Einstein's Greatest Mistake

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Einstein's Greatest Mistake Page 26

by David Bodanis


  F

  falling from a roof thought experiment, 51–52

  fame after validation of general relativity, 107–8, 111, 112

  Faraday, Michael, 13

  fire

  and conservation of matter, 4–5

  interlinked nature of energy and mass, 29–30

  Flatland (Abbott), 43–48, 45, 46, 51–52

  Flexner, Abraham, 223–24

  floating in closed room thought experiment, 59–61, 60

  Frank, Philipp, 185–86

  Freundlich, Erwin, 89–92, 97–98, 133

  Friedmann, Alexander

  attempts to meet with Einstein, 132–33

  correspondence with Einstein, 128, 129–30

  death of, 158

  early 1920s, 129

  publication of research in Zeitschrift für Physik, 127–28, 130, 134

  and pulsations of the universe implied by G = T, 127, 146

  Russian air force service, 125–26

  Fry, Ruth, 96

  G

  Gamow, George, 259 nxiii

  Gauss, Carl Friedrich, 67, 68, 76

  general relativity

  and evolution of theoretical physics, 165–67

  collaboration with Grossmann, 61–62, 63, 67–70

  curvature of space research, 73–78, 74, 76

  Einstein on difficulty of researching, 70

  falling from a roof thought experiment, 51–52

  and Flatland novel, 51–52

  floating in closed room thought experiment, 59–61, 60

  Friedmann’s research, 126–34

  implications of, 109–11

  lambda term addition, 115–20, 129–30, 133–34, 143–47, 165–67

  lambda term and dark energy, 234–35

  lambda term deletion, 150–58, 198–99

  media reaction to validation of, 107–9

  metrics of, 243–50

  modern form of “G = T” equation, 243–44, 249

  popular understanding of, 111

  reaction of colleagues to, 83–84, 105, 106–7

  and refutation of light-filled box thought experiment, 202–3

  testing of, 84–92, 87, 89

  “there came to me the happiest thought of my life,” 51

  geometry

  cartography and curved space geometry, 64, 65, 68

  in nineteenth century fiction, 48–49

  non-Euclidian, 49, 67

  German Jews, 5–6

  German University in Prague, 58–62

  God

  Einstein’s views on, 14, 28, 33, 177

  “God does not play dice with the universe,” 207, 218

  “I, at any rate, am convinced that He is not playing at dice,” 206

  Newton’s views on, 28–29

  and reactions to general relativity validation, 108

  Goebbels, Joseph, 214–15

  golfer thinking style, 61, 68

  Göttingen University, 177

  GPS systems, 252

  gravitational lenses, 221, 233–34

  gravity

  Newton’s theory of gravitation, 26, 84, 93, 178

  See also general relativity

  Great Fire of London, 4–5

  Greek classes in high school, 7

  Grossmann, Marcel

  collaborative research on general relativity theory, 61–62, 63, 67–70

  curvature of space mathematics, 64–68, 65, 66, 221

  with Einstein (early 1910s), 11

  at ETH (Zurich Polytechnic), 10–11, 11, 13, 16, 62–63

  secures interview at Patent Office for Einstein, 18

  “G = T,” used as a metaphor, 77–78

  H

  Haller, Friedrich

  and Einstein performing own research at Patent Office, 23–24, 37, 51, 53, 201

  and Einstein’s departure from the Patent Office, 55

  offers Patent Office job to Einstein, 20

  Hamburg Observatory, 89

  Handel, George Frideric, 204

  Heisenberg, Werner

  in 1926, 179

  Einstein’s rejection of Heisenberg’s work, 181–82, 184–86, 191–92, 194–203

  Ph.D. oral exams, 187–89

  quantum mechanics research, 178–81

  Schrödinger’s rejection of Heisenberg’s work, 186–87

  uncertainty principle, 189–90, 191–93

  World War II years, 212–14

  Heligoland, 180

  Hevesy, George de, 174, 213

  higher-dimensional universes, Flatland (Abbott), 44–48, 45, 46

  Hindu mythology and pulsations of the universe, 127

  Hiroshima, 32, 212

  Hitler, Adolf, 128, 214

  Hooker, John D., 148

  Hubble, Edwin Powell

  discovers proof of expanding universe, 148–54, 159–60, 198

  meeting with Einstein (1931), 154–57

  military service, 147–48

  at Mount Wilson observatory, 149

  human computers, 136–37

  Humason, Milton, 150–51, 151, 152, 161, 165, 198

  Hurwitz, Adolf, 17

  I

  Institute for Advanced Study, xi, 215, 218, 223

  isolation

  Einstein’s feelings of, 22

  Princeton years, x, xi–xiv, 210, 216–26

  J

  Jewish communities in Germany, 5–6

  Johnson, Jack, 147

  Juilliard String Quartet, 228

  Jung, Carl, 56

  K

  Kafka, Franz, 58

  Kant, Immanuel, 116

  King Kong thought experiment (curvature of space-time), 238–41

  Krupp family, 90

  L

  laser (Light Amplification through Stimulated Emission of Radiation), 175–76, 180

