University of Berlin, where he served
as director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics from 1913 to 1933.
As his fame spread, Einstein's
marriage fell apart. His constant travel and intense study of his work, the
arguments about their children and the family’s meager finances led Einstein to
the conclusion that his marriage was over. Einstein began an affair with a
cousin, Elsa Löwenthal, whom he later married. He finally divorced Mileva in
1919 and as a settlement agreed to give her the money he might receive if he
ever won a Nobel Prize.
Theory of Relativity
In November, 1915, Einstein completed the general theory of
relativity, which he considered his masterpiece. He was convinced that general
relativity was correct because of its mathematical beauty and because it
accurately predicted the perihelion of Mercury's orbit around the sun, which
fell short in Newton’s theory. General relativity theory also predicted a
measurable deflection of light around the sun when a planet or another sun
oribited near the sun. That prediction was confirmed in observations by British
astronomer Sir Arthur Eddington during the solar eclipse of 1919. In 1921,
Albert Einstein received word that he had received the Nobel Prize for Physics.
Because relativity was still considered controversial, Einstein received the
award for his explanation of the photoelectric effect.
In the 1920s, Einstein launched the new science of
cosmology. His equations predicted that the universe is dynamic, ever expanding
or contracting. This contradicted the prevailing view that the universe was
static, a view that Einstein held earlier and was a guiding factor in his
development of the general theory of relativity. But his later calculations in
the general theory indicated that the universe could be expanding or
contracting. In 1929, astronomer Edwin Hubble found that the universe was
indeed expanding, thereby confirming Einstein's work. In 1930, during a visit
to the Mount Wilson Observatory near Los Angeles, Einstein met with Hubble and
declared the cosmological constant, his original theory of the static size and
shape of the universe, to be his "greatest blunder."
While Einstein was touring much of the world speaking on
his theories in the 1920s, the Nazis were rising to power under the leadership
of Adolph Hitler. Einstein’s theories on relativity became a convenient target
for Nazi propaganda. In 1931, the Nazi’s enlisted other physicists to denounce
Einstein and his theories as "Jewish physics." At this time, Einstein
learned that the new German government, now in full control by the Nazi party,
had passed a law barring Jews from holding any official position, including
teaching at universities. Einstein also learned that his name was on a list of
assassination targets, and a Nazi organization published a magazine with
Einstein's picture and the caption "Not Yet Hanged" on the cover.
Move
to the United States
In December, 1932, Einstein decided
to leave Germany forever. He took a position a the newly formed Institute for
Advanced Study at Princeton, New Jersey, which soon became a Mecca for
physicists from around the world. It was here that he would spend the rest of
his career trying to develop a unified field theory—an all-embracing theory
that would unify the forces of the universe, and thereby the laws of physics,
into one framework—and refute the accepted interpretation of quantum physics.
Other European scientists also fled various countries threatened by Nazi
takeover and came to the United States. Some of these scientists knew of Nazi
plans to develop an atomic weapon. For a time, their warnings to Washington,
D.C. went unheeded.
In the summer of 1939, Einstein,
along with another scientist, Leo Szilard, was persuaded to write a letter to
President Franklin D. Roosevelt to alert him of the possibility of a Nazi bomb.
President Roosevelt could not risk the possibility that Germany might develop
an atomic bomb first. The letter is believed to be the key factor that
motivated the United States to investigate the development of nuclear weapons.
Roosevelt invited Einstein to meet with him and soon after the United States
initiated the Manhattan Project.
Not long after he began his career
at the Institute in New Jersey, Albert Einstein expressed an appreciation for
the "meritocracy" of the United States and the right people had to
think what they pleased—something he didn’t enjoy as a young man in Europe. In
1935, Albert Einstein was granted permanent residency in the United States and
became an American citizen in 1940. As the Manhattan Project moved from drawing
board to testing and development at Los Alamos, New Mexico, many of his colleagues
were asked to develop the first atomic bomb, but Eisenstein was not one of
them. According to several researchers who examined FBI files over the years,
the reason was the U.S. government didn't trust Einstein's lifelong association
with peace and socialist organizations. FBI director J. Edgar Hoover went so
far as to recommend that Einstein be kept out of America by the Alien Exclusion
Act, but he was overruled by the U.S. State Department. Instead, during the
war, Einstein helped the U.S. Navy evaluate designs for future weapons systems
and contributed to the war effort by auctioning off priceless personal
manuscripts. One example was a handwritten copy of his 1905 paper on special
relativity which sold for $6.5 million, and is now located in the Library of
Congress.
On August 6, 1945, while on
vacation, Einstein heard the news that an atomic bomb had been dropped on
Hiroshima, Japan. He soon became involved in an international effort to try to
bring the atomic bomb under control, and in 1946, he formed the Emergency
Committee of Atomic Scientists with physicist Leo Szilard. In 1947, in an
article that he wrote for The Atlantic Monthly, Einstein argued that the
United States should not try to monopolize the atomic bomb, but instead should
supply the United Nations with nuclear weapons for the sole purpose of
maintaining a deterrent. At this time, Einstein also became a member of the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. He corresponded
with civil rights activist W.E.B. Du Bois and actively campaigned for the
rights of African Americans.
After the war, Einstein continued to
work on many key aspects of the theory of general relativity, such as
wormholes, the possibility of time travel, the existence of black holes, and
the creation of the universe. However, he became increasingly isolated from the
rest of the physics community. With the huge developments in unraveling the
secrets of atoms and molecules, spurred on by the development to the atomic
bomb, the majority of scientists were working on the quantum theory, not
relativity. Another reason for Einstein's detachment from his colleagues was
his obsession with discovering his unified field theory. In the 1930s, Einstein
engaged in a series of historic private debates with Niels Bohr, the originator
of the Bohr atomic model. In a series of "thought experiments,"
Einstein tried to find logical inconsistencies in the quantum theory, but was
unsuccessful. However, in his later years, he stopped opposing quantum theory
and tried to incorporate it, along with light and gravity, into the larger
unified field theory he was developing.
In the last decade of his life,
Einstein withdrew from public life, rarely traveling far and confining himself
to long walks around Princeton with close associates, whom he engaged in deep
conversations about politics, religion, physics and his unified field theory.
On April 17, 1955, while working on
a speech he was preparing to commemorate Israel's 17th anniversary, Einstein
suffered an abdominal aortic aneurysm and experienced internal bleeding. He was
taken to the University Medical Center at Princeton for treatment, but refused
surgery, believing that he had lived his life and was content to accept his
fate. "I want to go when I want," he stated at the time. "It is
tasteless to prolong life artificially. I have done my share, it is time to go.
I will do it elegantly." Einstein died at the university medical center
early the next morning—April 18, 1955—at the age of 76.
During the autopsy, Thomas Stoltz
Harvey removed Einstein's brain, seemingly without the permission of his
family, for preservation and future study by doctors of neuroscience. His
remains were cremated and his ashes were scattered in an undisclosed location.
After decades of study, Einstein's brain is now located at the Princeton
University Medical Center.
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