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Albert Einstein

Albert Einstein (/ˈnstn/ EYEN-styne;[6] German: [ˈalbɛʁt ˈʔaɪnʃtaɪn] (listen); 14 March 1879 – 18 April 1955) was a German-born theoretical physicist,[7] widely acknowledged to be one of the greatest and most influential physicists of all time. Einstein is best known for developing the theory of relativity, but he also made important contributions to the development of the theory of quantum mechanics. Relativity and quantum mechanics are the two pillars of modern physics.[3][8] His mass–energy equivalence formula E = mc2, which arises from relativity theory, has been dubbed "the world's most famous equation".[9] His work is also known for its influence on the philosophy of science.[10][11] He received the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics "for his services to theoretical physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect",[12] a pivotal step in the development of quantum theory. His intellectual achievements and originality resulted in "Einstein" becoming synonymous with "genius".[13] Einsteinium, one of the synthetic elements in the periodic table, was named in his honor.[14]

Albert Einstein
Einstein in 1921, by Ferdinand Schmutzer
Born(1879-03-14)14 March 1879
Ulm, German Empire
Died18 April 1955(1955-04-18) (aged 76)
Princeton, New Jersey, United States
Citizenship
Full list
Education
Known for
Spouses
(m. 1903; div. 1919)
(m. 1919; died[1][2] 1936)
Children
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics, philosophy
Institutions
ThesisEine neue Bestimmung der Moleküldimensionen (A New Determination of Molecular Dimensions) (1905)
Doctoral advisorAlfred Kleiner
Other academic advisorsHeinrich Friedrich Weber
Influences
Influenced
Signature

In 1905, a year sometimes described as his annus mirabilis ('miracle year'), Einstein published four groundbreaking papers.[15] These outlined the theory of the photoelectric effect, explained Brownian motion, introduced special relativity, and demonstrated mass-energy equivalence. Einstein thought that the laws of classical mechanics could no longer be reconciled with those of the electromagnetic field, which led him to develop his special theory of relativity. He then extended the theory to gravitational fields; he published a paper on general relativity in 1916, introducing his theory of gravitation. In 1917, he applied the general theory of relativity to model the structure of the universe.[16][17] He continued to deal with problems of statistical mechanics and quantum theory, which led to his explanations of particle theory and the motion of molecules. He also investigated the thermal properties of light and the quantum theory of radiation, which laid the foundation of the photon theory of light.

However, for much of the later part of his career, he worked on two ultimately unsuccessful endeavors. First, despite his great contributions to quantum mechanics, he opposed what it evolved into, objecting that "God does not play dice".[18] Second, he attempted to devise a unified field theory by generalizing his geometric theory of gravitation to include electromagnetism. As a result, he became increasingly isolated from the mainstream of modern physics.

Einstein was born in the German Empire, but moved to Switzerland in 1895, forsaking his German citizenship (as a subject of the Kingdom of Württemberg)[note 1] the following year. In 1897, at the age of 17, he enrolled in the mathematics and physics teaching diploma program at the Swiss Federal polytechnic school in Zürich, graduating in 1900. In 1901, he acquired Swiss citizenship, which he kept for the rest of his life, and in 1903 he secured a permanent position at the Swiss Patent Office in Bern. In 1905, he was awarded a PhD by the University of Zurich. In 1914, Einstein moved to Berlin in order to join the Prussian Academy of Sciences and the Humboldt University of Berlin. In 1917, Einstein became director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics; he also became a German citizen again, this time Prussian.

In 1933, while Einstein was visiting the United States, Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany. Einstein, as a Jew, objected to the policies of the newly elected Nazi government;[19] he settled in the United States and became an American citizen in 1940.[20] On the eve of World War II, he endorsed a letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt alerting him to the potential German nuclear weapons program and recommending that the US begin similar research. Einstein supported the Allies but generally denounced the idea of nuclear weapons.[21]

Life and career

Early life and education

 
Einstein at the age of three in 1882
 
Albert Einstein in 1893 (age 14)

Albert Einstein was born in Ulm,[7] in the Kingdom of Württemberg in the German Empire, on 14 March 1879 into a family of secular Ashkenazi Jews.[22][23] His parents were Hermann Einstein, a salesman and engineer, and Pauline Koch. In 1880, the family moved to Munich, where Einstein's father and his uncle Jakob founded Elektrotechnische Fabrik J. Einstein & Cie, a company that manufactured electrical equipment based on direct current.[7]

Albert attended a Catholic elementary school in Munich, from the age of five, for three years. At the age of eight, he was transferred to the Luitpold-Gymnasium (now known as the Albert-Einstein-Gymnasium), where he received advanced primary and secondary school education until he left the German Empire seven years later.[24]

In 1894, Hermann and Jakob's company lost a bid to supply the city of Munich with electrical lighting because they lacked the capital to convert their equipment from the direct current (DC) standard to the more efficient alternating current (AC) standard.[25] The loss forced the sale of the Munich factory. In search of business, the Einstein family moved to Italy, first to Milan and a few months later to Pavia. In Pavia, the Einsteins settled in Palazzo Cornazzani, a medieval building where, at different times, Ugo Foscolo, Contardo Ferrini and Ada Negri lived.[26] When the family moved to Pavia, Einstein, then 15, stayed in Munich to finish his studies at the Luitpold Gymnasium. His father intended for him to pursue electrical engineering, but Einstein clashed with the authorities and resented the school's regimen and teaching method. He later wrote that the spirit of learning and creative thought was lost in strict rote learning. At the end of December 1894, he traveled to Italy to join his family in Pavia, convincing the school to let him go by using a doctor's note.[27] During his time in Italy he wrote a short essay with the title "On the Investigation of the State of the Ether in a Magnetic Field".[28][29]

Einstein excelled at math and physics from a young age, reaching a mathematical level years ahead of his peers. The 12-year-old Einstein taught himself algebra and Euclidean geometry over a single summer.[30] Einstein also independently discovered his own original proof of the Pythagorean theorem aged 12.[31] A family tutor Max Talmud says that after he had given the 12-year-old Einstein a geometry textbook, after a short time "[Einstein] had worked through the whole book. He thereupon devoted himself to higher mathematics ... Soon the flight of his mathematical genius was so high I could not follow."[32] His passion for geometry and algebra led the 12-year-old to become convinced that nature could be understood as a "mathematical structure".[32] Einstein started teaching himself calculus at 12, and as a 14-year-old he says he had "mastered integral and differential calculus".[33]

At the age of 13, when he had become more seriously interested in philosophy (and music),[34] Einstein was introduced to Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. Kant became his favorite philosopher, his tutor stating: "At the time he was still a child, only thirteen years old, yet Kant's works, incomprehensible to ordinary mortals, seemed to be clear to him."[32]

 
Einstein's Matura certificate, 1896[note 2]

In 1895, at the age of 16, Einstein took the entrance examinations for the Swiss Federal polytechnic school in Zürich (later the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule, ETH). He failed to reach the required standard in the general part of the examination,[35] but obtained exceptional grades in physics and mathematics.[36] On the advice of the principal of the polytechnic school, he attended the Argovian cantonal school (gymnasium) in Aarau, Switzerland, in 1895 and 1896 to complete his secondary schooling. While lodging with the family of Jost Winteler, he fell in love with Winteler's daughter, Marie. Albert's sister Maja later married Winteler's son Paul.[37] In January 1896, with his father's approval, Einstein renounced his citizenship in the German Kingdom of Württemberg to avoid military service.[38] In September 1896 he passed the Swiss Matura with mostly good grades, including a top grade of 6 in physics and mathematical subjects, on a scale of 1–6.[39] At 17, he enrolled in the four-year mathematics and physics teaching diploma program at the Federal polytechnic school. Marie Winteler, who was a year older, moved to Olsberg, Switzerland, for a teaching post.[37]

Einstein's future wife, a 20-year-old Serbian named Mileva Marić, also enrolled at the polytechnic school that year. She was the only woman among the six students in the mathematics and physics section of the teaching diploma course. Over the next few years, Einstein's and Marić's friendship developed into a romance, and they spent countless hours debating and reading books together on extra-curricular physics in which they were both interested. Einstein wrote in his letters to Marić that he preferred studying alongside her.[40] In 1900, Einstein passed the exams in Maths and Physics and was awarded a Federal teaching diploma.[41] There is eyewitness evidence and several letters over many years that indicate Marić might have collaborated with Einstein prior to his landmark 1905 papers,[40][42][43] known as the Annus Mirabilis papers, and that they developed some of the concepts together during their studies, although some historians of physics who have studied the issue disagree that she made any substantive contributions.[44][45][46][47]

Marriages and children

 
Albert Einstein and Mileva Marić Einstein, 1912

Early correspondence between Einstein and Marić was discovered and published in 1987 which revealed that the couple had a daughter named "Lieserl", born in early 1902 in Novi Sad where Marić was staying with her parents. Marić returned to Switzerland without the child, whose real name and fate are unknown. The contents of Einstein's letter in September 1903 suggest that the girl was either given up for adoption or died of scarlet fever in infancy.[48][49]

Einstein and Marić married in January 1903. In May 1904, their son Hans Albert Einstein was born in Bern, Switzerland. Their son Eduard was born in Zürich in July 1910. The couple moved to Berlin in April 1914, but Marić returned to Zürich with their sons after learning that, despite their close relationship before,[40] Einstein's chief romantic attraction was now his cousin Elsa Löwenthal;[50] she was his first cousin maternally and second cousin paternally.[51] Einstein and Marić divorced on 14 February 1919, having lived apart for five years.[52][53] As part of the divorce settlement, Einstein agreed to give Marić any future (in the event, 1921) Nobel Prize money.[54]

In letters revealed in 2015, Einstein wrote to his early love Marie Winteler about his marriage and his strong feelings for her. He wrote in 1910, while his wife was pregnant with their second child: "I think of you in heartfelt love every spare minute and am so unhappy as only a man can be." He spoke about a "misguided love" and a "missed life" regarding his love for Marie.[55]

Einstein married Löwenthal in 1919,[56][57] after having had a relationship with her since 1912.[51][58] They emigrated to the United States in 1933. Elsa was diagnosed with heart and kidney problems in 1935 and died in December 1936.[59]

In 1923, Einstein fell in love with a secretary named Betty Neumann, the niece of a close friend, Hans Mühsam.[60][61][62][63] In a volume of letters released by Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 2006,[64] Einstein described about six women, including Margarete Lebach (a blonde Austrian), Estella Katzenellenbogen (the rich owner of a florist business), Toni Mendel (a wealthy Jewish widow) and Ethel Michanowski (a Berlin socialite), with whom he spent time and from whom he received gifts while being married to Elsa.[65][66] Later, after the death of his second wife Elsa, Einstein was briefly in a relationship with Margarita Konenkova. Konenkova was a Russian spy who was married to the Russian sculptor Sergei Konenkov (who created the bronze bust of Einstein at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton).[67][68][failed verification]

Einstein's son Eduard had a breakdown at about age 20 and was diagnosed with schizophrenia.[69] His mother cared for him and he was also committed to asylums for several periods, finally, after her death, being committed permanently to Burghölzli, the Psychiatric University Hospital in Zürich.[70]

Patent office

 
Einstein in 1904 (age 25)

After graduating in 1900, Einstein spent almost two years searching for a teaching post. He acquired Swiss citizenship in February 1901,[71] but was not conscripted for medical reasons. With the help of Marcel Grossmann's father, he secured a job in Bern at the Swiss Patent Office,[72][73] as an assistant examiner – level III.[74][75]

Einstein evaluated patent applications for a variety of devices including a gravel sorter and an electromechanical typewriter.[75] In 1903, his position at the Swiss Patent Office became permanent, although he was passed over for promotion until he "fully mastered machine technology".[76]

Much of his work at the patent office related to questions about transmission of electric signals and electrical-mechanical synchronization of time, two technical problems that show up conspicuously in the thought experiments that eventually led Einstein to his radical conclusions about the nature of light and the fundamental connection between space and time.[15]

With a few friends he had met in Bern, Einstein started a small discussion group in 1902, self-mockingly named "The Olympia Academy", which met regularly to discuss science and philosophy. Sometimes they were joined by Mileva who attentively listened but did not participate.[77] Their readings included the works of Henri Poincaré, Ernst Mach, and David Hume, which influenced his scientific and philosophical outlook.[78]

First scientific papers

 
Cover image of the PhD dissertation of Albert Einstein defended in 1905

In 1900, Einstein's paper "Folgerungen aus den Capillaritätserscheinungen" ("Conclusions from the Capillarity Phenomena") was published in the journal Annalen der Physik.[79][80] On 30 April 1905 Einstein completed his dissertation, A New Determination of Molecular Dimensions[81] with Alfred Kleiner, serving as pro-forma advisor.[81][82] His thesis was accepted in July 1905, and Einstein was awarded a PhD on 15 January 1906.[81][82][83]

Also in 1905, which has been called Einstein's annus mirabilis (amazing year), he published four groundbreaking papers, on the photoelectric effect, Brownian motion, special relativity, and the equivalence of mass and energy, which were to bring him to the notice of the academic world, at the age of 26.[84]

Academic career

By 1908, he was recognized as a leading scientist and was appointed lecturer at the University of Bern. The following year, after he gave a lecture on electrodynamics and the relativity principle at the University of Zurich, Alfred Kleiner recommended him to the faculty for a newly created professorship in theoretical physics. Einstein was appointed associate professor in 1909.[85]

Einstein became a full professor at the German Charles-Ferdinand University in Prague in April 1911, accepting Austrian citizenship in the Austro-Hungarian Empire to do so.[86][87] During his Prague stay, he wrote 11 scientific works, five of them on radiation mathematics and on the quantum theory of solids.

 
Olympia Academy founders: Conrad Habicht, Maurice Solovine and Albert Einstein

In July 1912, he returned to his alma mater in Zürich. From 1912 until 1914, he was a professor of theoretical physics at the ETH Zurich, where he taught analytical mechanics and thermodynamics. He also studied continuum mechanics, the molecular theory of heat, and the problem of gravitation, on which he worked with mathematician and friend Marcel Grossmann.[88]

When the "Manifesto of the Ninety-Three" was published in October 1914—a document signed by a host of prominent German intellectuals that justified Germany's militarism and position during the First World War—Einstein was one of the few German intellectuals to rebut its contents and sign the pacifistic "Manifesto to the Europeans".[89]

 
The New York Times reported confirmation of "the Einstein theory" (specifically, the bending of light by gravitation) based on 29 May 1919 eclipse observations in Príncipe (Africa) and Sobral (Brazil), after the findings were presented on 6 November 1919 to a joint meeting in London of the Royal Society and the Royal Astronomical Society.[90]

In the spring of 1913, Einstein was enticed to move to Berlin with an offer that included membership in the Prussian Academy of Sciences, and a linked University of Berlin professorship, enabling him to concentrate exclusively on research.[58] On 3 July 1913, he became a member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences in Berlin. Max Planck and Walther Nernst visited him the next week in Zurich to persuade him to join the academy, additionally offering him the post of director at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics, which was soon to be established.[91] Membership in the academy included paid salary and professorship without teaching duties at Humboldt University of Berlin. He was officially elected to the academy on 24 July, and he moved to Berlin the following year. His decision to move to Berlin was also influenced by the prospect of living near his cousin Elsa, with whom he had started a romantic affair. Einstein assumed his position with the academy, and Berlin University,[92] after moving into his Dahlem apartment on 1 April 1914.[58][93] As World War I broke out that year, the plan for Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics was delayed. The institute was established on 1 October 1917, with Einstein as its director.[94] In 1916, Einstein was elected president of the German Physical Society (1916–1918).[95]

In 1911, Einstein used his 1907 Equivalence principle to calculate the deflection of light from another star by the Sun's gravity. In 1913, Einstein improved upon those calculations by using Riemannian space-time to represent the gravity field. By the fall of 1915, Einstein had successfully completed his general theory of relativity, which he used to calculate that deflection, and the perihelion precession of Mercury.[58][96] In 1919, that deflection prediction was confirmed by Sir Arthur Eddington during the solar eclipse of 29 May 1919. Those observations were published in the international media, making Einstein world-famous. On 7 November 1919, the leading British newspaper The Times printed a banner headline that read: "Revolution in Science – New Theory of the Universe – Newtonian Ideas Overthrown".[97]

In 1920, he became a Foreign Member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.[98] In 1922, he was awarded the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics "for his services to Theoretical Physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect".[12] While the general theory of relativity was still considered somewhat controversial, the citation also does not treat even the cited photoelectric work as an explanation but merely as a discovery of the law, as the idea of photons was considered outlandish and did not receive universal acceptance until the 1924 derivation of the Planck spectrum by S. N. Bose. Einstein was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society (ForMemRS) in 1921.[3] He also received the Copley Medal from the Royal Society in 1925.[3]

Einstein resigned from the Prussian Academy in March 1933. Einstein's scientific accomplishments while in Berlin, included finishing the general theory of relativity, proving the gyromagnetic effect, contributing to the quantum theory of radiation, and Bose–Einstein statistics.[58]

1921–1922: Travels abroad

 
Einstein with his second wife, Elsa, in 1921
 
Einstein's official portrait after receiving the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics

Einstein visited New York City for the first time on 2 April 1921, where he received an official welcome by Mayor John Francis Hylan, followed by three weeks of lectures and receptions.[99] He went on to deliver several lectures at Columbia University and Princeton University, and in Washington, he accompanied representatives of the National Academy of Sciences on a visit to the White House. On his return to Europe he was the guest of the British statesman and philosopher Viscount Haldane in London, where he met several renowned scientific, intellectual, and political figures, and delivered a lecture at King's College London.[100][101]

He also published an essay, "My First Impression of the U.S.A.", in July 1921, in which he tried briefly to describe some characteristics of Americans, much as had Alexis de Tocqueville, who published his own impressions in Democracy in America (1835).[102] For some of his observations, Einstein was clearly surprised: "What strikes a visitor is the joyous, positive attitude to life ... The American is friendly, self-confident, optimistic, and without envy."[103]

In 1922, his travels took him to Asia and later to Palestine, as part of a six-month excursion and speaking tour, as he visited Singapore, Ceylon and Japan, where he gave a series of lectures to thousands of Japanese. After his first public lecture, he met the emperor and empress at the Imperial Palace, where thousands came to watch. In a letter to his sons, he described his impression of the Japanese as being modest, intelligent, considerate, and having a true feel for art.[104] In his own travel diaries from his 1922–23 visit to Asia, he expresses some views on the Chinese, Japanese and Indian people, which have been described as xenophobic and racist judgments when they were rediscovered in 2018.[105][106]

Because of Einstein's travels to the Far East, he was unable to personally accept the Nobel Prize for Physics at the Stockholm award ceremony in December 1922. In his place, the banquet speech was made by a German diplomat, who praised Einstein not only as a scientist but also as an international peacemaker and activist.[107]

On his return voyage, he visited Palestine for 12 days, his only visit to that region. He was greeted as if he were a head of state, rather than a physicist, which included a cannon salute upon arriving at the home of the British high commissioner, Sir Herbert Samuel. During one reception, the building was stormed by people who wanted to see and hear him. In Einstein's talk to the audience, he expressed happiness that the Jewish people were beginning to be recognized as a force in the world.[108]

Einstein visited Spain for two weeks in 1923, where he briefly met Santiago Ramón y Cajal and also received a diploma from King Alfonso XIII naming him a member of the Spanish Academy of Sciences.[109]

 
Albert Einstein at a session of the International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation (League of Nations) of which he was a member from 1922 to 1932

From 1922 to 1932, Einstein was a member of the International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation of the League of Nations in Geneva (with a few months of interruption in 1923–1924),[110] a body created to promote international exchange between scientists, researchers, teachers, artists, and intellectuals.[111] Originally slated to serve as the Swiss delegate, Secretary-General Eric Drummond was persuaded by Catholic activists Oskar Halecki and Giuseppe Motta to instead have him become the German delegate, thus allowing Gonzague de Reynold to take the Swiss spot, from which he promoted traditionalist Catholic values.[112] Einstein's former physics professor Hendrik Lorentz and the Polish chemist Marie Curie were also members of the committee.[113]

1925: Visit to South America

In the months of March and April 1925, Einstein visited South America, where he spent about a month in Argentina, a week in Uruguay, and a week in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.[114] Einstein's visit was initiated by Jorge Duclout (1856–1927) and Mauricio Nirenstein (1877–1935)[115] with the support of several Argentine scholars, including Julio Rey Pastor, Jakob Laub, and Leopoldo Lugones. The visit by Einstein and his wife was financed primarily by the Council of the University of Buenos Aires and the Asociación Hebraica Argentina (Argentine Hebraic Association) with a smaller contribution from the Argentine-Germanic Cultural Institution.[116]

1930–1931: Travel to the US

 
Albert Einstein and a Salvation Army band before a performance at the Rose Bowl Parade, in California, 1926.

