The Year Of Albert Einstein
His dizzying discoveries in 1905 would forever change our understanding of the universe. Amid all the centennial hoopla, the trick is to separate the man from the math
- By Richard Panek
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 8)
His choice wasn’t arbitrary. Forty years earlier, the Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell had demonstrated that the speed of light is constant. It’s the same whether you’re moving toward the source of light or away from it, or whether it’s moving toward or away from you. (What changes isn’t the speed of the light waves, but the number of waves that reach you in a certain length of time.) Suppose you go back to the dock and look at Galileo’s ship, only now the height of its mast is 186,282 miles, or the distance that light travels in a vacuum in one second. (It’s a tall ship.) If the person at the top of the mast sends a light signal straight down while the ship is moving, where will it land? For Einstein as well as Galileo, it lands at the base of the mast. From your point of view on the dock, the base of the mast will have moved out from under the top of the mast during the descent, as it did when the rock was falling. This means that the distance the light has traveled, from your point of view, has lengthened. It’s not 186,282 miles. It’s more.
That’s where Einstein begins to depart from Galileo. The speed of light is always 186,282 miles per second. Speed is simply distance divided by, or “per,” a length of time. In the case of a beam of light, the speed is always 186,282 miles per second, so if you change the distance that the beam of light travels, you also have to change the time.
You have to change the time.
“Thank you!” Einstein greeted Besso the morning after their momentous discussion. “I have completely solved the problem.”
According to Einstein’s calculations, time itself wasn’t constant, an absolute, an immutable part of the universe. Now it was a variable that depended on how you and whatever you’re observing are moving in relation to each other. “Every other physicist assumed that there was a universal world clock that kept time,” says Schwartz. “Einstein completely removed that idea.” From the point of view of the person on the dock, the time it took the light to reach the ship’s deck was longer than a second. That means the time on board the ship appeared to be passing more slowly than on the dock. The reverse, Einstein knew, would also have to be true. From the sailor’s point of view, the dock would be moving, and therefore a beam of light sent down from a tall post on land would appear to him to travel a bit farther than it would to you on the dock. To the sailor, the time onshore would appear to be passing more slowly. And there we have it: a new principle of relativity.
“Henceforth, space by itself, and time by itself, are doomed to fade away into mere shadows,” the German mathematician Hermann Minkowski declared in 1908. Other physicists had done calculations that showed a similar difference in measurement of time between two observers, but they always added some version of “but not really.” For them, a difference in time might be in the math, but it wasn’t in the world. Einstein, however, said there is no “really.” There is only what you on the dock can measure about time on board the moving ship and what the sailor can measure about time on board the moving ship. The difference between the two is in the math, and the math is the world. Einstein’s insight was that because these perceptions are all that we can ever know, they are also, in terms of taking the measure of the universe, all that matter.
This was pretty heady stuff for a 26-year-old clerk who only a couple of weeks earlier had submitted his doctoral thesis to the University of Zurich. Einstein would keep his day job at the patent office until 1909, but his obscurity was over, at least among physicists. Within a year of completing his relativity paper, his ideas were being debated by some of the most prominent scientists in Germany. In 1908 physicist Johann Jakob Laub traveled from Würzburg to Bern to study with Einstein, exclaiming that to find the great man still laboring in a patent office was one of history’s “bad jokes.” But Einstein wasn’t complaining. His “handsome” pay, as he wrote a friend, was sufficient to support a wife and 4-year-old son, Hans Albert, and his schedule left him “eight hours of fun in the day, and then there is also Sunday.” Even on the job, he found plenty of time to daydream.
During one such daydream, Einstein experienced what he would later call “the most fortunate thought of my life.”
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Comments (5)
Perception changes everything, which is why you're happy with the paint you bought from Home Depot until you bring it home to your house. But seriously, in many, many years the universe will continue to expand, stars will collapse, black hole-ify, suck in all matter around them, eventually black holes, or 'anti-matter' (matter too dense for light to escape it) will overtake matter, our universe will collapse upon itself, all the anti-matter will explode! Rinse, repeat. That's our existence.
Posted by Phil E. Drifter on June 9,2012 | 05:40 AM
everyone should realized that the smartest man of the century would never be hired by todays corporate genius, tells us a lot about how stupid our modern society really is.
Posted by Frankwest on June 13,2011 | 07:51 PM
i love einstein
Posted by Skd on October 14,2009 | 04:52 PM
The impossible is possible.Einstein made his discoveries because he did not put limits on his mind or reality.To accept quantum mechanics is limiting your scope, not to say its wrong but there must be more. I believe Einstein was right to be stubborn and not give up.Even though he didnt break it, he learned more everyday to bring us closer.
Posted by Roger Torres on July 16,2009 | 06:31 PM
I've been looking at some photos of Aarau and thinking what a beautiful place it is. In Switzerland you can walk around the streets without being swamped by other pedestrians. As for Einstein & the other prominent physicists I would merely say this: the way forward is with the mind, but that mind must be the one that can transcend physical reality. Only through that means of coming face to face with root causes may radical advances in physics occur that would presently seem unbelievable e.g. faster than light travel. Keep the faith because I believe that time to be soon.
Posted by Richard Warwick on July 4,2009 | 09:32 PM