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 3 of 8)
He knew that his 1905 special relativity theory applied only to the relationship between a body at rest and a body moving at a constant velocity. What about bodies moving at changing velocities? In the fall of 1907, he saw a vision in his mind’s eye not unlike a beam of light descending from a mast: a man falling off a roof.
What’s the difference? Unlike the beam of light, which moves at a constant velocity, the falling man would be accelerating. But in another sense, he would also be at rest. Throughout the universe, every scrap of matter would be exerting its exquisitely predictable influence on the man, through gravity. This was Einstein’s key insight—that acceleration and gravitation are two ways of describing the same force. Just as someone on board Galileo’s ship would have as much right to think of the dock leaving the ship as the ship leaving the dock, so the man in free fall from the roof would have as much right to think of himself being at rest while the earth hurtles toward him. And there we have it: another principle of relativity, called general relativity.
“Einstein always took what everyone else thought to be two completely different scenarios of nature and saw them as equivalent,” says Gerald Holton of Harvard, a leading Einstein scholar. Space and time, energy and mass, and acceleration and gravitation: as Holton says, “Einstein was always confronting the question, Why should there be two different phenomena with two different theories to explain them when they look to me like one phenomenon?”
After his 1907 vision, however, another eight years would pass before Einstein worked out the equations to support it. Einstein told friends that when he finally figured out the math to demonstrate general relativity in 1915, something burst inside him. He could feel his heart beating erratically, and the palpitations didn’t stop for days. He later wrote a friend, “I was beyond myself with excitement.”
By then, Einstein was a professor at the University of Berlin, and the Great War was raging across the Continent. For word of Einstein’s achievement to reach the wider world of physicists, it was going to have to travel across enemy lines. Einstein carried his writings on general relativity to the Netherlands, and from there a physicist friend forwarded them across the North Sea to England, where they eventually reached Arthur Eddington, perhaps the only astronomer in the world with the political clout and scientific prominence sufficient to mobilize wartime resources and to put general relativity to the test.
Einstein had theorized that a solar eclipse offered a rare opportunity to observe gravity’s effect on light. As the daytime sky darkened, stars would become visible, and if indeed the sun’s gravity pulled on the passing light, then those stars near the edge of the sun would appear to be out of position by a degree his equations predicted precisely. Eddington rallied his nation’s scientific troops, and Great Britain’s Astronomer Royal, Sir Frank Dyson, petitioned his war-depleted government to send two expeditions to observe the total eclipse on May 29, 1919—one to Sobral, Brazil, the other to Príncipe, an island off the west coast of Africa.
In late September, Einstein got a telegram saying that the eclipse results matched his predictions. In October, he accepted the congratulations of the most prominent physicists on the Continent at a meeting in Amsterdam. Then he went home to Berlin. As far as he knew, he’d gotten his due.
“REVOLUTION IN SCIENCE,” the November 7 Times of London trumpeted. “New Theory of the Universe. Newtonian Ideas Overthrown.” The preceding day, Dyson had read aloud the eclipse results at a rare joint session of the Royal Society and the Royal Astronomical Society. The Royal Society president and the discoverer of the electron, J. J. Thomson, called Einstein’s theory, in a quote that raced around the world, “one of the most momentous, if not the most momentous, pronouncements of human thought.”
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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