In December 1930, Einstein visited America for the second time, originally intended as a two-month working visit as a research fellow at the California Institute of Technology. After the national attention he received during his first trip to the US, he and his arrangers aimed to protect his privacy. Although swamped with telegrams and invitations to receive awards or speak publicly, he declined them all.[117]

After arriving in New York City, Einstein was taken to various places and events, including Chinatown, a lunch with the editors of The New York Times, and a performance of Carmen at the Metropolitan Opera, where he was cheered by the audience on his arrival. During the days following, he was given the keys to the city by Mayor Jimmy Walker and met the president of Columbia University, who described Einstein as "the ruling monarch of the mind".[118] Harry Emerson Fosdick, pastor at New York's Riverside Church, gave Einstein a tour of the church and showed him a full-size statue that the church made of Einstein, standing at the entrance.[118] Also during his stay in New York, he joined a crowd of 15,000 people at Madison Square Garden during a Hanukkah celebration.[118]

 
Albert Einstein (left) and Charlie Chaplin at the Hollywood premiere of City Lights, January 1931

Einstein next traveled to California, where he met Caltech president and Nobel laureate Robert A. Millikan. His friendship with Millikan was "awkward", as Millikan "had a penchant for patriotic militarism", where Einstein was a pronounced pacifist.[119] During an address to Caltech's students, Einstein noted that science was often inclined to do more harm than good.[120]

This aversion to war also led Einstein to befriend author Upton Sinclair and film star Charlie Chaplin, both noted for their pacifism. Carl Laemmle, head of Universal Studios, gave Einstein a tour of his studio and introduced him to Chaplin. They had an instant rapport, with Chaplin inviting Einstein and his wife, Elsa, to his home for dinner. Chaplin said Einstein's outward persona, calm and gentle, seemed to conceal a "highly emotional temperament", from which came his "extraordinary intellectual energy".[121]

Chaplin's film, City Lights, was to premiere a few days later in Hollywood, and Chaplin invited Einstein and Elsa to join him as his special guests. Walter Isaacson, Einstein's biographer, described this as "one of the most memorable scenes in the new era of celebrity".[120] Chaplin visited Einstein at his home on a later trip to Berlin and recalled his "modest little flat" and the piano at which he had begun writing his theory. Chaplin speculated that it was "possibly used as kindling wood by the Nazis".[122]

1933: Emigration to the US

 
Cartoon of Einstein after shedding his "pacifism" wings (Charles R. Macauley, c. 1933)

In February 1933, while on a visit to the United States, Einstein knew he could not return to Germany with the rise to power of the Nazis under Germany's new chancellor, Adolf Hitler.[123][124]

While at American universities in early 1933, he undertook his third two-month visiting professorship at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. In February and March 1933, the Gestapo repeatedly raided his family's apartment in Berlin.[125] He and his wife Elsa returned to Europe in March, and during the trip, they learned that the German Reichstag had passed the Enabling Act on 23 March, transforming Hitler's government into a de facto legal dictatorship, and that they would not be able to proceed to Berlin. Later on, they heard that their cottage had been raided by the Nazis and Einstein's personal sailboat confiscated. Upon landing in Antwerp, Belgium on 28 March, Einstein immediately went to the German consulate and surrendered his passport, formally renouncing his German citizenship.[126] The Nazis later sold his boat and converted his cottage into a Hitler Youth camp.[127]

Refugee status

 
Albert Einstein's landing card (26 May 1933), when he landed in Dover (United Kingdom) from Ostend (Belgium) to visit Oxford

In April 1933, Einstein discovered that the new German government had passed laws barring Jews from holding any official positions, including teaching at universities.[126] Historian Gerald Holton describes how, with "virtually no audible protest being raised by their colleagues", thousands of Jewish scientists were suddenly forced to give up their university positions and their names were removed from the rolls of institutions where they were employed.[128]

A month later, Einstein's works were among those targeted by the German Student Union in the Nazi book burnings, with Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels proclaiming, "Jewish intellectualism is dead."[126] One German magazine included him in a list of enemies of the German regime with the phrase, "not yet hanged", offering a $5,000 bounty on his head.[126][129] In a subsequent letter to physicist and friend Max Born, who had already emigrated from Germany to England, Einstein wrote, "... I must confess that the degree of their brutality and cowardice came as something of a surprise."[126] After moving to the US, he described the book burnings as a "spontaneous emotional outburst" by those who "shun popular enlightenment", and "more than anything else in the world, fear the influence of men of intellectual independence".[130]

Einstein was now without a permanent home, unsure where he would live and work, and equally worried about the fate of countless other scientists still in Germany. Aided by the Academic Assistance Council, founded in April 1933 by British liberal politician William Beveridge to help academics escape Nazi persecution, Einstein was able to leave Germany.[131] He rented a house in De Haan, Belgium, where he lived for a few months. In late July 1933, he went to England for about six weeks at the personal invitation of British naval officer Commander Oliver Locker-Lampson, who had become friends with Einstein in the preceding years.[132] Locker-Lampson invited him to stay near his Cromer home in a wooden cabin on Roughton Heath in the Parish of Roughton, Norfolk. To protect Einstein, Locker-Lampson had two bodyguards watch over him at his secluded cabin; a photo of them carrying shotguns and guarding Einstein was published in the Daily Herald on 24 July 1933.[133][134]

Locker-Lampson took Einstein to meet Winston Churchill at his home, and later, Austen Chamberlain and former Prime Minister Lloyd George.[135] Einstein asked them to help bring Jewish scientists out of Germany. British historian Martin Gilbert notes that Churchill responded immediately, and sent his friend, physicist Frederick Lindemann, to Germany to seek out Jewish scientists and place them in British universities.[136] Churchill later observed that as a result of Germany having driven the Jews out, they had lowered their "technical standards" and put the Allies' technology ahead of theirs.[136]

Einstein later contacted leaders of other nations, including Turkey's Prime Minister, İsmet İnönü, to whom he wrote in September 1933 requesting placement of unemployed German-Jewish scientists. As a result of Einstein's letter, Jewish invitees to Turkey eventually totaled over "1,000 saved individuals".[137]

Locker-Lampson also submitted a bill to parliament to extend British citizenship to Einstein, during which period Einstein made a number of public appearances describing the crisis brewing in Europe.[138] In one of his speeches he denounced Germany's treatment of Jews, while at the same time he introduced a bill promoting Jewish citizenship in Palestine, as they were being denied citizenship elsewhere.[139] In his speech he described Einstein as a "citizen of the world" who should be offered a temporary shelter in the UK.[note 3][140] Both bills failed, however, and Einstein then accepted an earlier offer from the Institute for Advanced Study, in Princeton, New Jersey, US, to become a resident scholar.[138]

Resident scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study

 
Portrait of Einstein taken in 1935 at Princeton

On 3 October 1933, Einstein delivered a speech on the importance of academic freedom before a packed audience at the Royal Albert Hall in London, with The Times reporting he was wildly cheered throughout.[131] Four days later he returned to the US and took up a position at the Institute for Advanced Study,[138][141] noted for having become a refuge for scientists fleeing Nazi Germany.[142] At the time, most American universities, including Harvard, Princeton and Yale, had minimal or no Jewish faculty or students, as a result of their Jewish quotas, which lasted until the late 1940s.[142]

Einstein was still undecided on his future. He had offers from several European universities, including Christ Church, Oxford, where he stayed for three short periods between May 1931 and June 1933 and was offered a five-year research fellowship (called a "studentship" at Christ Church),[143][144] but in 1935, he arrived at the decision to remain permanently in the United States and apply for citizenship.[138][145]

Einstein's affiliation with the Institute for Advanced Study would last until his death in 1955.[146] He was one of the four first selected (along with John von Neumann, Kurt Gödel, and Hermann Weyl[147]) at the new Institute, where he soon developed a close friendship with Gödel. The two would take long walks together discussing their work. Bruria Kaufman, his assistant, later became a physicist. During this period, Einstein tried to develop a unified field theory and to refute the accepted interpretation of quantum physics, both unsuccessfully.

World War II and the Manhattan Project

In 1939, a group of Hungarian scientists that included émigré physicist Leó Szilárd attempted to alert Washington to ongoing Nazi atomic bomb research. The group's warnings were discounted. Einstein and Szilárd, along with other refugees such as Edward Teller and Eugene Wigner, "regarded it as their responsibility to alert Americans to the possibility that German scientists might win the race to build an atomic bomb, and to warn that Hitler would be more than willing to resort to such a weapon."[148][149] To make certain the US was aware of the danger, in July 1939, a few months before the beginning of World War II in Europe, Szilárd and Wigner visited Einstein to explain the possibility of atomic bombs, which Einstein, a pacifist, said he had never considered.[150] He was asked to lend his support by writing a letter, with Szilárd, to President Roosevelt, recommending the US pay attention and engage in its own nuclear weapons research.

The letter is believed to be "arguably the key stimulus for the U.S. adoption of serious investigations into nuclear weapons on the eve of the U.S. entry into World War II".[151] In addition to the letter, Einstein used his connections with the Belgian Royal Family[152] and the Belgian queen mother to get access with a personal envoy to the White House's Oval Office. Some say that as a result of Einstein's letter and his meetings with Roosevelt, the US entered the "race" to develop the bomb, drawing on its "immense material, financial, and scientific resources" to initiate the Manhattan Project.

For Einstein, "war was a disease ... [and] he called for resistance to war." By signing the letter to Roosevelt, some argue he went against his pacifist principles.[153] In 1954, a year before his death, Einstein said to his old friend, Linus Pauling, "I made one great mistake in my life—when I signed the letter to President Roosevelt recommending that atom bombs be made; but there was some justification—the danger that the Germans would make them ..."[154] In 1955, Einstein and ten other intellectuals and scientists, including British philosopher Bertrand Russell, signed a manifesto highlighting the danger of nuclear weapons.[155]

US citizenship

 
Einstein accepting US citizenship certificate from judge Phillip Forman

Einstein became an American citizen in 1940. Not long after settling into his career at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, he expressed his appreciation of the meritocracy in American culture compared to Europe. He recognized the "right of individuals to say and think what they pleased" without social barriers. As a result, individuals were encouraged, he said, to be more creative, a trait he valued from his early education.[156]

Einstein joined the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in Princeton, where he campaigned for the civil rights of African Americans. He considered racism America's "worst disease",[129][157] seeing it as "handed down from one generation to the next".[158] As part of his involvement, he corresponded with civil rights activist W. E. B. Du Bois and was prepared to testify on his behalf during his trial in 1951.[159] When Einstein offered to be a character witness for Du Bois, the judge decided to drop the case.[160]

In 1946, Einstein visited Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, a historically black college, where he was awarded an honorary degree. Lincoln was the first university in the United States to grant college degrees to African Americans; alumni include Langston Hughes and Thurgood Marshall. Einstein gave a speech about racism in America, adding, "I do not intend to be quiet about it."[161] A resident of Princeton recalls that Einstein had once paid the college tuition for a black student.[160] Einstein has said, "Being a Jew myself, perhaps I can understand and empathize with how black people feel as victims of discrimination".[157]

Personal views

Political views

 
Albert Einstein with his wife Elsa Einstein and Zionist leaders, including the future president of Israel, Chaim Weizmann, his wife Vera Weizmann, Menahem Ussishkin, and Ben-Zion Mossinson on arrival in New York City in 1921

In 1918, Einstein was one of the founding members of the German Democratic Party, a liberal party.[162] Later in his life, Einstein's political view was in favor of socialism and critical of capitalism, which he detailed in his essays such as "Why Socialism?"[163][164] His opinions on the Bolsheviks also changed with time. In 1925, he criticized them for not having a 'well-regulated system of government' and called their rule a 'regime of terror and a tragedy in human history'. He later adopted a more moderated view, criticizing their methods but praising them, which is shown by his 1929 remark on Vladimir Lenin: "In Lenin I honor a man, who in total sacrifice of his own person has committed his entire energy to realizing social justice. I do not find his methods advisable. One thing is certain, however: men like him are the guardians and renewers of mankind's conscience."[165] Einstein offered and was called on to give judgments and opinions on matters often unrelated to theoretical physics or mathematics.[138] He strongly advocated the idea of a democratic global government that would check the power of nation-states in the framework of a world federation.[166] He wrote "I advocate world government because I am convinced that there is no other possible way of eliminating the most terrible danger in which man has ever found himself."[167] The FBI created a secret dossier on Einstein in 1932, and by the time of his death his FBI file was 1,427 pages long.[168]

Einstein was deeply impressed by Mahatma Gandhi, with whom he exchanged written letters. He described Gandhi as "a role model for the generations to come".[169] The initial connection was established on 27 September 1931, when Wilfrid Israel took his Indian guest V. A. Sundaram to meet his friend Einstein at his summer home in the town of Caputh. Sundaram was Gandhi's disciple and special envoy, whom Wilfrid Israel met while visiting India and visiting the Indian leader's home in 1925. During the visit, Einstein wrote a short letter to Gandhi that was delivered to him through his envoy, and Gandhi responded quickly with his own letter. Although in the end Einstein and Gandhi were unable to meet as they had hoped, the direct connection between them was established through Wilfrid Israel.[170]

Relationship with Zionism
 
Einstein in 1947

Einstein was a figurehead leader in helping establish the Hebrew University of Jerusalem,[171] which opened in 1925, and was among its first Board of Governors. Earlier, in 1921, he was asked by the biochemist and president of the World Zionist Organization, Chaim Weizmann, to help raise funds for the planned university.[172] He made suggestions for the creation of an Institute of Agriculture, a Chemical Institute and an Institute of Microbiology in order to fight the various ongoing epidemics such as malaria, which he called an "evil" that was undermining a third of the country's development.[173] He also promoted the establishment of an Oriental Studies Institute, to include language courses given in both Hebrew and Arabic.[174]

Einstein was not a nationalist and was against the creation of an independent Jewish state, which would be established without his help as Israel in 1948. He felt that the waves of arriving Jews of the Aliyah could live alongside existing Arabs in Palestine.[175] Nevertheless, upon the death of Israeli president Weizmann in November 1952, Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion offered Einstein the largely ceremonial position of President of Israel at the urging of Ezriel Carlebach.[176][177] The offer was presented by Israel's ambassador in Washington, Abba Eban, who explained that the offer "embodies the deepest respect which the Jewish people can repose in any of its sons".[178] Einstein wrote that he was "deeply moved", but "at once saddened and ashamed" that he could not accept it.[178]

Religious and philosophical views

Start of a speech by Albert Einstein made on 11 April 1943 for the United Jewish Appeal (recording by Radio Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Argentina)
"Ladies (coughs) and gentlemen, our age is proud of the progress it has made in man's intellectual development. The search and striving for truth and knowledge is one of the highest of man's qualities ..."

