Albert Einstein
Article
by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson (University of St. Andrews, Scotland)
Albert
Einstein
Born: 14 March 1879 in Ulm, Württemberg,
Germany
Died: 18 April 1955 in Princeton, New Jersey,
USA
Around
1886 Albert Einstein began his school career in Munich. As well as his
violin lessons, which he had from age six to age thirteen, he also had religious
education at home where he was taught Judaism. Two years later he entered the
Luitpold Gymnasium and after this his religious education was given
at school.
In 1894 Einstein's family moved to Milan but Einstein remained
in Munich. In 1895 Einstein failed an examination that would have allowed him
to study for a diploma as an electrical engineer at the Eidgenössische Technische
Hochschule in Zurich. Einstein renounced German citizenship in 1896 and was to
be stateless for a number of years. He did not even apply for Swiss citizenship
until 1899, citizenship being granted in 1901.
Following the failing of the
entrance exam to the ETH, Einstein attended secondary school at Aarau planning
to use this route to enter the ETH in Zurich. While at Aarau he wrote an essay
(for which was only given a little above half marks!) in which he wrote of his
plans for the future, see [13]:-
If I were to have the good fortune
to pass my examinations, I would go to Zurich. I would stay there for four years
in order to study mathematics and physics. I imagine myself becoming a teacher
in those branches of the natural sciences, choosing the theoretical part of them.
Here are the reasons which lead me to this plan. Above all, it is my disposition
for abstract and mathematical thought, and my lack of imagination and practical
ability.
Indeed Einstein succeeded with his plan graduating in
1900 as a teacher of mathematics and physics. One of his friends at ETH was Marcel
Grossmann who was in the same class as Einstein. Einstein tried to obtain a post,
writing to Hurwitz who held out some hope of a position but nothing came of it.
Three of Einstein's fellow students, including Grossmann, were appointed assistants
at ETH in Zurich but clearly Einstein had not impressed enough and still in 1901
he was writing round universities in the hope of obtaining a job, but without
success.
He did manage to avoid Swiss military service on the grounds that
he had flat feet and varicose veins. By mid 1901 he had a temporary job as a teacher,
teaching mathematics at the Technical High School in Winterthur. Around this time
he wrote:-
I have given up the ambition to get to a university
...
Another temporary position teaching in a private school in
Schaffhausen followed. Then Grossmann's father tried to help Einstein get a job
by recommending him to the director of the patent office in Bern. Einstein was
appointed as a technical expert third class.
Einstein worked in this patent
office from 1902 to 1909, holding a temporary post when he was first appointed,
but by 1904 the position was made permanent and in 1906 he was promoted to technical
expert second class. While in the Bern patent office he completed an astonishing
range of theoretical physics publications, written in his spare time without the
benefit of close contact with scientific literature or colleagues.
Einstein
earned a doctorate from the University of Zurich in 1905 for a thesis On a
new determination of molecular dimensions. He dedicated the thesis to Grossmann.
In the first of three papers, all written in 1905, Einstein examined the phenomenon
discovered by Max Planck, according to which electromagnetic energy seemed to
be emitted from radiating objects in discrete quantities. The energy of these
quanta was directly proportional to the frequency of the radiation. This seemed
to contradict classical electromagnetic theory, based on Maxwell's equations and
the laws of thermodynamics which assumed that electromagnetic energy consisted
of waves which could contain any small amount of energy. Einstein used Planck's
quantum hypothesis to describe the electromagnetic radiation of light.
Einstein's
second 1905 paper proposed what is today called the special theory of relativity.
He based his new theory on a reinterpretation of the classical principle of relativity,
namely that the laws of physics had to have the same form in any frame of reference.
As a second fundamental hypothesis, Einstein assumed that the speed of light remained
constant in all frames of reference, as required by Maxwell's theory.
Later
in 1905 Einstein showed how mass and energy were equivalent. Einstein was not
the first to propose all the components of special theory of relativity. His contribution
is unifying important parts of classical mechanics and Maxwell's electrodynamics.
The third of Einstein's papers of 1905 concerned statistical mechanics, a
field of that had been studied by Ludwig Boltzmann and Josiah Gibbs.
After
1905 Einstein continued working in the areas described above. He made important
contributions to quantum theory, but he sought
to extend the special theory of relativity to phenomena involving acceleration.
The key appeared in 1907 with the principle of equivalence, in which gravitational
acceleration was held to be indistinguishable from acceleration caused by mechanical
forces. Gravitational mass was therefore identical with inertial mass.