  Laue, Max von, 34, 36–37, 38

  Lavoisier, Antoine, 25

  Leavitt, Henrietta Swan, 137–42, 138, 149–50, 151

  Lemaître, Father Georges

  with Einstein c. 1930, 144

  with Einstein in Brussels (1933), 158–59

  expanding universe research, 143–47, 152–53

  origins of the universe theory (1931), 164–65

  light

  bending of, 85

  light-filled box thought experiment, 200–203

  photon research, 175

  speed of, 31, 32

  See also E = mc2

  Light Amplification through Stimulated Emission of Radiation (laser), 175–76, 180

  Lorentz, Hendrik, 73, 84

  Lowenthal, Elsa

  affair with Einstein, 70–71

  death of, xii, 227

  departure from Berlin, 215

  marriage to Einstein, 82, 113, 114–15, 154, 155, 162–64

  Princeton years, 216, 217

  Lowenthal Einstein, Margot, 228, 230

  M

  Macaulay, Thomas Babington, 199

  Magellan, Ferdinand, 135–36

  Magellanic Clouds research, 136, 137–42

  Manhattan Project, 212

  Marconi, Guglielmo, 14, 25

  Marić, Mileva

  daughter Lieserl, 19, 26

  death of, 227–28

  Einstein’s letters to, 12, 17, 19, 21, 162

  estrangement and divorce from Einstein, 53–54, 70–72, 112–13

  failure to obtain academic post, 24, 26

  marriage to Einstein, 16, 17–19, 20–22, 42, 55, 56–58, 62

  and Pauline Einstein, 17–18, 21, 260 n21

  in Prague, 58, 61, 62

  at Zurich Polytechnic, 11, 12–13, 12

  mass and energy

  dark energy and dark matter, 234–35

  interlinked nature of, 28, 29–31, 32–33

  Victorian-era scientific understanding of, 3–5, 25, 27–28, 35, 260–61 n25

  mathematics for describing curvature of space-time, 64–68, 65, 66, 221, 246–50

  Maxwell, James Clerk, 8, 13

  Mercury’s orbit and testing
of general relativity, 84, 93

  Minkowski, Hermann, 238–40, 242, 243

  Moseley, Henry, 94

  Mount Wilson observatory, 147, 148, 149, 150–51, 154–57

  Mozart, Einstein’s love of, 204–5

  Mozart’s String Quintet in G Minor, 228–29

  Munich, anti-Semitism in, 6–7

  N

  Nagasaki, 212

  nationalism as mental epidemic, 72

  Nazi Germany, 212–15

  Newton, Isaac

  and causality of observable processes, 180–81

  creative genius of, 26

  religious assumptions of, 28–29

  and the Royal Society, 104, 105

  theory of gravitation, 26, 84, 93, 178

  understanding of own work, 52

  Newton-John, Olivia, 214

  Nirvana, 267 n187

  Nobel Prize

  awarded to Bohr, 173–74

  awarded to Einstein, 112, 129, 162

  awarded to Rutherford, 106

  awarded to Schrödinger, 197

  awarded to the Curies, 54

  awarded to Thompson, 105

  hidden during World War II, 213

  O

  Oberlin College, 137

  “observational democracy,” 86–87

  Ostwald, Wilhelm, 17

  P

  Patent Office

  Besso takes job at, 21

  “Department of Theoretical Physics” at, 24, 53

  Einstein performs own research at, 23–24, 37, 51, 53, 201

  Einstein secures job at, 19–20

  Grossman secures interview for Einstein at, 18

  Pauli, Wolfgang, 189, 196, 200, 225

  Pavia, Italy, 7, 14

  perception of errors and feeling fatigue, 146–47, 265 n147

  Perlmutter, Saul, 234–35, 269 n234

  photon research, 175

  Piccard, Auguste, 145, 146

  Pickering, Edward, 137–38, 139, 141–42

  Pigafetta, Antonio, 135–36

  Planck, Max, 25, 34, 62

  Poincaré, Henri, 73

  post-university job search, 16–18

  Prague, 58–62

  Princeton years, x, xi–xiv, 210, 216–26

  Q

  Quaker community, 94–95, 96

  quantum entanglement concept, 221–22, 223, 233

  quantum mechanics

  Einstein’s continuing rejection of, 206–7, 217–18, 221–22, 232–33

  Einstein’s rejection of Heisenberg’s work, 181–82, 184–86, 191–92, 194–203

  Heisenberg’s research, 178–81

  Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, 189–90, 191–93, 232–33

  light-filled box thought experiment, 200–203

  quantum jumps, 25, 175

  quantum tunneling, 218–19

  R

  Radcliffe College, 137

  radium, 25, 31–32

  Rainer, Luise, 114, 114

  randomness, 176–77

  Rathenau, Walter, 128

  redshifts, 156, 159

  Reichstag, 214