Einstein spoke of his spiritual outlook in a wide array of original writings and interviews.[179] He said he had sympathy for the impersonal pantheistic God of Baruch Spinoza's philosophy.[180] He did not believe in a personal god who concerns himself with fates and actions of human beings, a view which he described as naïve.[181] He clarified, however, that "I am not an atheist",[182] preferring to call himself an agnostic,[183][184] or a "deeply religious nonbeliever".[181] When asked if he believed in an afterlife, Einstein replied, "No. And one life is enough for me."[185]

Einstein was primarily affiliated with non-religious humanist and Ethical Culture groups in both the UK and US. He served on the advisory board of the First Humanist Society of New York,[186] and was an honorary associate of the Rationalist Association, which publishes New Humanist in Britain. For the 75th anniversary of the New York Society for Ethical Culture, he stated that the idea of Ethical Culture embodied his personal conception of what is most valuable and enduring in religious idealism. He observed, "Without 'ethical culture' there is no salvation for humanity."[187]

In a German-language letter to philosopher Eric Gutkind, dated 3 January 1954, Einstein wrote:

The word God is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses, the Bible a collection of honorable, but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish. No interpretation no matter how subtle can (for me) change this. ... For me the Jewish religion like all other religions is an incarnation of the most childish superstitions. And the Jewish people to whom I gladly belong and with whose mentality I have a deep affinity have no different quality for me than all other people. ... I cannot see anything 'chosen' about them.[188]

Einstein had been sympathetic toward vegetarianism for a long time. In a letter in 1930 to Hermann Huth, vice-president of the German Vegetarian Federation (Deutsche Vegetarier-Bund), he wrote:

Although I have been prevented by outward circumstances from observing a strictly vegetarian diet, I have long been an adherent to the cause in principle. Besides agreeing with the aims of vegetarianism for aesthetic and moral reasons, it is my view that a vegetarian manner of living by its purely physical effect on the human temperament would most beneficially influence the lot of mankind.[189]

He became a vegetarian himself only during the last part of his life. In March 1954 he wrote in a letter: "So I am living without fats, without meat, without fish, but am feeling quite well this way. It almost seems to me that man was not born to be a carnivore."[190]

Love of music

 
Albert Einstein (right) with writer, musician and Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore, 1930

Einstein developed an appreciation for music at an early age. In his late journals he wrote:

"If I were not a physicist, I would probably be a musician. I often think in music. I live my daydreams in music. I see my life in terms of music... I get most joy in life out of music."[191][192]

His mother played the piano reasonably well and wanted her son to learn the violin, not only to instill in him a love of music but also to help him assimilate into German culture. According to conductor Leon Botstein, Einstein began playing when he was 5. However, he did not enjoy it at that age.[193]

When he turned 13, he discovered the violin sonatas of Mozart, whereupon he became enamored of Mozart's compositions and studied music more willingly. Einstein taught himself to play without "ever practicing systematically". He said that "love is a better teacher than a sense of duty."[193] At the age of 17, he was heard by a school examiner in Aarau while playing Beethoven's violin sonatas. The examiner stated afterward that his playing was "remarkable and revealing of 'great insight'". What struck the examiner, writes Botstein, was that Einstein "displayed a deep love of the music, a quality that was and remains in short supply. Music possessed an unusual meaning for this student."[193]

Music took on a pivotal and permanent role in Einstein's life from that period on. Although the idea of becoming a professional musician himself was not on his mind at any time, among those with whom Einstein played chamber music were a few professionals, including Kurt Appelbaum, and he performed for private audiences and friends. Chamber music had also become a regular part of his social life while living in Bern, Zürich, and Berlin, where he played with Max Planck and his son, among others. He is sometimes erroneously credited as the editor of the 1937 edition of the Köchel catalog of Mozart's work; that edition was prepared by Alfred Einstein, who may have been a distant relation.[194][195]

In 1931, while engaged in research at the California Institute of Technology, he visited the Zoellner family conservatory in Los Angeles, where he played some of Beethoven and Mozart's works with members of the Zoellner Quartet.[196][197] Near the end of his life, when the young Juilliard Quartet visited him in Princeton, he played his violin with them, and the quartet was "impressed by Einstein's level of coordination and intonation".[193]

Death

On 17 April 1955, Einstein experienced internal bleeding caused by the rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm, which had previously been reinforced surgically by Rudolph Nissen in 1948.[198] He took the draft of a speech he was preparing for a television appearance commemorating the state of Israel's seventh anniversary with him to the hospital, but he did not live to complete it.[199]

Einstein refused surgery, saying, "I want to go when I want. It is tasteless to prolong life artificially. I have done my share; it is time to go. I will do it elegantly."[200] He died in the University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro early the next morning at the age of 76, having continued to work until near the end.[201]

During the autopsy, the pathologist Thomas Stoltz Harvey removed Einstein's brain for preservation without the permission of his family, in the hope that the neuroscience of the future would be able to discover what made Einstein so intelligent.[202] Einstein's remains were cremated in Trenton, New Jersey,[203] and his ashes were scattered at an undisclosed location.[204][205]

In a memorial lecture delivered on 13 December 1965 at UNESCO headquarters, nuclear physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer summarized his impression of Einstein as a person: "He was almost wholly without sophistication and wholly without worldliness ... There was always with him a wonderful purity at once childlike and profoundly stubborn."[206]

Einstein bequeathed his personal archives, library, and intellectual assets to the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel.[207]

Scientific career

Throughout his life, Einstein published hundreds of books and articles.[7][208] He published more than 300 scientific papers and 150 non-scientific ones.[16][208] On 5 December 2014, universities and archives announced the release of Einstein's papers, comprising more than 30,000 unique documents.[209][210] Einstein's intellectual achievements and originality have made the word "Einstein" synonymous with "genius".[13] In addition to the work he did by himself he also collaborated with other scientists on additional projects including the Bose–Einstein statistics, the Einstein refrigerator and others.[211][212]

1905 – Annus Mirabilis papers

The Annus Mirabilis papers are four articles pertaining to the photoelectric effect (which gave rise to quantum theory), Brownian motion, the special theory of relativity, and E = mc2 that Einstein published in the Annalen der Physik scientific journal in 1905. These four works contributed substantially to the foundation of modern physics and changed views on space, time, and matter. The four papers are:

Title (translated) Area of focus Received Published Significance
"On a Heuristic Viewpoint Concerning the Production and Transformation of Light"[213] Photoelectric effect 18 March 9 June Resolved an unsolved puzzle by suggesting that energy is exchanged only in discrete amounts (quanta).[214] This idea was pivotal to the early development of quantum theory.[215]
"On the Motion of Small Particles Suspended in a Stationary Liquid, as Required by the Molecular Kinetic Theory of Heat"[216] Brownian motion 11 May 18 July Explained empirical evidence for the atomic theory, supporting the application of statistical physics.
"On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies"[217] Special relativity 30 June 26 September Reconciled Maxwell's equations for electricity and magnetism with the laws of mechanics by introducing changes to mechanics, resulting from analysis based on empirical evidence that the speed of light is independent of the motion of the observer.[218] Discredited the concept of a "luminiferous ether".[219]
"Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content?"[220] Matter–energy equivalence 27 September 21 November Equivalence of matter and energy, E = mc2 (and by implication, the ability of gravity to "bend" light), the existence of "rest energy", and the basis of nuclear energy.

Statistical mechanics

Thermodynamic fluctuations and statistical physics

Einstein's first paper[79][221] submitted in 1900 to Annalen der Physik was on capillary attraction. It was published in 1901 with the title "Folgerungen aus den Capillaritätserscheinungen", which translates as "Conclusions from the capillarity phenomena". Two papers he published in 1902–1903 (thermodynamics) attempted to interpret atomic phenomena from a statistical point of view. These papers were the foundation for the 1905 paper on Brownian motion, which showed that Brownian movement can be construed as firm evidence that molecules exist. His research in 1903 and 1904 was mainly concerned with the effect of finite atomic size on diffusion phenomena.[221]

Theory of critical opalescence

Einstein returned to the problem of thermodynamic fluctuations, giving a treatment of the density variations in a fluid at its critical point. Ordinarily the density fluctuations are controlled by the second derivative of the free energy with respect to the density. At the critical point, this derivative is zero, leading to large fluctuations. The effect of density fluctuations is that light of all wavelengths is scattered, making the fluid look milky white. Einstein relates this to Rayleigh scattering, which is what happens when the fluctuation size is much smaller than the wavelength, and which explains why the sky is blue.[222] Einstein quantitatively derived critical opalescence from a treatment of density fluctuations, and demonstrated how both the effect and Rayleigh scattering originate from the atomistic constitution of matter.

Special relativity

Einstein's "Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper"[217] ("On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies") was received on 30 June 1905 and published 26 September of that same year. It reconciled conflicts between Maxwell's equations (the laws of electricity and magnetism) and the laws of Newtonian mechanics by introducing changes to the laws of mechanics.[223] Observationally, the effects of these changes are most apparent at high speeds (where objects are moving at speeds close to the speed of light). The theory developed in this paper later became known as Einstein's special theory of relativity. There is evidence from Einstein's writings that he collaborated with his first wife, Mileva Marić, on this work. The decision to publish only under his name seems to have been mutual, but the exact reason is unknown.[40]

This paper predicted that, when measured in the frame of a relatively moving observer, a clock carried by a moving body would appear to slow down, and the body itself would contract in its direction of motion. This paper also argued that the idea of a luminiferous aether—one of the leading theoretical entities in physics at the time—was superfluous.[note 4]

In his paper on mass–energy equivalence, Einstein produced E = mc2 as a consequence of his special relativity equations.[224] Einstein's 1905 work on relativity remained controversial for many years, but was accepted by leading physicists, starting with Max Planck.[note 5][225]

Einstein originally framed special relativity in terms of kinematics (the study of moving bodies). In 1908, Hermann Minkowski reinterpreted special relativity in geometric terms as a theory of spacetime. Einstein adopted Minkowski's formalism in his 1915 general theory of relativity.[226]

General relativity

General relativity and the equivalence principle

 
Eddington's photograph of a solar eclipse

General relativity (GR) is a theory of gravitation that was developed by Einstein between 1907 and 1915. According to general relativity, the observed gravitational attraction between masses results from the warping of space and time by those masses. General relativity has developed into an essential tool in modern astrophysics. It provides the foundation for the current understanding of black holes, regions of space where gravitational attraction is so strong that not even light can escape.

As Einstein later said, the reason for the development of general relativity was that the preference of inertial motions within special relativity was unsatisfactory, while a theory which from the outset prefers no state of motion (even accelerated ones) should appear more satisfactory.[227] Consequently, in 1907 he published an article on acceleration under special relativity. In that article titled "On the Relativity Principle and the Conclusions Drawn from It", he argued that free fall is really inertial motion, and that for a free-falling observer the rules of special relativity must apply. This argument is called the equivalence principle. In the same article, Einstein also predicted the phenomena of gravitational time dilation, gravitational redshift and deflection of light.[228][229]

In 1911, Einstein published another article "On the Influence of Gravitation on the Propagation of Light" expanding on the 1907 article, in which he estimated the amount of deflection of light by massive bodies. Thus, the theoretical prediction of general relativity could for the first time be tested experimentally.[230]

Gravitational waves

In 1916, Einstein predicted gravitational waves,[231][232] ripples in the curvature of spacetime which propagate as waves, traveling outward from the source, transporting energy as gravitational radiation. The existence of gravitational waves is possible under general relativity due to its Lorentz invariance which brings the concept of a finite speed of propagation of the physical interactions of gravity with it. By contrast, gravitational waves cannot exist in the Newtonian theory of gravitation, which postulates that the physical interactions of gravity propagate at infinite speed.

The first, indirect, detection of gravitational waves came in the 1970s through observation of a pair of closely orbiting neutron stars, PSR B1913+16.[233] The explanation of the decay in their orbital period was that they were emitting gravitational waves.[233][234] Einstein's prediction was confirmed on 11 February 2016, when researchers at LIGO published the first observation of gravitational waves,[235] detected on Earth on 14 September 2015, nearly one hundred years after the prediction.[233][236][237][238][239]

Hole argument and Entwurf theory

While developing general relativity, Einstein became confused about the gauge invariance in the theory. He formulated an argument that led him to conclude that a general relativistic field theory is impossible. He gave up looking for fully generally covariant tensor equations and searched for equations that would be invariant under general linear transformations only.

In June 1913, the Entwurf ('draft') theory was the result of these investigations. As its name suggests, it was a sketch of a theory, less elegant and more difficult than general relativity, with the equations of motion supplemented by additional gauge fixing conditions. After more than two years of intensive work, Einstein realized that the hole argument was mistaken[240] and abandoned the theory in November 1915.

Physical cosmology

 
Einstein with Millikan and Georges Lemaître at the California Institute of Technology in January 1933

In 1917, Einstein applied the general theory of relativity to the structure of the universe as a whole.[241] He discovered that the general field equations predicted a universe that was dynamic, either contracting or expanding. As observational evidence for a dynamic universe was not known at the time, Einstein introduced a new term, the cosmological constant, to the field equations, in order to allow the theory to predict a static universe. The modified field equations predicted a static universe of closed curvature, in accordance with Einstein's understanding of Mach's principle in these years. This model became known as the Einstein World or Einstein's static universe.[242][243]

Following the discovery of the recession of the nebulae by Edwin Hubble in 1929, Einstein abandoned his static model of the universe, and proposed two dynamic models of the cosmos, The Friedmann-Einstein universe of 1931[244][245] and the Einstein–de Sitter universe of 1932.[246][247] In each of these models, Einstein discarded the cosmological constant, claiming that it was "in any case theoretically unsatisfactory".[244][245][248]

In many Einstein biographies, it is claimed that Einstein referred to the cosmological constant in later years as his "biggest blunder", based on a letter George Gamow claimed to have received from him. The astrophysicist Mario Livio has recently cast doubt on this claim.[249]

In late 2013, a team led by the Irish physicist Cormac O'Raifeartaigh discovered evidence that, shortly after learning of Hubble's observations of the recession of the nebulae, Einstein considered a steady-state model of the universe.[250][251] In a hitherto overlooked manuscript, apparently written in early 1931, Einstein explored a model of the expanding universe in which the density of matter remains constant due to a continuous creation of matter, a process he associated with the cosmological constant.[252][253] As he stated in the paper, "In what follows, I would like to draw attention to a solution to equation (1) that can account for Hubbel's [sic] facts, and in which the density is constant over time" ... "If one considers a physically bounded volume, particles of matter will be continually leaving it. For the density to remain constant, new particles of matter must be continually formed in the volume from space."

It thus appears that Einstein considered a steady-state model of the expanding universe many years before Hoyle, Bondi and Gold.[254][255] However, Einstein's steady-state model contained a fundamental flaw and he quickly abandoned the idea.[252][253][256]

Energy momentum pseudotensor

General relativity includes a dynamical spacetime, so it is difficult to see how to identify the conserved energy and momentum. Noether's theorem allows these quantities to be determined from a Lagrangian with translation invariance, but general covariance makes translation invariance into something of a gauge symmetry. The energy and momentum derived within general relativity by Noether's prescriptions do not make a real tensor for this reason.

Einstein argued that this is true for a fundamental reason: the gravitational field could be made to vanish by a choice of coordinates. He maintained that the non-covariant energy momentum pseudotensor was, in fact, the best description of the energy momentum distribution in a gravitational field. This approach has been echoed by Lev Landau and Evgeny Lifshitz, and others, and has become standard.

The use of non-covariant objects like pseudotensors was heavily criticized in 1917 by Erwin Schrödinger and others.

Wormholes

In 1935, Einstein collaborated with Nathan Rosen to produce a model of a wormhole, often called Einstein–Rosen bridges.[257][258] His motivation was to model elementary particles with charge as a solution of gravitational field equations, in line with the program outlined in the paper "Do Gravitational Fields play an Important Role in the Constitution of the Elementary Particles?". These solutions cut and pasted Schwarzschild black holes to make a bridge between two patches.[259]

If one end of a wormhole was positively charged, the other end would be negatively charged. These properties led Einstein to believe that pairs of particles and antiparticles could be described in this way.

Einstein–Cartan theory

 
Einstein at his office, University of Berlin, 1920

In order to incorporate spinning point particles into general relativity, the affine connection needed to be generalized to include an antisymmetric part, called the torsion. This modification was made by Einstein and Cartan in the 1920s.

Equations of motion

The theory of general relativity has a fundamental law—the Einstein field equations, which describe how space curves. The geodesic equation, which describes how particles move, may be derived from the Einstein field equations.

Since the equations of general relativity are non-linear, a lump of energy made out of pure gravitational fields, like a black hole, would move on a trajectory which is determined by the Einstein field equations themselves, not by a new law. So Einstein proposed that the path of a singular solution, like a black hole, would be determined to be a geodesic from general relativity itself.

This was established by Einstein, Infeld, and Hoffmann for pointlike objects without angular momentum, and by Roy Kerr for spinning objects.

Old quantum theory

Photons and energy quanta

 
The photoelectric effect. Incoming photons on the left strike a metal plate (bottom), and eject electrons, depicted as flying off to the right.

In a 1905 paper,[213] Einstein postulated that light itself consists of localized particles (quanta). Einstein's light quanta were nearly universally rejected by all physicists, including Max Planck and Niels Bohr. This idea only became universally accepted in 1919, with Robert Millikan's detailed experiments on the photoelectric effect, and with the measurement of Compton scattering.

Einstein concluded that each wave of frequency f is associated with a collection of photons with energy hf each, where h is Planck's constant. He does not say much more, because he is not sure how the particles are related to the wave. But he does suggest that this idea would explain certain experimental results, notably the photoelectric effect.[213]

Quantized atomic vibrations

In 1907, Einstein proposed a model of matter where each atom in a lattice structure is an independent harmonic oscillator. In the Einstein model, each atom oscillates independently—a series of equally spaced quantized states for each oscillator. Einstein was aware that getting the frequency of the actual oscillations would be difficult, but he nevertheless proposed this theory because it was a particularly clear demonstration that quantum mechanics could solve the specific heat problem in classical mechanics. Peter Debye refined this model.[260]

Adiabatic principle and action-angle variables

Throughout the 1910s, quantum mechanics expanded in scope to cover many different systems. After Ernest Rutherford discovered the nucleus and proposed that electrons orbit like planets, Niels Bohr was able to show that the same quantum mechanical postulates introduced by Planck and developed by Einstein would explain the discrete motion of electrons in atoms, and the periodic table of the elements.

Einstein contributed to these developments by linking them with the 1898 arguments Wilhelm Wien had made. Wien had shown that the hypothesis of adiabatic invariance of a thermal equilibrium state allows all the blackbody curves at different temperature to be derived from one another by a simple shifting process. Einstein noted in 1911 that the same adiabatic principle shows that the quantity which is quantized in any mechanical motion must be an adiabatic invariant. Arnold Sommerfeld identified this adiabatic invariant as the action variable of classical mechanics.

Bose–Einstein statistics

In 1924, Einstein received a description of a statistical model from Indian physicist Satyendra Nath Bose, based on a counting method that assumed that light could be understood as a gas of indistinguishable particles. Einstein noted that Bose's statistics applied to some atoms as well as to the proposed light particles, and submitted his translation of Bose's paper to the Zeitschrift für Physik. Einstein also published his own articles describing the model and its implications, among them the Bose–Einstein condensate phenomenon that some particulates should appear at very low temperatures.[261] It was not until 1995 that the first such condensate was produced experimentally by Eric Allin Cornell and Carl Wieman using ultra-cooling equipment built at the NISTJILA laboratory at the University of Colorado at Boulder.[262] Bose–Einstein statistics are now used to describe the behaviors of any assembly of bosons. Einstein's sketches for this project may be seen in the Einstein Archive in the library of the Leiden University.[211]

Wave–particle duality

 
Einstein during his visit to the United States

Although the patent office promoted Einstein to Technical Examiner Second Class in 1906, he had not given up on academia. In 1908, he became a Privatdozent at the University of Bern.[263] In "Über die Entwicklung unserer Anschauungen über das Wesen und die Konstitution der Strahlung" ("The Development of our Views on the Composition and Essence of Radiation"), on the quantization of light, and in an earlier 1909 paper, Einstein showed that Max Planck's energy quanta must have well-defined momenta and act in some respects as independent, point-like particles. This paper introduced the photon concept (although the name photon was introduced later by Gilbert N. Lewis in 1926) and inspired the notion of wave–particle duality in quantum mechanics. Einstein saw this wave–particle duality in radiation as concrete evidence for his conviction that physics needed a new, unified foundation.

Zero-point energy

In a series of works completed from 1911 to 1913, Planck reformulated his 1900 quantum theory and introduced the idea of zero-point energy in his "second quantum theory". Soon, this idea attracted the attention of Einstein and his assistant Otto Stern. Assuming the energy of rotating diatomic molecules contains zero-point energy, they then compared the theoretical specific heat of hydrogen gas with the experimental data. The numbers matched nicely. However, after publishing the findings, they promptly withdrew their support, because they no longer had confidence in the correctness of the idea of zero-point energy.[264]

Stimulated emission

In 1917, at the height of his work on relativity, Einstein published an article in Physikalische Zeitschrift that proposed the possibility of stimulated emission, the physical process that makes possible the maser and the laser.[265] This article showed that the statistics of absorption and emission of light would only be consistent with Planck's distribution law if the emission of light into a mode with n photons would be enhanced statistically compared to the emission of light into an empty mode. This paper was enormously influential in the later development of quantum mechanics, because it was the first paper to show that the statistics of atomic transitions had simple laws.

