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 6 of 8)
Yet when Einstein attended the Hollywood première of City Lights in 1931, the movie’s star and director, Charlie Chaplin, offered him an explanation: “They cheer me because they all understand me, and they cheer you because no one understands you.” Maybe Einstein achieved his peculiar brand of immortality not in spite of his inscrutability but because of it. Social scientist Bernard H. Gustin has suggested that an Einstein assumes godlike status because he is “thought to come into contact with what is essential in the universe.” Holton recently elaborated on this comment: “I believe this is precisely why so many who knew little about Einstein’s scientific writing flocked to catch a glimpse of him, and to this day feel somehow uplifted by contemplating his iconic image.”
The halo has helped maintain the myth, keeping Einstein a presence on magazine covers and newspaper front pages, on posters and postcards, coffee mugs, baseball caps, T-shirts, refrigerator magnets and, based on a Google search, 23,600 Internet sites. But what we’re celebrating this year is more than a myth. In reinventing relativity, Einstein also reinvented nothing less than the way we see the universe. For thousands of years, astronomers and mathematicians had studied the motions of bodies in the night sky, then searched for equations to match them. Einstein did the reverse. He started with idle musings and scratches on paper and wound up pointing toward phenomena previously unimaginable and still unfathomable. “The general theory of relativity is one man’s idea of what the universe ought to be like,” says Einstein scholar Arthur I. Miller of UniversityCollege, London. “And that’s pretty much what it turned out to be.” It’s this legacy of Einstein’s that the World Year of Physics is commemorating, this lasting contribution to the modern era: the triumph of mind over matter.
THE LAST WORD ON ENERGY
It may be the world’s most famous equation, but what does E=mc2 actually mean?
Shortly after completing his paper on special relativity, in 1905, Einstein realized his equations applied to more than space and time. From the point of view of an observer standing still relative to an object moving very fast—approaching the speed of light—the object would appear to be gaining mass. And the greater its velocity—in other words the more energy that had been spent in getting it moving—the greater its apparent mass. Specifically, the measure of its energy would be equal to the measure of its mass multiplied by the speed of light squared.
The equation didn’t help scientists engineer an atomic bomb, but it does explain why smashing atoms can release mushroom clouds’ worth of power. The speed of light, or c, is a big number: 186,282 miles per second. Multiply it by itself, and the result is, well, a really big number: 34,700,983,524. Now multiply that number by even an extraordinarily minute amount of mass, such as what one might find in the nucleus of an atom, and the result is still an extraordinarily tremendous number. And that number is E, energy.
Prompted by two nuclear physicists, Einstein wrote to President Franklin D. Roosevelt on August 2, 1939, that “extremely powerful bombs” of a new type were now “conceivable.” Historians tend to think the letter played a “strictly subsidiary role” in the decision of the Allied powers to pursue the nuclear option, says physics historian Spencer Weart. But the fact that Einstein and, indirectly, his equation played any role whatsoever has forever linked a lifelong pacifist and utopian with mankind’s ability to destroy itself.
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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