  relativity

  and curvature of space-time, 238–41, 250–53

  layman’s guide to, 238–53

  unified field theory, 38–39, 219–21, 229

  See also general relativity; special relativity

  religion

  science as replacement for, 28–29

  and Victorian-era science, 4

  research and teaching

  “Department of Theoretical Physics” at Patent Office, 24, 53

  ETH (Zurich Polytechnic), 54–55, 56–58, 62–63, 69–70

  German University in Prague, 58–62

  post-university tutoring jobs, 17, 20, 24

  pressure to publish preliminary findings, 24

  Princeton years, x, xi–xiv, 210, 216–26

  University of Bern, 37–38, 54–55

  Riemann, Bernhard, 68

  Röntgen, Wilhelm, 14, 181

  Roosevelt, Franklin D., 212

  Royal Astronomical Society, 103–4

  Royal Society, 103–4, 106

  Rutherford, Ernest, 62, 106, 111, 172–73, 174

  S

  schizophrenia, 227–28

  Schrödinger, Erwin

  in the 1940s, 187

  correspondence with Einstein, 222

  in Dublin, 224–25

  and Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, 197

  on Nirvana, 267 n187

  quantum mechanics research, 186–87, 189

  Schrödinger’s Cat thought experiment, 223

  science

  as replacement for religion, 28–29

  Victorian-era understanding of mass and energy, 3–5, 25, 27–28, 35, 260–61 n25

  Shapley, Harlow, 149–50, 153, 156

  skating on curved surface thought experiment, 65–66, 67, 75

  social satire, Flatland novel, 43–48, 45, 46, 51–52

  Society for the Collegiate Instruction of Women, 137

  solar eclipses and testing of general relativity, 88–92, 93–105

  Solovine, Maurice, 24–26

  Sommerfeld, Arnold, 36, 69, 70, 177, 187–89

  space, curvature of

  ball on trampoline thought experiment, 73–78, 74, 76, 77–78, 85

  cartography and curved space geometry, 64, 65, 68

  initial thoughts on unified theory, 39

  mathematics of, 22, 64–68, 65, 66

  skating on curved surface thought experiment, 65–66, 67, 75

  See also general relativity

  space-time

  events and curvature of space-time, 239–42

  intervals between events, 242–43

  special relativity

  abstract approach to, 35

  E = mc2, 31, 32–33, 35, 38, 198, 205, 220, 268 n198

  initial reception by scientific community, 35–38, 83–84

  interlinked nature of mass and energy, 28, 29–31, 32–33, 38

  invisible tunnel thought experiment, 30–31

  and Patent Office job, 23–24, 26, 33–39

  the sphere and Sphereland, Flatland novel, 45–48, 46

  Square, A., Flatland novel, 43–48, 45

  Steklov, Vladimir, 125–26

  subatomic particles research

  Einstein, 175–77

  Ernest Rutherford, 172–73, 174

  Niels Bohr, 173–75, 177, 267 n177

  Swiss Polytechnic University, 7–11

  T

  tennis player thinking style, 61, 69

  thermodynamics, 25

  Thomson, J. J., 13, 105

  thought experiments

  ball on trampoline (curvature of space), 73–78, 74, 76

  closed room (curvature of light), 85–88, 87

  falling from a roof (general relativity), 51–52

  floating in closed room (general relativity), 59–61, 60

  invisible tunnel (special relativity), 30–31

  King Kong (curvature of space-time), 238–41

  light-filled box (quantum mechanics), 200–203

  Schrödinger’s Cat, 223

  skating on curved surface (curvature of space), 65–66, 67, 75

  time

  altered concepts of, 109–11

  curvature of, 238–41, 250–53

  time travel, 110

  Tinnef (boat), 217

  Tümmler (sailboat), 114–15, 124

  tutoring jobs, 17, 20, 24

  U

  unified field theory, 38–39, 219–21, 229

  universe

  higher-dimensional universes in Flatland (Abbott), 44–48, 45, 46

  Hindu mythology and, 127

  Lemaître’s origins of the universe theory (1931), 164–65

  pulsations of and general relativity, 127, 146

  See also expanding universe

  University of Bern, 37–38, 54–55

  University of Chicago, 148, 163

  University of Copenhagen, 173, 194, 211, 213r />
  V

  Veblen, Thorstein, 27

  Victorian-era science, 3–5, 25, 27–28, 35, 260–61 n25

 

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