Matter waves

Einstein discovered Louis de Broglie's work and supported his ideas, which were received skeptically at first. In another major paper from this era, Einstein gave a wave equation for de Broglie waves, which Einstein suggested was the Hamilton–Jacobi equation of mechanics. This paper would inspire Schrödinger's work of 1926.

Quantum mechanics

Einstein's objections to quantum mechanics

 
Newspaper headline on 4 May 1935

Einstein played a major role in developing quantum theory, beginning with his 1905 paper on the photoelectric effect. However, he became displeased with modern quantum mechanics as it had evolved after 1925, despite its acceptance by other physicists. He was skeptical that the randomness of quantum mechanics was fundamental rather than the result of determinism, stating that God "is not playing at dice".[266] Until the end of his life, he continued to maintain that quantum mechanics was incomplete.[267]

Bohr versus Einstein

 
Einstein and Niels Bohr, 1925

The Bohr–Einstein debates were a series of public disputes about quantum mechanics between Einstein and Niels Bohr, who were two of its founders. Their debates are remembered because of their importance to the philosophy of science.[268][269][270] Their debates would influence later interpretations of quantum mechanics.

Einstein–Podolsky–Rosen paradox

In 1935, Einstein returned to quantum mechanics, in particular to the question of its completeness, in a collaboration with Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen that laid out what would become known as the EPR paradox.[270] In a thought experiment, they considered two particles, which had interacted such that their properties were strongly correlated. No matter how far the two particles were separated, a precise position measurement on one particle would result in equally precise knowledge of the position of the other particle; likewise, a precise momentum measurement of one particle would result in equally precise knowledge of the momentum of the other particle, without needing to disturb the other particle in any way.[271]

Given Einstein's concept of local realism, there were two possibilities: (1) either the other particle had these properties already determined, or (2) the process of measuring the first particle instantaneously affected the reality of the position and momentum of the second particle. Einstein rejected this second possibility (popularly called "spooky action at a distance").[271]

Einstein's belief in local realism led him to assert that, while the correctness of quantum mechanics was not in question, it must be incomplete. But as a physical principle, local realism was shown to be incorrect when the Aspect experiment of 1982 confirmed Bell's theorem, which J. S. Bell had delineated in 1964. The results of these and subsequent experiments demonstrate that quantum physics cannot be represented by any version of the picture of physics in which "particles are regarded as unconnected independent classical-like entities, each one being unable to communicate with the other after they have separated."[272]

Although Einstein was wrong about local realism, his clear prediction of the unusual properties of its opposite, entangled quantum states, has resulted in the EPR paper becoming among the most influential papers published in Physical Review. It is considered a centerpiece of the development of quantum information theory.[273]

Unified field theory

Following his research on general relativity, Einstein attempted to generalize his theory of gravitation to include electromagnetism as aspects of a single entity. In 1950, he described his "unified field theory" in a Scientific American article titled "On the Generalized Theory of Gravitation".[274] Although he was lauded for this work, his efforts were ultimately unsuccessful. Notably, Einstein's unification project did not accommodate the strong and weak nuclear forces, neither of which was well understood until many years after his death. Although mainstream physics long ignored Einstein's approaches to unification, Einstein's work has motivated modern quests for a theory of everything, in particular string theory, where geometrical fields emerge in a unified quantum-mechanical setting.

Other investigations

Einstein conducted other investigations that were unsuccessful and abandoned. These pertain to force, superconductivity, and other research.

Collaboration with other scientists

 
The 1927 Solvay Conference in Brussels, a gathering of the world's top physicists. Einstein is in the center.

In addition to longtime collaborators Leopold Infeld, Nathan Rosen, Peter Bergmann and others, Einstein also had some one-shot collaborations with various scientists.

Einstein–de Haas experiment

Einstein and De Haas demonstrated that magnetization is due to the motion of electrons, nowadays known to be the spin. In order to show this, they reversed the magnetization in an iron bar suspended on a torsion pendulum. They confirmed that this leads the bar to rotate, because the electron's angular momentum changes as the magnetization changes. This experiment needed to be sensitive because the angular momentum associated with electrons is small, but it definitively established that electron motion of some kind is responsible for magnetization.

Schrödinger gas model

Einstein suggested to Erwin Schrödinger that he might be able to reproduce the statistics of a Bose–Einstein gas by considering a box. Then to each possible quantum motion of a particle in a box associate an independent harmonic oscillator. Quantizing these oscillators, each level will have an integer occupation number, which will be the number of particles in it.[citation needed]

This formulation is a form of second quantization, but it predates modern quantum mechanics. Erwin Schrödinger applied this to derive the thermodynamic properties of a semiclassical ideal gas. Schrödinger urged Einstein to add his name as co-author, although Einstein declined the invitation.[275]

Einstein refrigerator

In 1926, Einstein and his former student Leó Szilárd co-invented (and in 1930, patented) the Einstein refrigerator. This absorption refrigerator was then revolutionary for having no moving parts and using only heat as an input.[276] On 11 November 1930, U.S. Patent 1,781,541 was awarded to Einstein and Leó Szilárd for the refrigerator. Their invention was not immediately put into commercial production, and the most promising of their patents were acquired by the Swedish company Electrolux.[note 6]

Non-scientific legacy

 
Einstein (second from left) at a picnic in Oslo in 1920. Heinrich Goldschmidt is at the left, Ole Colbjørnsen in the center and Jørgen Vogt sits behind Ilse Einstein.

While traveling, Einstein wrote daily to his wife Elsa and adopted stepdaughters Margot and Ilse. The letters were included in the papers bequeathed to the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Margot Einstein permitted the personal letters to be made available to the public, but requested that it not be done until twenty years after her death (she died in 1986[278]). Barbara Wolff, of the Hebrew University's Albert Einstein Archives, told the BBC that there are about 3,500 pages of private correspondence written between 1912 and 1955.[279]

Einstein's right of publicity was litigated in 2015 in a federal district court in California. Although the court initially held that the right had expired,[280] that ruling was immediately appealed, and the decision was later vacated in its entirety. The underlying claims between the parties in that lawsuit were ultimately settled. The right is enforceable, and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem is the exclusive representative of that right.[281] Corbis, successor to The Roger Richman Agency, licenses the use of his name and associated imagery, as agent for the university.[282]

Mount Einstein in New Zealand's Paparoa Range was named after him in 1970 by the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research.[283]

In popular culture

Einstein became one of the most famous scientific celebrities,[284][285] beginning with the confirmation of his theory of general relativity in 1919.[286] Despite the general public having little understanding of his work, he was widely recognized and received adulation and publicity. In the period before World War II, The New Yorker published a vignette in their "The Talk of the Town" feature saying that Einstein was so well known in America that he would be stopped on the street by people wanting him to explain "that theory". He finally figured out a way to handle the incessant inquiries. He told his inquirers, "Pardon me, sorry! Always I am mistaken for Professor Einstein."[287]

Einstein has been the subject of or inspiration for many novels, films, plays, and works of music.[288] He is a favorite model for depictions of absent-minded professors; his expressive face and distinctive hairstyle have been widely copied and exaggerated. Time magazine's Frederic Golden wrote that Einstein was "a cartoonist's dream come true".[289]

Many popular quotations are often misattributed to him.[290][291]

Awards and honors

Einstein received numerous awards and honors, and in 1922, he was awarded the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics "for his services to Theoretical Physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect". None of the nominations in 1921 met the criteria set by Alfred Nobel, so the 1921 prize was carried forward and awarded to Einstein in 1922.[12]

Publications

Scientific

  • Einstein, Albert (1901) [Completed 13 December 1900 and manuscript received 16 December 1900]. Written at Zurich, Switzerland. Paul Karl Ludwig Drude (ed.). "Folgerungen aus den Capillaritätserscheinungen" [Conclusions Drawn from the Phenomena of Capillarity]. Annalen der Physik. Vierte Folge (in German). Leipzig, Germany: Verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth (published 1 March 1901). 4 (all series: 309) (3): 513–523. Bibcode:1901AnP...309..513E. doi:10.1002/andp.19013090306 – via Wiley Online Library, Hoboken, New Jersey, USA (March 2006).
  • Einstein, Albert (1905a) [Completed 17 March 1905 and submitted 18 March 1905]. Written at Berne, Switzerland. Paul Karl Ludwig Drude (ed.). "Über einen die Erzeugung und Verwandlung des Lichtes betreffenden heuristischen Gesichtspunkt" [On a Heuristic Viewpoint Concerning the Production and Transformation of Light] (PDF). Annalen der Physik. Vierte Folge (in German). Leipzig, Germany: Verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth (published 9 June 1905). 17 (all series: 322) (6): 132–148. Bibcode:1905AnP...322..132E. doi:10.1002/andp.19053220607 – via Wiley Online Library, Hoboken, New Jersey, USA (10 March 2006).
  • Einstein, Albert (1905b) [Completed 30 April 1905]. Eine neue Bestimmung der Moleküldimensionen [A new determination of molecular dimensions] (PDF). Dissertationen Universität Zürich (PhD Thesis) (in German). Berne, Switzerland: Wyss Buchdruckerei (published 20 July 1905). doi:10.3929/ethz-a-000565688. hdl:20.500.11850/139872 – via ETH Bibliothek, Zürich (2008).
  • Einstein, Albert (1905c) [Manuscript received: 11 May 1905]. Written at Berne, Switzerland. Paul Karl Ludwig Drude (ed.). "Über die von der molekularkinetischen Theorie der Wärme geforderte Bewegung von in ruhenden Flüssigkeiten suspendierten Teilchen" [On the Motion – Required by the Molecular Kinetic Theory of Heat – of Small Particles Suspended in a Stationary Liquid]. Annalen der Physik. Vierte Folge (in German). Leipzig, Germany: Verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth (published 18 July 1905). 17 (all series: 322) (8): 549–560. Bibcode:1905AnP...322..549E. doi:10.1002/andp.19053220806. hdl:10915/2785 – via Wiley Online Library, Hoboken, New Jersey, USA (10 March 2006).
  • Einstein, Albert (1905d) [Manuscript received 30 June 1905]. Written at Berne, Switzerland. Paul Karl Ludwig Drude (ed.). "Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper" [On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies]. Annalen der Physik (Submitted manuscript). Vierte Folge (in German). Leipzig, Germany: Verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth (published 26 September 1905). 17 (all series: 322) (10): 891–921. Bibcode:1905AnP...322..891E. doi:10.1002/andp.19053221004. hdl:10915/2786 – via Wiley Online Library, Hoboken, New Jersey, USA (10 March 2006).
  • Einstein, Albert (1905e) [Manuscript received 27 September 1905]. Written at Berne, Switzerland. Paul Karl Ludwig Drude (ed.). "Ist die Trägheit eines Körpers von seinem Energieinhalt abhängig?" [Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content?]. Annalen der Physik. Vierte Folge (in German). Leipzig, Germany: Verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth (published 21 November 1905). 18 (all series: 323) (13): 639–641. Bibcode:1905AnP...323..639E. doi:10.1002/andp.19053231314 – via Wiley Online Library, Hoboken, New Jersey, USA (10 March 2006).
  • Einstein, Albert (1915) [Completed 25 November 1915]. "Die Feldgleichungen der Gravitation" [The Field Equations of Gravitation] (Online page images). Sitzungsberichte 1915 (in German). Berlin, Germany: Königlich Preussische Akademie der Wissenschaften (published 2 December 1915): 844–847 – via ECHO, Cultural Heritage Online, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science.
  • Einstein, Albert (1916) [Issued 29 June 1916]. "Näherungsweise Integration der Feldgleichungen der Gravitation" [Approximate integration of the field equations of gravitation] (Online page images). Sitzungsberichte 1916. Berlin, Germany: Königlich Preussische Akademie der Wissenschaften: 688–696. Bibcode:1916SPAW.......688E. Retrieved 24 January 2022 – via SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS).
  • Einstein, Albert (1917a). "Kosmologische Betrachtungen zur allgemeinen Relativitätstheorie" [Cosmological Considerations in the General Theory of Relativity] (Online page images). Sitzungsberichte 1917 (in German). Königlich Preussische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Berlin.
  • Einstein, Albert (1917b). "Zur Quantentheorie der Strahlung" [On the Quantum Mechanics of Radiation]. Physikalische Zeitschrift (in German). 18: 121–128. Bibcode:1917PhyZ...18..121E.
  • Einstein, Albert (31 January 1918). "Über Gravitationswellen" [About gravitational waves]. Sitzungsberichte der Königlich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften Berlin: 154–167. Bibcode:1918SPAW.......154E. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  • Einstein, Albert (1923) [First published 1923, in English 1967]. Written at Gothenburg. Grundgedanken und Probleme der Relativitätstheorie [Fundamental Ideas and Problems of the Theory of Relativity] (Speech). Lecture delivered to the Nordic Assembly of Naturalists at Gothenburg, 11 July 1923. Nobel Lectures, Physics 1901–1921 (in German and English). Stockholm: Nobelprice.org (published 3 February 2015) – via Nobel Media AB 2014.
  • Einstein, Albert (1924) [Published 10 July 1924]. [Quantum theory of monatomic ideal gases]. Sitzungsberichte der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Physikalisch-Mathematische Klasse (in German): 261–267. Archived from the original (Online page images) on 14 October 2016. Retrieved 26 February 2015 – via ECHO, Cultural Heritage Online, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science. First of a series of papers on this topic.
  • Einstein, Albert (12 March 1926) [Cover Date 1 March 1926]. Written at Berlin. "Die Ursache der Mäanderbildung der Flußläufe und des sogenannten Baerschen Gesetzes" [On Baer's law and meanders in the courses of rivers]. Die Naturwissenschaften (in German). Heidelberg, Germany. 14 (11): 223–224. Bibcode:1926NW.....14..223E. doi:10.1007/BF01510300. ISSN 1432-1904. S2CID 39899416.
  • Einstein, Albert (1926b). Written at Berne, Switzerland. Fürth, R. (ed.). Investigations on the Theory of the Brownian Movement (PDF). Translated by Cowper, A. D. US: Dover Publications (published 1956). ISBN 978-1-60796-285-4. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  • Einstein, Albert (1931). "Zum kosmologischen Problem der allgemeinen Relativitätstheorie" [On the cosmological problem of the general theory of relativity]. Sonderasugabe aus den Sitzungsb. König. Preuss. Akad.: 235–237.
  • Einstein, A.; de Sitter, W. (1932). "On the relation between the expansion and the mean density of the universe". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 18 (3): 213–214. Bibcode:1932PNAS...18..213E. doi:10.1073/pnas.18.3.213. PMC 1076193. PMID 16587663.
  • Einstein, Albert; Rosen, Nathan (1935). "The Particle Problem in the General Theory of Relativity". Physical Review. 48 (1): 73. Bibcode:1935PhRv...48...73E. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.48.73.
  • Einstein, Albert; Podolsky, Boris; Rosen, Nathan (15 May 1935) [Received 25 March 1935]. "Can Quantum-Mechanical Description of Physical Reality Be Considered Complete?". Physical Review (Submitted manuscript). 47 (10): 777–780. Bibcode:1935PhRv...47..777E. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.47.777 – via APS Journals.
  • Einstein, Albert (1950). "On the Generalized Theory of Gravitation". Scientific American. CLXXXII (4): 13–17. Bibcode:1950SciAm.182d..13E. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0450-13.
  • Einstein, Albert (1954). Ideas and Opinions. New York: Crown Publishers. ISBN 978-0-517-00393-0.
    —————— (1995) [1954]. Ideas and Opinions. New York: Three Rivers Press. ISBN 978-0-517-88440-9.
  • Einstein, Albert (1969). Albert Einstein, Hedwig und Max Born: Briefwechsel 1916–1955 (in German). Commented by Max Born; Preface by Bertrand Russell; Foreword by Werner Heisenberg. Munich: Nymphenburger Verlagshandlung. ISBN 978-3-88682-005-4. A reprint of this book was published by Edition Erbrich in 1982, ISBN 978-3-88682-005-4.
  • Stachel, John; Martin J. Klein; A. J. Kox; Michel Janssen; R. Schulmann; Diana Komos Buchwald; et al., eds. (21 July 2008) [Published between 1987 and 2006]. The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein. Vol. 1–10. Princeton University Press. Further information about the volumes published so far can be found on the webpages of the Einstein Papers Project[292] and on the Princeton University Press Einstein Page.[293]

Others

  • Einstein, Albert; et al. (4 December 1948). . The New York Times. Melville, New York. ISBN 978-0-7354-0359-8. Archived from the original on 17 December 2007. Retrieved 25 May 2006.
  • Einstein, Albert (May 1949). Sweezy, Paul; Huberman, Leo (eds.). "Why Socialism?". Monthly Review. 1 (1): 9–15. doi:10.14452/MR-001-01-1949-05_3.
    —————— (May 2009) [May 1949]. "Why Socialism? (Reprise)". Monthly Review. New York: Monthly Review Foundation. from the original on 11 January 2006. Retrieved 16 January 2006 – via MonthlyReview.org.
  • Einstein, Albert (1979). Autobiographical Notes. Paul Arthur Schilpp (Centennial ed.). Chicago: Open Court. ISBN 978-0-87548-352-8.. The chasing a light beam thought experiment is described on pages 48–51.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c In the German Empire, citizens were exclusively subjects of one of the 27 Bundesstaaten.
  2. ^ Einstein's scores on his Matura certificate: German 5; French 3; Italian 5; History 6; Geography 4; Algebra 6; Geometry 6; Descriptive Geometry 6; Physics 6; Chemistry 5; Natural History 5; Art Drawing 4; Technical Drawing 4.
    Scale: 6 = very good, 5 = good, 4 = sufficient, 3 = insufficient, 2 = poor, 1 = very poor.
  3. ^ "Their leaders in Germany have not driven out her cut-throats and her blackguards. She has chosen the cream of her culture and has suppressed it. She has even turned upon her most glorious citizen, Albert Einstein, who is the supreme example of the selfless intellectual...The man, who, beyond all others, approximates a citizen of the world, is without a home. How proud we must be to offer him temporary shelter."
  4. ^ In his paper, Einstein wrote: "The introduction of a 'luminiferous æther' will be proved to be superfluous in so far, as according to the conceptions which will be developed, we shall introduce neither a 'space absolutely at rest' endowed with special properties, nor shall we associate a velocity-vector with a point in which electro-magnetic processes take place."
  5. ^ For a discussion of the reception of relativity theory around the world, and the different controversies it encountered, see the articles in Glick (1987).
  6. ^ In September 2008 it was reported that Malcolm McCulloch of Oxford University was heading a three-year project to develop more robust appliances that could be used in locales lacking electricity, and that his team had completed a prototype Einstein refrigerator. He was quoted as saying that improving the design and changing the types of gases used might allow the design's efficiency to be quadrupled.[277]

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Works cited

  • Calaprice, Alice (2000). The Expanded Quotable Einstein. Princeton University Press.
  • Calaprice, Alice (2005). . Princeton University Press. Archived from the original on 22 June 2009.
  • Calaprice, Alice; Lipscombe, Trevor (2005). Albert Einstein: A Biography. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-33080-3.
  • Calaprice, Alice (2010). The Ultimate Quotable Einstein. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-3596-6.
albert, einstein, einstein, redirects, here, other, uses, einstein, disambiguation, disambiguation, eyen, styne, german, ˈalbɛʁt, ˈʔaɪnʃtaɪn, listen, march, 1879, april, 1955, german, born, theoretical, physicist, widely, acknowledged, greatest, most, influent. Einstein redirects here For other uses see Einstein disambiguation and Albert Einstein disambiguation Albert Einstein ˈ aɪ n s t aɪ n EYEN styne 6 German ˈalbɛʁt ˈʔaɪnʃtaɪn listen 14 March 1879 18 April 1955 was a German born theoretical physicist 7 widely acknowledged to be one of the greatest and most influential physicists of all time Einstein is best known for developing the theory of relativity but he also made important contributions to the development of the theory of quantum mechanics Relativity and quantum mechanics are the two pillars of modern physics 3 8 His mass energy equivalence formula E mc2 which arises from relativity theory has been dubbed the world s most famous equation 9 His work is also known for its influence on the philosophy of science 10 11 He received the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics for his services to theoretical physics and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect 12 a pivotal step in the development of quantum theory His intellectual achievements and originality resulted in Einstein becoming synonymous with genius 13 Einsteinium one of the synthetic elements in the periodic table was named in his honor 14 Albert EinsteinEinstein in 1921 by Ferdinand SchmutzerBorn 1879 03 14 14 March 1879Ulm German EmpireDied18 April 1955 1955 04 18 aged 76 Princeton New Jersey United StatesCitizenshipFull list Kingdom of Wurttemberg part of the German Empire 1879 1896 note 1 Stateless 1896 1901 Switzerland 1901 1955 Austria part of the Austro Hungarian Empire 1911 1912 Kingdom of Prussia part of the German Empire 1914 1918 note 1 Free State of Prussia Weimar Republic 1918 1933 United States 1940 1955 EducationFederal polytechnic school in Zurich Federal teaching diploma 1900 University of Zurich PhD 1905 Known forGeneral relativity Special relativity Photoelectric effect E mc2 Mass energy equivalence E hf Planck Einstein relation Theory of Brownian motion Einstein field equations Bose Einstein statistics Bose Einstein condensate Gravitational wave Cosmological constant Unified field theory EPR paradox Ensemble interpretation List of other conceptsSpousesMileva Maric m 1903 div 1919 wbr Elsa Lowenthal m 1919 died 1 2 1936 wbr ChildrenLieserl Hans Albert Eduard Tete AwardsBarnard Medal 1920 Nobel Prize in Physics 1921 Matteucci Medal 1921 ForMemRS 1921 3 Copley Medal 1925 3 Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society 1926 4 Max Planck Medal 1929 Member of the National Academy of Sciences 1942 5 Time Person of the Century 1999 Scientific careerFieldsPhysics philosophyInstitutionsSwiss Patent Office Bern 1902 1909 University of Bern 1908 1909 University of Zurich 1909 1911 Charles University in Prague 1911 1912 ETH Zurich 1912 1914 Prussian Academy of Sciences 1914 1933 Humboldt University of Berlin 1914 1933 Kaiser Wilhelm Institute director 1917 1933 German Physical Society president 1916 1918 Leiden University visits 1920 Institute for Advanced Study Princeton University 1933 1955 California Institute of Technology visits 1931 1933 University of Oxford visits 1931 1933 Brandeis University director 1946 1947 ThesisEine neue Bestimmung der Molekuldimensionen A New Determination of Molecular Dimensions 1905 Doctoral advisorAlfred KleinerOther academic advisorsHeinrich Friedrich WeberInfluencesHendrik Lorentz Hermann Minkowski citation needed InfluencedVirtually all modern physicistsSignatureIn 1905 a year sometimes described as his annus mirabilis miracle year Einstein published four groundbreaking papers 15 These outlined the theory of the photoelectric effect explained Brownian motion introduced special relativity and demonstrated mass energy equivalence Einstein thought that the laws of classical mechanics could no longer be reconciled with those of the electromagnetic field which led him to develop his special theory of relativity He then extended the theory to gravitational fields he published a paper on general relativity in 1916 introducing his theory of gravitation In 1917 he applied the general theory of relativity to model the structure of the universe 16 17 He continued to deal with problems of statistical mechanics and quantum theory which led to his explanations of particle theory and the motion of molecules He also investigated the thermal properties of light and the quantum theory of radiation which laid the foundation of the photon theory of light However for much of the later part of his career he worked on two ultimately unsuccessful endeavors First despite his great contributions to quantum mechanics he opposed what it evolved into objecting that God does not play dice 18 Second he attempted to devise a unified field theory by generalizing his geometric theory of gravitation to include electromagnetism As a result he became increasingly isolated from the mainstream of modern physics Einstein was born in the German Empire but moved to Switzerland in 1895 forsaking his German citizenship as a subject of the Kingdom of Wurttemberg note 1 the following year In 1897 at the age of 17 he enrolled in the mathematics and physics teaching diploma program at the Swiss Federal polytechnic school in Zurich graduating in 1900 In 1901 he acquired Swiss citizenship which he kept for the rest of his life and in 1903 he secured a permanent position at the Swiss Patent Office in Bern In 1905 he was awarded a PhD by the University of Zurich In 1914 Einstein moved to Berlin in order to join the Prussian Academy of Sciences and the Humboldt University of Berlin In 1917 Einstein became director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics he also became a German citizen again this time Prussian In 1933 while Einstein was visiting the United States Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany Einstein as a Jew objected to the policies of the newly elected Nazi government 19 he settled in the United States and became an American citizen in 1940 20 On the eve of World War II he endorsed a letter to President Franklin D Roosevelt alerting him to the potential German nuclear weapons program and recommending that the US begin similar research Einstein supported the Allies but generally denounced the idea of nuclear weapons 21 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Marriages and children 1 3 Patent office 1 4 First scientific papers 1 5 Academic career 1 6 1921 1922 Travels abroad 1 7 1925 Visit to South America 1 8 1930 1931 Travel to the US 1 9 1933 Emigration to the US 1 9 1 Refugee status 1 9 2 Resident scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study 1 9 3 World War II and the Manhattan Project 1 9 4 US citizenship 1 10 Personal views 1 10 1 Political views 1 10 1 1 Relationship with Zionism 1 10 2 Religious and philosophical views 1 10 3 Love of music 1 11 Death 2 Scientific career 2 1 1905 Annus Mirabilis papers 2 2 Statistical mechanics 2 2 1 Thermodynamic fluctuations and statistical physics 2 2 2 Theory of critical opalescence 2 3 Special relativity 2 4 General relativity 2 4 1 General relativity and the equivalence principle 2 4 2 Gravitational waves 2 4 3 Hole argument and Entwurf theory 2 4 4 Physical cosmology 2 4 5 Energy momentum pseudotensor 2 4 6 Wormholes 2 4 7 Einstein Cartan theory 2 4 8 Equations of motion 2 5 Old quantum theory 2 5 1 Photons and energy quanta 2 5 2 Quantized atomic vibrations 2 5 3 Adiabatic principle and action angle variables 2 5 4 Bose Einstein statistics 2 5 5 Wave particle duality 2 5 6 Zero point energy 2 5 7 Stimulated emission 2 5 8 Matter waves 2 6 Quantum mechanics 2 6 1 Einstein s objections to quantum mechanics 2 6 2 Bohr versus Einstein 2 6 3 Einstein Podolsky Rosen paradox 2 7 Unified field theory 2 8 Other investigations 2 9 Collaboration with other scientists 2 9 1 Einstein de Haas experiment 2 9 2 Schrodinger gas model 2 9 3 Einstein refrigerator 3 Non scientific legacy 4 In popular culture 5 Awards and honors 6 Publications 6 1 Scientific 6 2 Others 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Works cited 10 Further reading 11 External linksLife and careerEarly life and education See also Einstein family Einstein at the age of three in 1882 Albert Einstein in 1893 age 14 Albert Einstein was born in Ulm 7 in the Kingdom of Wurttemberg in the German Empire on 14 March 1879 into a family of secular Ashkenazi Jews 22 23 His parents were Hermann Einstein a salesman and engineer and Pauline Koch In 1880 the family moved to Munich where Einstein s father and his uncle Jakob founded Elektrotechnische Fabrik J Einstein amp Cie a company that manufactured electrical equipment based on direct current 7 Albert attended a Catholic elementary school in Munich from the age of five for three years At the age of eight he was transferred to the Luitpold Gymnasium now known as the Albert Einstein Gymnasium where he received advanced primary and secondary school education until he left the German Empire seven years later 24 In 1894 Hermann and Jakob s company lost a bid to supply the city of Munich with electrical lighting because they lacked the capital to convert their equipment from the direct current DC standard to the more efficient alternating current AC standard 25 The loss forced the sale of the Munich factory In search of business the Einstein family moved to Italy first to Milan and a few months later to Pavia In Pavia the Einsteins settled in Palazzo Cornazzani a medieval building where at different times Ugo Foscolo Contardo Ferrini and Ada Negri lived 26 When the family moved to Pavia Einstein then 15 stayed in Munich to finish his studies at the Luitpold Gymnasium His father intended for him to pursue electrical engineering but Einstein clashed with the authorities and resented the school s regimen and teaching method He later wrote that the spirit of learning and creative thought was lost in strict rote learning At the end of December 1894 he traveled to Italy to join his family in Pavia convincing the school to let him go by using a doctor s note 27 During his time in Italy he wrote a short essay with the title On the Investigation of the State of the Ether in a Magnetic Field 28 29 Einstein excelled at math and physics from a young age reaching a mathematical level years ahead of his peers The 12 year old Einstein taught himself algebra and Euclidean geometry over a single summer 30 Einstein also independently discovered his own original proof of the Pythagorean theorem aged 12 31 A family tutor Max Talmud says that after he had given the 12 year old Einstein a geometry textbook after a short time Einstein had worked through the whole book He thereupon devoted himself to higher mathematics Soon the flight of his mathematical genius was so high I could not follow 32 His passion for geometry and algebra led the 12 year old to become convinced that nature could be understood as a mathematical structure 32 Einstein started teaching himself calculus at 12 and as a 14 year old he says he had mastered integral and differential calculus 33 At the age of 13 when he had become more seriously interested in philosophy and music 34 Einstein was introduced to Kant s Critique of Pure Reason Kant became his favorite philosopher his tutor stating At the time he was still a child only thirteen years old yet Kant s works incomprehensible to ordinary mortals seemed to be clear to him 32 Einstein s Matura certificate 1896 note 2 In 1895 at the age of 16 Einstein took the entrance examinations for the Swiss Federal polytechnic school in Zurich later the Eidgenossische Technische Hochschule ETH He failed to reach the required standard in the general part of the examination 35 but obtained exceptional grades in physics and mathematics 36 On the advice of the principal of the polytechnic school he attended the Argovian cantonal school gymnasium in Aarau Switzerland in 1895 and 1896 to complete his secondary schooling While lodging with the family of Jost Winteler he fell in love with Winteler s daughter Marie Albert s sister Maja later married Winteler s son Paul 37 In January 1896 with his father s approval Einstein renounced his citizenship in the German Kingdom of Wurttemberg to avoid military service 38 In September 1896 he passed the Swiss Matura with mostly good grades including a top grade of 6 in physics and mathematical subjects on a scale of 1 6 39 At 17 he enrolled in the four year mathematics and physics teaching diploma program at the Federal polytechnic school Marie Winteler who was a year older moved to Olsberg Switzerland for a teaching post 37 Einstein s future wife a 20 year old Serbian named Mileva Maric also enrolled at the polytechnic school that year She was the only woman among the six students in the mathematics and physics section of the teaching diploma course Over the next few years Einstein s and Maric s friendship developed into a romance and they spent countless hours debating and reading books together on extra curricular physics in which they were both interested Einstein wrote in his letters to Maric that he preferred studying alongside her 40 In 1900 Einstein passed the exams in Maths and Physics and was awarded a Federal teaching diploma 41 There is eyewitness evidence and several letters over many years that indicate Maric might have collaborated with Einstein prior to his landmark 1905 papers 40 42 43 known as the Annus Mirabilis papers and that they developed some of the concepts together during their studies although some historians of physics who have studied the issue disagree that she made any substantive contributions 44 45 46 47 Marriages and children Albert Einstein and Mileva Maric Einstein 1912 Early correspondence between Einstein and Maric was discovered and published in 1987 which revealed that the couple had a daughter named Lieserl born in early 1902 in Novi Sad where Maric was staying with her parents Maric returned to Switzerland without the child whose real name and fate are unknown The contents of Einstein s letter in September 1903 suggest that the girl was either given up for adoption or died of scarlet fever in infancy 48 49 Einstein and Maric married in January 1903 In May 1904 their son Hans Albert Einstein was born in Bern Switzerland Their son Eduard was born in Zurich in July 1910 The couple moved to Berlin in April 1914 but Maric returned to Zurich with their sons after learning that despite their close relationship before 40 Einstein s chief romantic attraction was now his cousin Elsa Lowenthal 50 she was his first cousin maternally and second cousin paternally 51 Einstein and Maric divorced on 14 February 1919 having lived apart for five years 52 53 As part of the divorce settlement Einstein agreed to give Maric any future in the event 1921 Nobel Prize money 54 In letters revealed in 2015 Einstein wrote to his early love Marie Winteler about his marriage and his strong feelings for her He wrote in 1910 while his wife was pregnant with their second child I think of you in heartfelt love every spare minute and am so unhappy as only a man can be He spoke about a misguided love and a missed life regarding his love for Marie 55 Einstein married Lowenthal in 1919 56 57 after having had a relationship with her since 1912 51 58 They emigrated to the United States in 1933 Elsa was diagnosed with heart and kidney problems in 1935 and died in December 1936 59 In 1923 Einstein fell in love with a secretary named Betty Neumann the niece of a close friend Hans Muhsam 60 61 62 63 In a volume of letters released by Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 2006 64 Einstein described about six women including Margarete Lebach a blonde Austrian Estella Katzenellenbogen the rich owner of a florist business Toni Mendel a wealthy Jewish widow and Ethel Michanowski a Berlin socialite with whom he spent time and from whom he received gifts while being married to Elsa 65 66 Later after the death of his second wife Elsa Einstein was briefly in a relationship with Margarita Konenkova Konenkova was a Russian spy who was married to the Russian sculptor Sergei Konenkov who created the bronze bust of Einstein at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton 67 68 failed verification Einstein s son Eduard had a breakdown at about age 20 and was diagnosed with schizophrenia 69 His mother cared for him and he was also committed to asylums for several periods finally after her death being committed permanently to Burgholzli the Psychiatric University Hospital in Zurich 70 Patent office Einstein in 1904 age 25 After graduating in 1900 Einstein spent almost two years searching for a teaching post He acquired Swiss citizenship in February 1901 71 but was not conscripted for medical reasons With the help of Marcel Grossmann s father he secured a job in Bern at the Swiss Patent Office 72 73 as an assistant examiner level III 74 75 Einstein evaluated patent applications for a variety of devices including a gravel sorter and an electromechanical typewriter 75 In 1903 his position at the Swiss Patent Office became permanent although he was passed over for promotion until he fully mastered machine technology 76 Much of his work at the patent office related to questions about transmission of electric signals and electrical mechanical synchronization of time two technical problems that show up conspicuously in the thought experiments that eventually led Einstein to his radical conclusions about the nature of light and the fundamental connection between space and time 15 With a few friends he had met in Bern Einstein started a small discussion group in 1902 self mockingly named The Olympia Academy which met regularly to discuss science and philosophy Sometimes they were joined by Mileva who attentively listened but did not participate 77 Their readings included the works of Henri Poincare Ernst Mach and David Hume which influenced his scientific and philosophical outlook 78 First scientific papers Cover image of the PhD dissertation of Albert Einstein defended in 1905 In 1900 Einstein s paper Folgerungen aus den Capillaritatserscheinungen Conclusions from the Capillarity Phenomena was published in the journal Annalen der Physik 79 80 On 30 April 1905 Einstein completed his dissertation A New Determination of Molecular Dimensions 81 with Alfred Kleiner serving as pro forma advisor 81 82 His thesis was accepted in July 1905 and Einstein was awarded a PhD on 15 January 1906 81 82 83 Also in 1905 which has been called Einstein s annus mirabilis amazing year he published four groundbreaking papers on the photoelectric effect Brownian motion special relativity and the equivalence of mass and energy which were to bring him to the notice of the academic world at the age of 26 84 Academic career By 1908 he was recognized as a leading scientist and was appointed lecturer at the University of Bern The following year after he gave a lecture on electrodynamics and the relativity principle at the University of Zurich Alfred Kleiner recommended him to the faculty for a newly created professorship in theoretical physics Einstein was appointed associate professor in 1909 85 Einstein became a full professor at the German Charles Ferdinand University in Prague in April 1911 accepting Austrian citizenship in the Austro Hungarian Empire to do so 86 87 During his Prague stay he wrote 11 scientific works five of them on radiation mathematics and on the quantum theory of solids Olympia Academy founders Conrad Habicht Maurice Solovine and Albert Einstein In July 1912 he returned to his alma mater in Zurich From 1912 until 1914 he was a professor of theoretical physics at the ETH Zurich where he taught analytical mechanics and thermodynamics He also studied continuum mechanics the molecular theory of heat and the problem of gravitation on which he worked with mathematician and friend Marcel Grossmann 88 When the Manifesto of the Ninety Three was published in October 1914 a document signed by a host of prominent German intellectuals that justified Germany s militarism and position during the First World War Einstein was one of the few German intellectuals to rebut its contents and sign the pacifistic Manifesto to the Europeans 89 The New York Times reported confirmation of the Einstein theory specifically the bending of light by gravitation based on 29 May 1919 eclipse observations in Principe Africa and Sobral Brazil after the findings were presented on 6 November 1919 to a joint meeting in London of the Royal Society and the Royal Astronomical Society 90 In the spring of 1913 Einstein was enticed to move to Berlin with an offer that included membership in the Prussian Academy of Sciences and a linked University of Berlin professorship enabling him to concentrate exclusively on research 58 On 3 July 1913 he became a member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences in Berlin Max Planck and Walther Nernst visited him the next week in Zurich to persuade him to join the academy additionally offering him the post of director at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics which was soon to be established 91 Membership in the academy included paid salary and professorship without teaching duties at Humboldt University of Berlin He was officially elected to the academy on 24 July and he moved to Berlin the following year His decision to move to Berlin was also influenced by the prospect of living near his cousin Elsa with whom he had started a romantic affair Einstein assumed his position with the academy and Berlin University 92 after moving into his Dahlem apartment on 1 April 1914 58 93 As World War I broke out that year the plan for Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics was delayed The institute was established on 1 October 1917 with Einstein as its director 94 In 1916 Einstein was elected president of the German Physical Society 1916 1918 95 In 1911 Einstein used his 1907 Equivalence principle to calculate the deflection of light from another star by the Sun s gravity In 1913 Einstein improved upon those calculations by using Riemannian space time to represent the gravity field By the fall of 1915 Einstein had successfully completed his general theory of relativity which he used to calculate that deflection and the perihelion precession of Mercury 58 96 In 1919 that deflection prediction was confirmed by Sir Arthur Eddington during the solar eclipse of 29 May 1919 Those observations were published in the international media making Einstein world famous On 7 November 1919 the leading British newspaper The Times printed a banner headline that read Revolution in Science New Theory of the Universe Newtonian Ideas Overthrown 97 In 1920 he became a Foreign Member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences 98 In 1922 he was awarded the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics for his services to Theoretical Physics and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect 12 While the general theory of relativity was still considered somewhat controversial the citation also does not treat even the cited photoelectric work as an explanation but merely as a discovery of the law as the idea of photons was considered outlandish and did not receive universal acceptance until the 1924 derivation of the Planck spectrum by S N Bose Einstein was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society ForMemRS in 1921 3 He also received the Copley Medal from the Royal Society in 1925 3 Einstein resigned from the Prussian Academy in March 1933 Einstein s scientific accomplishments while in Berlin included finishing the general theory of relativity proving the gyromagnetic effect contributing to the quantum theory of radiation and Bose Einstein statistics 58 1921 1922 Travels abroad Einstein with his second wife Elsa in 1921 Einstein s official portrait after receiving the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics Einstein visited New York City for the first time on 2 April 1921 where he received an official welcome by Mayor John Francis Hylan followed by three weeks of lectures and receptions 99 He went on to deliver several lectures at Columbia University and Princeton University and in Washington he accompanied representatives of the National Academy of Sciences on a visit to the White House On his return to Europe he was the guest of the British statesman and philosopher Viscount Haldane in London where he met several renowned scientific intellectual and political figures and delivered a lecture at King s College London 100 101 He also published an essay My First Impression of the U S A in July 1921 in which he tried briefly to describe some characteristics of Americans much as had Alexis de Tocqueville who published his own impressions in Democracy in America 1835 102 For some of his observations Einstein was clearly surprised What strikes a visitor is the joyous positive attitude to life The American is friendly self confident optimistic and without envy 103 In 1922 his travels took him to Asia and later to Palestine as part of a six month excursion and speaking tour as he visited Singapore Ceylon and Japan where he gave a series of lectures to thousands of Japanese After his first public lecture he met the emperor and empress at the Imperial Palace where thousands came to watch In a letter to his sons he described his impression of the Japanese as being modest intelligent considerate and having a true feel for art 104 In his own travel diaries from his 1922 23 visit to Asia he expresses some views on the Chinese Japanese and Indian people which have been described as xenophobic and racist judgments when they were rediscovered in 2018 105 106 Because of Einstein s travels to the Far East he was unable to personally accept the Nobel Prize for Physics at the Stockholm award ceremony in December 1922 In his place the banquet speech was made by a German diplomat who praised Einstein not only as a scientist but also as an international peacemaker and activist 107 On his return voyage he visited Palestine for 12 days his only visit to that region He was greeted as if he were a head of state rather than a physicist which included a cannon salute upon arriving at the home of the British high commissioner Sir Herbert Samuel During one reception the building was stormed by people who wanted to see and hear him In Einstein s talk to the audience he expressed happiness that the Jewish people were beginning to be recognized as a force in the world 108 Einstein visited Spain for two weeks in 1923 where he briefly met Santiago Ramon y Cajal and also received a diploma from King Alfonso XIII naming him a member of the Spanish Academy of Sciences 109 Albert Einstein at a session of the International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation League of Nations of which he was a member from 1922 to 1932 From 1922 to 1932 Einstein was a member of the International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation of the League of Nations in Geneva with a few months of interruption in 1923 1924 110 a body created to promote international exchange between scientists researchers teachers artists and intellectuals 111 Originally slated to serve as the Swiss delegate Secretary General Eric Drummond was persuaded by Catholic activists Oskar Halecki and Giuseppe Motta to instead have him become the German delegate thus allowing Gonzague de Reynold to take the Swiss spot from which he promoted traditionalist Catholic values 112 Einstein s former physics professor Hendrik Lorentz and the Polish chemist Marie Curie were also members of the committee 113 1925 Visit to South America In the months of March and April 1925 Einstein visited South America where he spent about a month in Argentina a week in Uruguay and a week in Rio de Janeiro Brazil 114 Einstein s visit was initiated by Jorge Duclout 1856 1927 and Mauricio Nirenstein 1877 1935 115 with the support of several Argentine scholars including Julio Rey Pastor Jakob Laub and Leopoldo Lugones The visit by Einstein and his wife was financed primarily by the Council of the University of Buenos Aires and the Asociacion Hebraica Argentina Argentine Hebraic Association with a smaller contribution from the Argentine Germanic Cultural Institution 116 1930 1931 Travel to the US Albert Einstein and a Salvation Army band before a performance at the Rose Bowl Parade in California 1926 In December 1930 Einstein visited America for the second time originally intended as a two month working visit as a research fellow at the California Institute of Technology After the national attention he received during his first trip to the US he and his arrangers aimed to protect his privacy Although swamped with telegrams and invitations to receive awards or speak publicly he declined them all 117 After arriving in New York City Einstein was taken to various places and events including Chinatown a lunch with the editors of The New York Times and a performance of Carmen at the Metropolitan Opera where he was cheered by the audience on his arrival During the days following he was given the keys to the city by Mayor Jimmy Walker and met the president of Columbia University who described Einstein as the ruling monarch of the mind 118 Harry Emerson Fosdick pastor at New York s Riverside Church gave Einstein a tour of the church and showed him a full size statue that the church made of Einstein standing at the entrance 118 Also during his stay in New York he joined a crowd of 15 000 people at Madison Square Garden during a Hanukkah celebration 118 Albert Einstein left and Charlie Chaplin at the Hollywood premiere of City Lights January 1931 Einstein next traveled to California where he met Caltech president and Nobel laureate Robert A Millikan His friendship with Millikan was awkward as Millikan had a penchant for patriotic militarism where Einstein was a pronounced pacifist 119 During an address to Caltech s students Einstein noted that science was often inclined to do more harm than good 120 This aversion to war also led Einstein to befriend author Upton Sinclair and film star Charlie Chaplin both noted for their pacifism Carl Laemmle head of Universal Studios gave Einstein a tour of his studio and introduced him to Chaplin They had an instant rapport with Chaplin inviting Einstein and his wife Elsa to his home for dinner Chaplin said Einstein s outward persona calm and gentle seemed to conceal a highly emotional temperament from which came his extraordinary intellectual energy 121 Chaplin s film City Lights was to premiere a few days later in Hollywood and Chaplin invited Einstein and Elsa to join him as his special guests Walter Isaacson Einstein s biographer described this as one of the most memorable scenes in the new era of celebrity 120 Chaplin visited Einstein at his home on a later trip to Berlin and recalled his modest little flat and the piano at which he had begun writing his theory Chaplin speculated that it was possibly used as kindling wood by the Nazis 122 1933 Emigration to the US Cartoon of Einstein after shedding his pacifism wings Charles R Macauley c 1933 In February 1933 while on a visit to the United States Einstein knew he could not return to Germany with the rise to power of the Nazis under Germany s new chancellor Adolf Hitler 123 124 While at American universities in early 1933 he undertook his third two month visiting professorship at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena In February and March 1933 the Gestapo repeatedly raided his family s apartment in Berlin 125 He and his wife Elsa returned to Europe in March and during the trip they learned that the German Reichstag had passed the Enabling Act on 23 March transforming Hitler s government into a de facto legal dictatorship and that they would not be able to proceed to Berlin Later on they heard that their cottage had been raided by the Nazis and Einstein s personal sailboat confiscated Upon landing in Antwerp Belgium on 28 March Einstein immediately went to the German consulate and surrendered his passport formally renouncing his German citizenship 126 The Nazis later sold his boat and converted his cottage into a Hitler Youth camp 127 Refugee status Albert Einstein s landing card 26 May 1933 when he landed in Dover United Kingdom from Ostend Belgium to visit Oxford In April 1933 Einstein discovered that the new German government had passed laws barring Jews from holding any official positions including teaching at universities 126 Historian Gerald Holton describes how with virtually no audible protest being raised by their colleagues thousands of Jewish scientists were suddenly forced to give up their university positions and their names were removed from the rolls of institutions where they were employed 128 A month later Einstein s works were among those targeted by the German Student Union in the Nazi book burnings with Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels proclaiming Jewish intellectualism is dead 126 One German magazine included him in a list of enemies of the German regime with the phrase not yet hanged offering a 5 000 bounty on his head 126 129 In a subsequent letter to physicist and friend Max Born who had already emigrated from Germany to England Einstein wrote I must confess that the degree of their brutality and cowardice came as something of a surprise 126 After moving to the US he described the book burnings as a spontaneous emotional outburst by those who shun popular enlightenment and more than anything else in the world fear the influence of men of intellectual independence 130 Einstein was now without a permanent home unsure where he would live and work and equally worried about the fate of countless other scientists still in Germany Aided by the Academic Assistance Council founded in April 1933 by British liberal politician William Beveridge to help academics escape Nazi persecution Einstein was able to leave Germany 131 He rented a house in De Haan Belgium where he lived for a few months In late July 1933 he went to England for about six weeks at the personal invitation of British naval officer Commander Oliver Locker Lampson who had become friends with Einstein in the preceding years 132 Locker Lampson invited him to stay near his Cromer home in a wooden cabin on Roughton Heath in the Parish of Roughton Norfolk To protect Einstein Locker Lampson had two bodyguards watch over him at his secluded cabin a photo of them carrying shotguns and guarding Einstein was published in the Daily Herald on 24 July 1933 133 134 Locker Lampson took Einstein to meet Winston Churchill at his home and later Austen Chamberlain and former Prime Minister Lloyd George 135 Einstein asked them to help bring Jewish scientists out of Germany British historian Martin Gilbert notes that Churchill responded immediately and sent his friend physicist Frederick Lindemann to Germany to seek out Jewish scientists and place them in British universities 136 Churchill later observed that as a result of Germany having driven the Jews out they had lowered their technical standards and put the Allies technology ahead of theirs 136 Einstein later contacted leaders of other nations including Turkey s Prime Minister Ismet Inonu to whom he wrote in September 1933 requesting placement of unemployed German Jewish scientists As a result of Einstein s letter Jewish invitees to Turkey eventually totaled over 1 000 saved individuals 137 Locker Lampson also submitted a bill to parliament to extend British citizenship to Einstein during which period Einstein made a number of public appearances describing the crisis brewing in Europe 138 In one of his speeches he denounced Germany s treatment of Jews while at the same time he introduced a bill promoting Jewish citizenship in Palestine as they were being denied citizenship elsewhere 139 In his speech he described Einstein as a citizen of the world who should be offered a temporary shelter in the UK note 3 140 Both bills failed however and Einstein then accepted an earlier offer from the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton New Jersey US to become a resident scholar 138 Resident scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study Portrait of Einstein taken in 1935 at Princeton On 3 October 1933 Einstein delivered a speech on the importance of academic freedom before a packed audience at the Royal Albert Hall in London with The Times reporting he was wildly cheered throughout 131 Four days later he returned to the US and took up a position at the Institute for Advanced Study 138 141 noted for having become a refuge for scientists fleeing Nazi Germany 142 At the time most American universities including Harvard Princeton and Yale had minimal or no Jewish faculty or students as a result of their Jewish quotas which lasted until the late 1940s 142 Einstein was still undecided on his future He had offers from several European universities including Christ Church Oxford where he stayed for three short periods between May 1931 and June 1933 and was offered a five year research fellowship called a studentship at Christ Church 143 144 but in 1935 he arrived at the decision to remain permanently in the United States and apply for citizenship 138 145 Einstein s affiliation with the Institute for Advanced Study would last until his death in 1955 146 He was one of the four first selected along with John von Neumann Kurt Godel and Hermann Weyl 147 at the new Institute where he soon developed a close friendship with Godel The two would take long walks together discussing their work Bruria Kaufman his assistant later became a physicist During this period Einstein tried to develop a unified field theory and to refute the accepted interpretation of quantum physics both unsuccessfully World War II and the Manhattan Project See also Einstein Szilard letter In 1939 a group of Hungarian scientists that included emigre physicist Leo Szilard attempted to alert Washington to ongoing Nazi atomic bomb research The group s warnings were discounted Einstein and Szilard along with other refugees such as Edward Teller and Eugene Wigner regarded it as their responsibility to alert Americans to the possibility that German scientists might win the race to build an atomic bomb and to warn that Hitler would be more than willing to resort to such a weapon 148 149 To make certain the US was aware of the danger in July 1939 a few months before the beginning of World War II in Europe Szilard and Wigner visited Einstein to explain the possibility of atomic bombs which Einstein a pacifist said he had never considered 150 He was asked to lend his support by writing a letter with Szilard to President Roosevelt recommending the US pay attention and engage in its own nuclear weapons research The letter is believed to be arguably the key stimulus for the U S adoption of serious investigations into nuclear weapons on the eve of the U S entry into World War II 151 In addition to the letter Einstein used his connections with the Belgian Royal Family 152 and the Belgian queen mother to get access with a personal envoy to the White House s Oval Office Some say that as a result of Einstein s letter and his meetings with Roosevelt the US entered the race to develop the bomb drawing on its immense material financial and scientific resources to initiate the Manhattan Project For Einstein war was a disease and he called for resistance to war By signing the letter to Roosevelt some argue he went against his pacifist principles 153 In 1954 a year before his death Einstein said to his old friend Linus Pauling I made one great mistake in my life when I signed the letter to President Roosevelt recommending that atom bombs be made but there was some justification the danger that the Germans would make them 154 In 1955 Einstein and ten other intellectuals and scientists including British philosopher Bertrand Russell signed a manifesto highlighting the danger of nuclear weapons 155 US citizenship Einstein accepting US citizenship certificate from judge Phillip Forman Einstein became an American citizen in 1940 Not long after settling into his career at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton New Jersey he expressed his appreciation of the meritocracy in American culture compared to Europe He recognized the right of individuals to say and think what they pleased without social barriers As a result individuals were encouraged he said to be more creative a trait he valued from his early education 156 Einstein joined the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People NAACP in Princeton where he campaigned for the civil rights of African Americans He considered racism America s worst disease 129 157 seeing it as handed down from one generation to the next 158 As part of his involvement he corresponded with civil rights activist W E B Du Bois and was prepared to testify on his behalf during his trial in 1951 159 When Einstein offered to be a character witness for Du Bois the judge decided to drop the case 160 In 1946 Einstein visited Lincoln University in Pennsylvania a historically black college where he was awarded an honorary degree Lincoln was the first university in the United States to grant college degrees to African Americans alumni include Langston Hughes and Thurgood Marshall Einstein gave a speech about racism in America adding I do not intend to be quiet about it 161 A resident of Princeton recalls that Einstein had once paid the college tuition for a black student 160 Einstein has said Being a Jew myself perhaps I can understand and empathize with how black people feel as victims of discrimination 157 Personal views Political views Main article Political views of Albert Einstein Albert Einstein with his wife Elsa Einstein and Zionist leaders including the future president of Israel Chaim Weizmann his wife Vera Weizmann Menahem Ussishkin and Ben Zion Mossinson on arrival in New York City in 1921 In 1918 Einstein was one of the founding members of the German Democratic Party a liberal party 162 Later in his life Einstein s political view was in favor of socialism and critical of capitalism which he detailed in his essays such as Why Socialism 163 164 His opinions on the Bolsheviks also changed with time In 1925 he criticized them for not having a well regulated system of government and called their rule a regime of terror and a tragedy in human history He later adopted a more moderated view criticizing their methods but praising them which is shown by his 1929 remark on Vladimir Lenin In Lenin I honor a man who in total sacrifice of his own person has committed his entire energy to realizing social justice I do not find his methods advisable One thing is certain however men like him are the guardians and renewers of mankind s conscience 165 Einstein offered and was called on to give judgments and opinions on matters often unrelated to theoretical physics or mathematics 138 He strongly advocated the idea of a democratic global government that would check the power of nation states in the framework of a world federation 166 He wrote I advocate world government because I am convinced that there is no other possible way of eliminating the most terrible danger in which man has ever found himself 167 The FBI created a secret dossier on Einstein in 1932 and by the time of his death his FBI file was 1 427 pages long 168 Einstein was deeply impressed by Mahatma Gandhi with whom he exchanged written letters He described Gandhi as a role model for the generations to come 169 The initial connection was established on 27 September 1931 when Wilfrid Israel took his Indian guest V A Sundaram to meet his friend Einstein at his summer home in the town of Caputh Sundaram was Gandhi s disciple and special envoy whom Wilfrid Israel met while visiting India and visiting the Indian leader s home in 1925 During the visit Einstein wrote a short letter to Gandhi that was delivered to him through his envoy and Gandhi responded quickly with his own letter Although in the end Einstein and Gandhi were unable to meet as they had hoped the direct connection between them was established through Wilfrid Israel 170 Relationship with Zionism Einstein in 1947 Einstein was a figurehead leader in helping establish the Hebrew University of Jerusalem 171 which opened in 1925 and was among its first Board of Governors Earlier in 1921 he was asked by the biochemist and president of the World Zionist Organization Chaim Weizmann to help raise funds for the planned university 172 He made suggestions for the creation of an Institute of Agriculture a Chemical Institute and an Institute of Microbiology in order to fight the various ongoing epidemics such as malaria which he called an evil that was undermining a third of the country s development 173 He also promoted the establishment of an Oriental Studies Institute to include language courses given in both Hebrew and Arabic 174 Einstein was not a nationalist and was against the creation of an independent Jewish state which would be established without his help as Israel in 1948 He felt that the waves of arriving Jews of the Aliyah could live alongside existing Arabs in Palestine 175 Nevertheless upon the death of Israeli president Weizmann in November 1952 Prime Minister David Ben Gurion offered Einstein the largely ceremonial position of President of Israel at the urging of Ezriel Carlebach 176 177 The offer was presented by Israel s ambassador in Washington Abba Eban who explained that the offer embodies the deepest respect which the Jewish people can repose in any of its sons 178 Einstein wrote that he was deeply moved but at once saddened and ashamed that he could not accept it 178 Religious and philosophical views source source Start of a speech by Albert Einstein made on 11 April 1943 for the United Jewish Appeal recording by Radio Universidad Nacional de La Plata Argentina Ladies coughs and gentlemen our age is proud of the progress it has made in man s intellectual development The search and striving for truth and knowledge is one of the highest of man s qualities Main article Religious and philosophical views of Albert Einstein Einstein spoke of his spiritual outlook in a wide array of original writings and interviews 179 He said he had sympathy for the impersonal pantheistic God of Baruch Spinoza s philosophy 180 He did not believe in a personal god who concerns himself with fates and actions of human beings a view which he described as naive 181 He clarified however that I am not an atheist 182 preferring to call himself an agnostic 183 184 or a deeply religious nonbeliever 181 When asked if he believed in an afterlife Einstein replied No And one life is enough for me 185 Einstein was primarily affiliated with non religious humanist and Ethical Culture groups in both the UK and US He served on the advisory board of the First Humanist Society of New York 186 and was an honorary associate of the Rationalist Association which publishes New Humanist in Britain For the 75th anniversary of the New York Society for Ethical Culture he stated that the idea of Ethical Culture embodied his personal conception of what is most valuable and enduring in religious idealism He observed Without ethical culture there is no salvation for humanity 187 In a German language letter to philosopher Eric Gutkind dated 3 January 1954 Einstein wrote The word God is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses the Bible a collection of honorable but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish No interpretation no matter how subtle can for me change this For me the Jewish religion like all other religions is an incarnation of the most childish superstitions And the Jewish people to whom I gladly belong and with whose mentality I have a deep affinity have no different quality for me than all other people I cannot see anything chosen about them 188 Einstein had been sympathetic toward vegetarianism for a long time In a letter in 1930 to Hermann Huth vice president of the German Vegetarian Federation Deutsche Vegetarier Bund he wrote Although I have been prevented by outward circumstances from observing a strictly vegetarian diet I have long been an adherent to the cause in principle Besides agreeing with the aims of vegetarianism for aesthetic and moral reasons it is my view that a vegetarian manner of living by its purely physical effect on the human temperament would most beneficially influence the lot of mankind 189 He became a vegetarian himself only during the last part of his life In March 1954 he wrote in a letter So I am living without fats without meat without fish but am feeling quite well this way It almost seems to me that man was not born to be a carnivore 190 Love of music Albert Einstein right with writer musician and Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore 1930 Einstein developed an appreciation for music at an early age In his late journals he wrote If I were not a physicist I would probably be a musician I often think in music I live my daydreams in music I see my life in terms of music I get most joy in life out of music 191 192 His mother played the piano reasonably well and wanted her son to learn the violin not only to instill in him a love of music but also to help him assimilate into German culture According to conductor Leon Botstein Einstein began playing when he was 5 However he did not enjoy it at that age 193 When he turned 13 he discovered the violin sonatas of Mozart whereupon he became enamored of Mozart s compositions and studied music more willingly Einstein taught himself to play without ever practicing systematically He said that love is a better teacher than a sense of duty 193 At the age of 17 he was heard by a school examiner in Aarau while playing Beethoven s violin sonatas The examiner stated afterward that his playing was remarkable and revealing of great insight What struck the examiner writes Botstein was that Einstein displayed a deep love of the music a quality that was and remains in short supply Music possessed an unusual meaning for this student 193 Music took on a pivotal and permanent role in Einstein s life from that period on Although the idea of becoming a professional musician himself was not on his mind at any time among those with whom Einstein played chamber music were a few professionals including Kurt Appelbaum and he performed for private audiences and friends Chamber music had also become a regular part of his social life while living in Bern Zurich and Berlin where he played with Max Planck and his son among others He is sometimes erroneously credited as the editor of the 1937 edition of the Kochel catalog of Mozart s work that edition was prepared by Alfred Einstein who may have been a distant relation 194 195 In 1931 while engaged in research at the California Institute of Technology he visited the Zoellner family conservatory in Los Angeles where he played some of Beethoven and Mozart s works with members of the Zoellner Quartet 196 197 Near the end of his life when the young Juilliard Quartet visited him in Princeton he played his violin with them and the quartet was impressed by Einstein s level of coordination and intonation 193 Death On 17 April 1955 Einstein experienced internal bleeding caused by the rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm which had previously been reinforced surgically by Rudolph Nissen in 1948 198 He took the draft of a speech he was preparing for a television appearance commemorating the state of Israel s seventh anniversary with him to the hospital but he did not live to complete it 199 Einstein refused surgery saying I want to go when I want It is tasteless to prolong life artificially I have done my share it is time to go I will do it elegantly 200 He died in the University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro early the next morning at the age of 76 having continued to work until near the end 201 During the autopsy the pathologist Thomas Stoltz Harvey removed Einstein s brain for preservation without the permission of his family in the hope that the neuroscience of the future would be able to discover what made Einstein so intelligent 202 Einstein s remains were cremated in Trenton New Jersey 203 and his ashes were scattered at an undisclosed location 204 205 In a memorial lecture delivered on 13 December 1965 at UNESCO headquarters nuclear physicist J Robert Oppenheimer summarized his impression of Einstein as a person He was almost wholly without sophistication and wholly without worldliness There was always with him a wonderful purity at once childlike and profoundly stubborn 206 Einstein bequeathed his personal archives library and intellectual assets to the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel 207 Scientific careerThroughout his life Einstein published hundreds of books and articles 7 208 He published more than 300 scientific papers and 150 non scientific ones 16 208 On 5 December 2014 universities and archives announced the release of Einstein s papers comprising more than 30 000 unique documents 209 210 Einstein s intellectual achievements and originality have made the word Einstein synonymous with genius 13 In addition to the work he did by himself he also collaborated with other scientists on additional projects including the Bose Einstein statistics the Einstein refrigerator and others 211 212 1905 Annus Mirabilis papers The Annus Mirabilis papers are four articles pertaining to the photoelectric effect which gave rise to quantum theory Brownian motion the special theory of relativity and E mc2 that Einstein published in the Annalen der Physik scientific journal in 1905 These four works contributed substantially to the foundation of modern physics and changed views on space time and matter The four papers are Title translated Area of focus Received Published Significance On a Heuristic Viewpoint Concerning the Production and Transformation of Light 213 Photoelectric effect 18 March 9 June Resolved an unsolved puzzle by suggesting that energy is exchanged only in discrete amounts quanta 214 This idea was pivotal to the early development of quantum theory 215 On the Motion of Small Particles Suspended in a Stationary Liquid as Required by the Molecular Kinetic Theory of Heat 216 Brownian motion 11 May 18 July Explained empirical evidence for the atomic theory supporting the application of statistical physics On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies 217 Special relativity 30 June 26 September Reconciled Maxwell s equations for electricity and magnetism with the laws of mechanics by introducing changes to mechanics resulting from analysis based on empirical evidence that the speed of light is independent of the motion of the observer 218 Discredited the concept of a luminiferous ether 219 Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content 220 Matter energy equivalence 27 September 21 November Equivalence of matter and energy E mc2 and by implication the ability of gravity to bend light the existence of rest energy and the basis of nuclear energy Statistical mechanics Thermodynamic fluctuations and statistical physics Main articles Statistical mechanics thermal fluctuations and statistical physics Einstein s first paper 79 221 submitted in 1900 to Annalen der Physik was on capillary attraction It was published in 1901 with the title Folgerungen aus den Capillaritatserscheinungen which translates as Conclusions from the capillarity phenomena Two papers he published in 1902 1903 thermodynamics attempted to interpret atomic phenomena from a statistical point of view These papers were the foundation for the 1905 paper on Brownian motion which showed that Brownian movement can be construed as firm evidence that molecules exist His research in 1903 and 1904 was mainly concerned with the effect of finite atomic size on diffusion phenomena 221 Theory of critical opalescence Main article Critical opalescence Einstein returned to the problem of thermodynamic fluctuations giving a treatment of the density variations in a fluid at its critical point Ordinarily the density fluctuations are controlled by the second derivative of the free energy with respect to the density At the critical point this derivative is zero leading to large fluctuations The effect of density fluctuations is that light of all wavelengths is scattered making the fluid look milky white Einstein relates this to Rayleigh scattering which is what happens when the fluctuation size is much smaller than the wavelength and which explains why the sky is blue 222 Einstein quantitatively derived critical opalescence from a treatment of density fluctuations and demonstrated how both the effect and Rayleigh scattering originate from the atomistic constitution of matter Special relativity Main article History of special relativity Einstein s Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Korper 217 On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies was received on 30 June 1905 and published 26 September of that same year It reconciled conflicts between Maxwell s equations the laws of electricity and magnetism and the laws of Newtonian mechanics by introducing changes to the laws of mechanics 223 Observationally the effects of these changes are most apparent at high speeds where objects are moving at speeds close to the speed of light The theory developed in this paper later became known as Einstein s special theory of relativity There is evidence from Einstein s writings that he collaborated with his first wife Mileva Maric on this work The decision to publish only under his name seems to have been mutual but the exact reason is unknown 40 This paper predicted that when measured in the frame of a relatively moving observer a clock carried by a moving body would appear to slow down and the body itself would contract in its direction of motion This paper also argued that the idea of a luminiferous aether one of the leading theoretical entities in physics at the time was superfluous note 4 In his paper on mass energy equivalence Einstein produced E mc2 as a consequence of his special relativity equations 224 Einstein s 1905 work on relativity remained controversial for many years but was accepted by leading physicists starting with Max Planck note 5 225 Einstein originally framed special relativity in terms of kinematics the study of moving bodies In 1908 Hermann Minkowski reinterpreted special relativity in geometric terms as a theory of spacetime Einstein adopted Minkowski s formalism in his 1915 general theory of relativity 226 General relativity General relativity and the equivalence principle Main article History of general relativity See also Theory of relativity and Einstein field equations Eddington s photograph of a solar eclipse General relativity GR is a theory of gravitation that was developed by Einstein between 1907 and 1915 According to general relativity the observed gravitational attraction between masses results from the warping of space and time by those masses General relativity has developed into an essential tool in modern astrophysics It provides the foundation for the current understanding of black holes regions of space where gravitational attraction is so strong that not even light can escape As Einstein later said the reason for the development of general relativity was that the preference of inertial motions within special relativity was unsatisfactory while a theory which from the outset prefers no state of motion even accelerated ones should appear more satisfactory 227 Consequently in 1907 he published an article on acceleration under special relativity In that article titled On the Relativity Principle and the Conclusions Drawn from It he argued that free fall is really inertial motion and that for a free falling observer the rules of special relativity must apply This argument is called the equivalence principle In the same article Einstein also predicted the phenomena of gravitational time dilation gravitational redshift and deflection of light 228 229 In 1911 Einstein published another article On the Influence of Gravitation on the Propagation of Light expanding on the 1907 article in which he estimated the amount of deflection of light by massive bodies Thus the theoretical prediction of general relativity could for the first time be tested experimentally 230 Gravitational waves In 1916 Einstein predicted gravitational waves 231 232 ripples in the curvature of spacetime which propagate as waves traveling outward from the source transporting energy as gravitational radiation The existence of gravitational waves is possible under general relativity due to its Lorentz invariance which brings the concept of a finite speed of propagation of the physical interactions of gravity with it By contrast gravitational waves cannot exist in the Newtonian theory of gravitation which postulates that the physical interactions of gravity propagate at infinite speed The first indirect detection of gravitational waves came in the 1970s through observation of a pair of closely orbiting neutron stars PSR B1913 16 233 The explanation of the decay in their orbital period was that they were emitting gravitational waves 233 234 Einstein s prediction was confirmed on 11 February 2016 when researchers at LIGO published the first observation of gravitational waves 235 detected on Earth on 14 September 2015 nearly one hundred years after the prediction 233 236 237 238 239 Hole argument and Entwurf theory While developing general relativity Einstein became confused about the gauge invariance in the theory He formulated an argument that led him to conclude that a general relativistic field theory is impossible He gave up looking for fully generally covariant tensor equations and searched for equations that would be invariant under general linear transformations only In June 1913 the Entwurf draft theory was the result of these investigations As its name suggests it was a sketch of a theory less elegant and more difficult than general relativity with the equations of motion supplemented by additional gauge fixing conditions After more than two years of intensive work Einstein realized that the hole argument was mistaken 240 and abandoned the theory in November 1915 Physical cosmology Main article Physical cosmology Einstein with Millikan and Georges Lemaitre at the California Institute of Technology in January 1933 In 1917 Einstein applied the general theory of relativity to the structure of the universe as a whole 241 He discovered that the general field equations predicted a universe that was dynamic either contracting or expanding As observational evidence for a dynamic universe was not known at the time Einstein introduced a new term the cosmological constant to the field equations in order to allow the theory to predict a static universe The modified field equations predicted a static universe of closed curvature in accordance with Einstein s understanding of Mach s principle in these years This model became known as the Einstein World or Einstein s static universe 242 243 Following the discovery of the recession of the nebulae by Edwin Hubble in 1929 Einstein abandoned his static model of the universe and proposed two dynamic models of the cosmos The Friedmann Einstein universe of 1931 244 245 and the Einstein de Sitter universe of 1932 246 247 In each of these models Einstein discarded the cosmological constant claiming that it was in any case theoretically unsatisfactory 244 245 248 In many Einstein biographies it is claimed that Einstein referred to the cosmological constant in later years as his biggest blunder based on a letter George Gamow claimed to have received from him The astrophysicist Mario Livio has recently cast doubt on this claim 249 In late 2013 a team led by the Irish physicist Cormac O Raifeartaigh discovered evidence that shortly after learning of Hubble s observations of the recession of the nebulae Einstein considered a steady state model of the universe 250 251 In a hitherto overlooked manuscript apparently written in early 1931 Einstein explored a model of the expanding universe in which the density of matter remains constant due to a continuous creation of matter a process he associated with the cosmological constant 252 253 As he stated in the paper In what follows I would like to draw attention to a solution to equation 1 that can account for Hubbel s sic facts and in which the density is constant over time If one considers a physically bounded volume particles of matter will be continually leaving it For the density to remain constant new particles of matter must be continually formed in the volume from space It thus appears that Einstein considered a steady state model of the expanding universe many years before Hoyle Bondi and Gold 254 255 However Einstein s steady state model contained a fundamental flaw and he quickly abandoned the idea 252 253 256 Energy momentum pseudotensor Main article Stress energy momentum pseudotensor General relativity includes a dynamical spacetime so it is difficult to see how to identify the conserved energy and momentum Noether s theorem allows these quantities to be determined from a Lagrangian with translation invariance but general covariance makes translation invariance into something of a gauge symmetry The energy and momentum derived within general relativity by Noether s prescriptions do not make a real tensor for this reason Einstein argued that this is true for a fundamental reason the gravitational field could be made to vanish by a choice of coordinates He maintained that the non covariant energy momentum pseudotensor was in fact the best description of the energy momentum distribution in a gravitational field This approach has been echoed by Lev Landau and Evgeny Lifshitz and others and has become standard The use of non covariant objects like pseudotensors was heavily criticized in 1917 by Erwin Schrodinger and others Wormholes In 1935 Einstein collaborated with Nathan Rosen to produce a model of a wormhole often called Einstein Rosen bridges 257 258 His motivation was to model elementary particles with charge as a solution of gravitational field equations in line with the program outlined in the paper Do Gravitational Fields play an Important Role in the Constitution of the Elementary Particles These solutions cut and pasted Schwarzschild black holes to make a bridge between two patches 259 If one end of a wormhole was positively charged the other end would be negatively charged These properties led Einstein to believe that pairs of particles and antiparticles could be described in this way Einstein Cartan theory Main article Einstein Cartan theory Einstein at his office University of Berlin 1920In order to incorporate spinning point particles into general relativity the affine connection needed to be generalized to include an antisymmetric part called the torsion This modification was made by Einstein and Cartan in the 1920s Equations of motion Main article Einstein Infeld Hoffmann equations The theory of general relativity has a fundamental law the Einstein field equations which describe how space curves The geodesic equation which describes how particles move may be derived from the Einstein field equations Since the equations of general relativity are non linear a lump of energy made out of pure gravitational fields like a black hole would move on a trajectory which is determined by the Einstein field equations themselves not by a new law So Einstein proposed that the path of a singular solution like a black hole would be determined to be a geodesic from general relativity itself This was established by Einstein Infeld and Hoffmann for pointlike objects without angular momentum and by Roy Kerr for spinning objects Old quantum theory Main article Old quantum theory Photons and energy quanta The photoelectric effect Incoming photons on the left strike a metal plate bottom and eject electrons depicted as flying off to the right In a 1905 paper 213 Einstein postulated that light itself consists of localized particles quanta Einstein s light quanta were nearly universally rejected by all physicists including Max Planck and Niels Bohr This idea only became universally accepted in 1919 with Robert Millikan s detailed experiments on the photoelectric effect and with the measurement of Compton scattering Einstein concluded that each wave of frequency f is associated with a collection of photons with energy hf each where h is Planck s constant He does not say much more because he is not sure how the particles are related to the wave But he does suggest that this idea would explain certain experimental results notably the photoelectric effect 213 Quantized atomic vibrations Main article Einstein solid In 1907 Einstein proposed a model of matter where each atom in a lattice structure is an independent harmonic oscillator In the Einstein model each atom oscillates independently a series of equally spaced quantized states for each oscillator Einstein was aware that getting the frequency of the actual oscillations would be difficult but he nevertheless proposed this theory because it was a particularly clear demonstration that quantum mechanics could solve the specific heat problem in classical mechanics Peter Debye refined this model 260 Adiabatic principle and action angle variables Main article Adiabatic invariant Throughout the 1910s quantum mechanics expanded in scope to cover many different systems After Ernest Rutherford discovered the nucleus and proposed that electrons orbit like planets Niels Bohr was able to show that the same quantum mechanical postulates introduced by Planck and developed by Einstein would explain the discrete motion of electrons in atoms and the periodic table of the elements Einstein contributed to these developments by linking them with the 1898 arguments Wilhelm Wien had made Wien had shown that the hypothesis of adiabatic invariance of a thermal equilibrium state allows all the blackbody curves at different temperature to be derived from one another by a simple shifting process Einstein noted in 1911 that the same adiabatic principle shows that the quantity which is quantized in any mechanical motion must be an adiabatic invariant Arnold Sommerfeld identified this adiabatic invariant as the action variable of classical mechanics Bose Einstein statistics Main article Bose Einstein statistics In 1924 Einstein received a description of a statistical model from Indian physicist Satyendra Nath Bose based on a counting method that assumed that light could be understood as a gas of indistinguishable particles Einstein noted that Bose s statistics applied to some atoms as well as to the proposed light particles and submitted his translation of Bose s paper to the Zeitschrift fur Physik Einstein also published his own articles describing the model and its implications among them the Bose Einstein condensate phenomenon that some particulates should appear at very low temperatures 261 It was not until 1995 that the first such condensate was produced experimentally by Eric Allin Cornell and Carl Wieman using ultra cooling equipment built at the NIST JILA laboratory at the University of Colorado at Boulder 262 Bose Einstein statistics are now used to describe the behaviors of any assembly of bosons Einstein s sketches for this project may be seen in the Einstein Archive in the library of the Leiden University 211 Wave particle duality Einstein during his visit to the United States Although the patent office promoted Einstein to Technical Examiner Second Class in 1906 he had not given up on academia In 1908 he became a Privatdozent at the University of Bern 263 In Uber die Entwicklung unserer Anschauungen uber das Wesen und die Konstitution der Strahlung The Development of our Views on the Composition and Essence of Radiation on the quantization of light and in an earlier 1909 paper Einstein showed that Max Planck s energy quanta must have well defined momenta and act in some respects as independent point like particles This paper introduced the photon concept although the name photon was introduced later by Gilbert N Lewis in 1926 and inspired the notion of wave particle duality in quantum mechanics Einstein saw this wave particle duality in radiation as concrete evidence for his conviction that physics needed a new unified foundation Zero point energy In a series of works completed from 1911 to 1913 Planck reformulated his 1900 quantum theory and introduced the idea of zero point energy in his second quantum theory Soon this idea attracted the attention of Einstein and his assistant Otto Stern Assuming the energy of rotating diatomic molecules contains zero point energy they then compared the theoretical specific heat of hydrogen gas with the experimental data The numbers matched nicely However after publishing the findings they promptly withdrew their support because they no longer had confidence in the correctness of the idea of zero point energy 264 Stimulated emission In 1917 at the height of his work on relativity Einstein published an article in Physikalische Zeitschrift that proposed the possibility of stimulated emission the physical process that makes possible the maser and the laser 265 This article showed that the statistics of absorption and emission of light would only be consistent with Planck s distribution law if the emission of light into a mode with n photons would be enhanced statistically compared to the emission of light into an empty mode This paper was enormously influential in the later development of quantum mechanics because it was the first paper to show that the statistics of atomic transitions had simple laws Matter waves Einstein discovered Louis de Broglie s work and supported his ideas which were received skeptically at first In another major paper from this era Einstein gave a wave equation for de Broglie waves which Einstein suggested was the Hamilton Jacobi equation of mechanics This paper would inspire Schrodinger s work of 1926 Quantum mechanics Einstein s objections to quantum mechanics Newspaper headline on 4 May 1935 Einstein played a major role in developing quantum theory beginning with his 1905 paper on the photoelectric effect However he became displeased with modern quantum mechanics as it had evolved after 1925 despite its acceptance by other physicists He was skeptical that the randomness of quantum mechanics was fundamental rather than the result of determinism stating that God is not playing at dice 266 Until the end of his life he continued to maintain that quantum mechanics was incomplete 267 Bohr versus Einstein Main article Bohr Einstein debates Einstein and Niels Bohr 1925The Bohr Einstein debates were a series of public disputes about quantum mechanics between Einstein and Niels Bohr who were two of its founders Their debates are remembered because of their importance to the philosophy of science 268 269 270 Their debates would influence later interpretations of quantum mechanics Einstein Podolsky Rosen paradox Main article EPR paradox In 1935 Einstein returned to quantum mechanics in particular to the question of its completeness in a collaboration with Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen that laid out what would become known as the EPR paradox 270 In a thought experiment they considered two particles which had interacted such that their properties were strongly correlated No matter how far the two particles were separated a precise position measurement on one particle would result in equally precise knowledge of the position of the other particle likewise a precise momentum measurement of one particle would result in equally precise knowledge of the momentum of the other particle without needing to disturb the other particle in any way 271 Given Einstein s concept of local realism there were two possibilities 1 either the other particle had these properties already determined or 2 the process of measuring the first particle instantaneously affected the reality of the position and momentum of the second particle Einstein rejected this second possibility popularly called spooky action at a distance 271 Einstein s belief in local realism led him to assert that while the correctness of quantum mechanics was not in question it must be incomplete But as a physical principle local realism was shown to be incorrect when the Aspect experiment of 1982 confirmed Bell s theorem which J S Bell had delineated in 1964 The results of these and subsequent experiments demonstrate that quantum physics cannot be represented by any version of the picture of physics in which particles are regarded as unconnected independent classical like entities each one being unable to communicate with the other after they have separated 272 Although Einstein was wrong about local realism his clear prediction of the unusual properties of its opposite entangled quantum states has resulted in the EPR paper becoming among the most influential papers published in Physical Review It is considered a centerpiece of the development of quantum information theory 273 Unified field theory Main article Classical unified field theories Following his research on general relativity Einstein attempted to generalize his theory of gravitation to include electromagnetism as aspects of a single entity In 1950 he described his unified field theory in a Scientific American article titled On the Generalized Theory of Gravitation 274 Although he was lauded for this work his efforts were ultimately unsuccessful Notably Einstein s unification project did not accommodate the strong and weak nuclear forces neither of which was well understood until many years after his death Although mainstream physics long ignored Einstein s approaches to unification Einstein s work has motivated modern quests for a theory of everything in particular string theory where geometrical fields emerge in a unified quantum mechanical setting Other investigations Main article Einstein s unsuccessful investigations Einstein conducted other investigations that were unsuccessful and abandoned These pertain to force superconductivity and other research Collaboration with other scientists The 1927 Solvay Conference in Brussels a gathering of the world s top physicists Einstein is in the center In addition to longtime collaborators Leopold Infeld Nathan Rosen Peter Bergmann and others Einstein also had some one shot collaborations with various scientists Einstein de Haas experiment Main article Einstein de Haas effect Einstein and De Haas demonstrated that magnetization is due to the motion of electrons nowadays known to be the spin In order to show this they reversed the magnetization in an iron bar suspended on a torsion pendulum They confirmed that this leads the bar to rotate because the electron s angular momentum changes as the magnetization changes This experiment needed to be sensitive because the angular momentum associated with electrons is small but it definitively established that electron motion of some kind is responsible for magnetization Schrodinger gas model Einstein suggested to Erwin Schrodinger that he might be able to reproduce the statistics of a Bose Einstein gas by considering a box Then to each possible quantum motion of a particle in a box associate an independent harmonic oscillator Quantizing these oscillators each level will have an integer occupation number which will be the number of particles in it citation needed This formulation is a form of second quantization but it predates modern quantum mechanics Erwin Schrodinger applied this to derive the thermodynamic properties of a semiclassical ideal gas Schrodinger urged Einstein to add his name as co author although Einstein declined the invitation 275 Einstein refrigerator In 1926 Einstein and his former student Leo Szilard co invented and in 1930 patented the Einstein refrigerator This absorption refrigerator was then revolutionary for having no moving parts and using only heat as an input 276 On 11 November 1930 U S Patent 1 781 541 was awarded to Einstein and Leo Szilard for the refrigerator Their invention was not immediately put into commercial production and the most promising of their patents were acquired by the Swedish company Electrolux note 6 Non scientific legacy Einstein second from left at a picnic in Oslo in 1920 Heinrich Goldschmidt is at the left Ole Colbjornsen in the center and Jorgen Vogt sits behind Ilse Einstein While traveling Einstein wrote daily to his wife Elsa and adopted stepdaughters Margot and Ilse The letters were included in the papers bequeathed to the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Margot Einstein permitted the personal letters to be made available to the public but requested that it not be done until twenty years after her death she died in 1986 278 Barbara Wolff of the Hebrew University s Albert Einstein Archives told the BBC that there are about 3 500 pages of private correspondence written between 1912 and 1955 279 Einstein s right of publicity was litigated in 2015 in a federal district court in California Although the court initially held that the right had expired 280 that ruling was immediately appealed and the decision was later vacated in its entirety The underlying claims between the parties in that lawsuit were ultimately settled The right is enforceable and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem is the exclusive representative of that right 281 Corbis successor to The Roger Richman Agency licenses the use of his name and associated imagery as agent for the university 282 Mount Einstein in New Zealand s Paparoa Range was named after him in 1970 by the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research 283 In popular cultureMain article Albert Einstein in popular culture Einstein became one of the most famous scientific celebrities 284 285 beginning with the confirmation of his theory of general relativity in 1919 286 Despite the general public having little understanding of his work he was widely recognized and received adulation and publicity In the period before World War II The New Yorker published a vignette in their The Talk of the Town feature saying that Einstein was so well known in America that he would be stopped on the street by people wanting him to explain that theory He finally figured out a way to handle the incessant inquiries He told his inquirers Pardon me sorry Always I am mistaken for Professor Einstein 287 Einstein has been the subject of or inspiration for many novels films plays and works of music 288 He is a favorite model for depictions of absent minded professors his expressive face and distinctive hairstyle have been widely copied and exaggerated Time magazine s Frederic Golden wrote that Einstein was a cartoonist s dream come true 289 Many popular quotations are often misattributed to him 290 291 Awards and honorsMain article List of awards and honors received by Albert Einstein Einstein received numerous awards and honors and in 1922 he was awarded the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics for his services to Theoretical Physics and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect None of the nominations in 1921 met the criteria set by Alfred Nobel so the 1921 prize was carried forward and awarded to Einstein in 1922 12 PublicationsScientific Further information List of scientific publications by Albert EinsteinEinstein Albert 1901 Completed 13 December 1900 and manuscript received 16 December 1900 Written at Zurich Switzerland Paul Karl Ludwig Drude ed Folgerungen aus den Capillaritatserscheinungen Conclusions Drawn from the Phenomena of Capillarity Annalen der Physik Vierte Folge in German Leipzig Germany Verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth published 1 March 1901 4 all series 309 3 513 523 Bibcode 1901AnP 309 513E doi 10 1002 andp 19013090306 via Wiley Online Library Hoboken New Jersey USA March 2006 Einstein Albert 1905a Completed 17 March 1905 and submitted 18 March 1905 Written at Berne Switzerland Paul Karl Ludwig Drude ed Uber einen die Erzeugung und Verwandlung des Lichtes betreffenden heuristischen Gesichtspunkt On a Heuristic Viewpoint Concerning the Production and Transformation of Light PDF Annalen der Physik Vierte Folge in German Leipzig Germany Verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth published 9 June 1905 17 all series 322 6 132 148 Bibcode 1905AnP 322 132E doi 10 1002 andp 19053220607 via Wiley Online Library Hoboken New Jersey USA 10 March 2006 Einstein Albert 1905b Completed 30 April 1905 Eine neue Bestimmung der Molekuldimensionen A new determination of molecular dimensions PDF Dissertationen Universitat Zurich PhD Thesis in German Berne Switzerland Wyss Buchdruckerei published 20 July 1905 doi 10 3929 ethz a 000565688 hdl 20 500 11850 139872 via ETH Bibliothek Zurich 2008 Einstein Albert 1905c Manuscript received 11 May 1905 Written at Berne Switzerland Paul Karl Ludwig Drude ed Uber die von der molekularkinetischen Theorie der Warme geforderte Bewegung von in ruhenden Flussigkeiten suspendierten Teilchen On the Motion Required by the Molecular Kinetic Theory of Heat of Small Particles Suspended in a Stationary Liquid Annalen der Physik Vierte Folge in German Leipzig Germany Verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth published 18 July 1905 17 all series 322 8 549 560 Bibcode 1905AnP 322 549E doi 10 1002 andp 19053220806 hdl 10915 2785 via Wiley Online Library Hoboken New Jersey USA 10 March 2006 Einstein Albert 1905d Manuscript received 30 June 1905 Written at Berne Switzerland Paul Karl Ludwig Drude ed Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Korper On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies Annalen der Physik Submitted manuscript Vierte Folge in German Leipzig Germany Verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth published 26 September 1905 17 all series 322 10 891 921 Bibcode 1905AnP 322 891E doi 10 1002 andp 19053221004 hdl 10915 2786 via Wiley Online Library Hoboken New Jersey USA 10 March 2006 Einstein Albert 1905e Manuscript received 27 September 1905 Written at Berne Switzerland Paul Karl Ludwig Drude ed Ist die Tragheit eines Korpers von seinem Energieinhalt abhangig Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content Annalen der Physik Vierte Folge in German Leipzig Germany Verlag von Johann Ambrosius Barth published 21 November 1905 18 all series 323 13 639 641 Bibcode 1905AnP 323 639E doi 10 1002 andp 19053231314 via Wiley Online Library Hoboken New Jersey USA 10 March 2006 Einstein Albert 1915 Completed 25 November 1915 Die Feldgleichungen der Gravitation The Field Equations of Gravitation Online page images Sitzungsberichte 1915 in German Berlin Germany Koniglich Preussische Akademie der Wissenschaften published 2 December 1915 844 847 via ECHO Cultural Heritage Online Max Planck Institute for the History of Science Einstein Albert 1916 Issued 29 June 1916 Naherungsweise Integration der Feldgleichungen der Gravitation Approximate integration of the field equations of gravitation Online page images Sitzungsberichte 1916 Berlin Germany Koniglich Preussische Akademie der Wissenschaften 688 696 Bibcode 1916SPAW 688E Retrieved 24 January 2022 via SAO NASA Astrophysics Data System ADS Einstein Albert 1917a Kosmologische Betrachtungen zur allgemeinen Relativitatstheorie Cosmological Considerations in the General Theory of Relativity Online page images Sitzungsberichte 1917 in German Koniglich Preussische Akademie der Wissenschaften Berlin Einstein Albert 1917b Zur Quantentheorie der Strahlung On the Quantum Mechanics of Radiation Physikalische Zeitschrift in German 18 121 128 Bibcode 1917PhyZ 18 121E Einstein Albert 31 January 1918 Uber Gravitationswellen About gravitational waves Sitzungsberichte der Koniglich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften Berlin 154 167 Bibcode 1918SPAW 154E Retrieved 14 November 2020 Einstein Albert 1923 First published 1923 in English 1967 Written at Gothenburg Grundgedanken und Probleme der Relativitatstheorie Fundamental Ideas and Problems of the Theory of Relativity Speech Lecture delivered to the Nordic Assembly of Naturalists at Gothenburg 11 July 1923 Nobel Lectures Physics 1901 1921 in German and English Stockholm Nobelprice org published 3 February 2015 via Nobel Media AB 2014 Einstein Albert 1924 Published 10 July 1924 Quantentheorie des einatomigen idealen Gases Quantum theory of monatomic ideal gases Sitzungsberichte der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften Physikalisch Mathematische Klasse in German 261 267 Archived from the original Online page images on 14 October 2016 Retrieved 26 February 2015 via ECHO Cultural Heritage Online Max Planck Institute for the History of Science First of a series of papers on this topic Einstein Albert 12 March 1926 Cover Date 1 March 1926 Written at Berlin Die Ursache der Maanderbildung der Flusslaufe und des sogenannten Baerschen Gesetzes On Baer s law and meanders in the courses of rivers Die Naturwissenschaften in German Heidelberg Germany 14 11 223 224 Bibcode 1926NW 14 223E doi 10 1007 BF01510300 ISSN 1432 1904 S2CID 39899416 Einstein Albert 1926b Written at Berne Switzerland Furth R ed Investigations on the Theory of the Brownian Movement PDF Translated by Cowper A D US Dover Publications published 1956 ISBN 978 1 60796 285 4 Retrieved 4 January 2015 Einstein Albert 1931 Zum kosmologischen Problem der allgemeinen Relativitatstheorie On the cosmological problem of the general theory of relativity Sonderasugabe aus den Sitzungsb Konig Preuss Akad 235 237 Einstein A de Sitter W 1932 On the relation between the expansion and the mean density of the universe Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 18 3 213 214 Bibcode 1932PNAS 18 213E doi 10 1073 pnas 18 3 213 PMC 1076193 PMID 16587663 Einstein Albert Rosen Nathan 1935 The Particle Problem in the General Theory of Relativity Physical Review 48 1 73 Bibcode 1935PhRv 48 73E doi 10 1103 PhysRev 48 73 Einstein Albert Podolsky Boris Rosen Nathan 15 May 1935 Received 25 March 1935 Can Quantum Mechanical Description of Physical Reality Be Considered Complete Physical Review Submitted manuscript 47 10 777 780 Bibcode 1935PhRv 47 777E doi 10 1103 PhysRev 47 777 via APS Journals Einstein Albert 1950 On the Generalized Theory of Gravitation Scientific American CLXXXII 4 13 17 Bibcode 1950SciAm 182d 13E doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0450 13 Einstein Albert 1954 Ideas and Opinions New York Crown Publishers ISBN 978 0 517 00393 0 1995 1954 Ideas and Opinions New York Three Rivers Press ISBN 978 0 517 88440 9 Einstein Albert 1969 Albert Einstein Hedwig und Max Born Briefwechsel 1916 1955 in German Commented by Max Born Preface by Bertrand Russell Foreword by Werner Heisenberg Munich Nymphenburger Verlagshandlung ISBN 978 3 88682 005 4 A reprint of this book was published by Edition Erbrich in 1982 ISBN 978 3 88682 005 4 Stachel John Martin J Klein A J Kox Michel Janssen R Schulmann Diana Komos Buchwald et al eds 21 July 2008 Published between 1987 and 2006 The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein Vol 1 10 Princeton University Press Further information about the volumes published so far can be found on the webpages of the Einstein Papers Project 292 and on the Princeton University Press Einstein Page 293 Others Einstein Albert et al 4 December 1948 To the editors of The New York Times The New York Times Melville New York ISBN 978 0 7354 0359 8 Archived from the original on 17 December 2007 Retrieved 25 May 2006 Einstein Albert May 1949 Sweezy Paul Huberman Leo eds Why Socialism Monthly Review 1 1 9 15 doi 10 14452 MR 001 01 1949 05 3 May 2009 May 1949 Why Socialism Reprise Monthly Review New York Monthly Review Foundation Archived from the original on 11 January 2006 Retrieved 16 January 2006 via MonthlyReview org Einstein Albert 1979 Autobiographical Notes Paul Arthur Schilpp Centennial ed Chicago Open Court ISBN 978 0 87548 352 8 The chasing a light beam thought experiment is described on pages 48 51 See alsoAlbert Einstein House in Princeton Einstein family Einstein s thought experiments Einstein notation The Einstein Theory of Relativity an educational film Frist Campus Center at Princeton University room 302 is associated with Einstein The center was once the Palmer Physical Laboratory Heinrich Burkhardt Bern Historical Museum Einstein Museum History of gravitational theory List of coupled cousins List of German inventors and discoverers Jewish Nobel laureates List of peace activists Relativity priority dispute Sticky bead argument Heinrich ZanggerNotes a b c In the German Empire citizens were exclusively subjects of one of the 27 Bundesstaaten Einstein s scores on his Matura certificate German 5 French 3 Italian 5 History 6 Geography 4 Algebra 6 Geometry 6 Descriptive Geometry 6 Physics 6 Chemistry 5 Natural History 5 Art Drawing 4 Technical Drawing 4 Scale 6 very good 5 good 4 sufficient 3 insufficient 2 poor 1 very poor Their leaders in Germany have not driven out her cut throats and her blackguards She has chosen the cream of her culture and has suppressed it She has even turned upon her most glorious citizen Albert Einstein who is the supreme example of the selfless intellectual The man who beyond all others approximates a citizen of the world is without a home How proud we must be to offer him temporary shelter In his paper Einstein wrote The introduction of a luminiferous aether will be proved to be superfluous in so far as according to the conceptions which will be developed we shall introduce neither a space absolutely at rest endowed with special properties nor shall we associate a velocity vector with a point in which electro magnetic processes take place For a discussion of the reception of relativity theory around the world and the different controversies it encountered see the articles in Glick 1987 In September 2008 it was reported that Malcolm McCulloch of Oxford University was heading a three year project to develop more robust appliances that could be used in locales lacking electricity and that his team had 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