In 1908
Einstein became a lecturer at the University of Bern after submitting his Habilitation thesis Consequences for the constitution
of radiation following from the energy distribution law of black bodies. The
following year he become professor of physics at the University of Zurich, having
resigned his lectureship at Bern and his job in the patent office in Bern.
By
1909 Einstein was recognised as a leading scientific thinker and in that year
he resigned from the patent office. He was appointed a full professor at the Karl-Ferdinand
University in Prague in 1911. In fact 1911 was a very significant year for Einstein
since he was able to make preliminary predictions about how a ray of light from
a distant star, passing near the Sun, would appear to be bent slightly, in the
direction of the Sun. This would be highly significant as it would lead to the
first experimental evidence in favour of Einstein's theory.
About 1912, Einstein
began a new phase of his gravitational research, with the help of his mathematician
friend Marcel Grossmann, by expressing his work in terms of the tensor calculus of Tullio Levi-Civita and Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro.
Einstein called his new work the general theory of relativity. He moved from Prague
to Zurich in 1912 to take up a chair at the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule
in Zurich.
Einstein returned to Germany in 1914 but did not reapply for German
citizenship. What he accepted was an impressive offer. It was a research position
in the Prussian Academy of Sciences together with a chair (but no teaching duties)
at the University of Berlin. He was also offered the directorship of the Kaiser
Wilhelm Institute of Physics in Berlin which was about to be established.
After
a number of false starts Einstein published, late in 1915, the definitive version
of general theory. Just before publishing this work he lectured on general relativity
at Göttingen and he wrote:-
To my great joy, I completely succeeded
in convincing Hilbert and Klein.
In fact Hilbert submitted for
publication, a week before Einstein completed his work, a paper which contains
the correct field equations of general relativity.
When British eclipse expeditions
in 1919 confirmed his predictions, Einstein was idolised by the popular press.
The London Times ran the headline on 7 November 1919:-
Revolution
in science - New theory of the Universe - Newtonian ideas overthrown.
In
1920 Einstein's lectures in Berlin were disrupted by demonstrations which, although
officially denied, were almost certainly anti-Jewish. Certainly there were strong
feelings expressed against his works during this period which Einstein replied
to in the press quoting Lorentz, Planck and Eddington as supporting his theories
and stating that certain Germans would have attacked them if he had been:-
...
a German national with or without swastika instead of a Jew with liberal international
convictions...
During 1921 Einstein made his first visit to the
United States. His main reason was to raise funds for the planned Hebrew University
of Jerusalem. However he received the Barnard Medal during his visit and lectured
several times on relativity. He is reported to have commented to the chairman
at the lecture he gave in a large hall at Princeton which was overflowing with
people:-
I never realised that so many Americans were interested
in tensor analysis.
Einstein received the Nobel Prize in 1921
but not for relativity rather for his 1905 work on the photoelectric effect. In
fact he was not present in December 1922 to receive the prize being on a voyage
to Japan. Around this time he made many international visits. He had visited Paris
earlier in 1922 and during 1923 he visited Palestine. After making his last major
scientific discovery on the association of waves with matter in 1924 he made further
visits in 1925, this time to South America.
Among further honours which Einstein
received were the Copley Medal of the Royal Society in 1925 and the Gold Medal
of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1926.
Niels Bohr and Einstein were to
carry on a debate on quantum theory which began at the Solvay Conference in 1927.
Planck, Niels Bohr, de Broglie, Heisenberg, Schrödinger and Dirac were at this
conference, in addition to Einstein. Einstein had declined to give a paper at
the conference and:-
... said hardly anything beyond presenting
a very simple objection to the probability interpretation .... Then he
fell back into silence ...
Indeed Einstein's life had been hectic
and he was to pay the price in 1928 with a physical collapse brought on through
overwork. However he made a full recovery despite having to take things easy throughout
1928.
By 1930 he was making international visits again, back to the United
States. A third visit to the United States in 1932 was followed by the offer of
a post at Princeton. The idea was that Einstein would spend seven months a year
in Berlin, five months at Princeton. Einstein accepted and left Germany in December
1932 for the United States. The following month the Nazis came to power in Germany
and Einstein was never to return there.
During 1933 Einstein travelled in Europe
visiting Oxford, Glasgow, Brussels and Zurich. Offers of academic posts which
he had found it so hard to get in 1901, were plentiful. He received offers from
Jerusalem, Leiden, Oxford, Madrid and Paris.
What was intended only as a visit
became a permanent arrangement by 1935 when he applied and was granted permanent
residency in the United States. At Princeton his work attempted to unify the laws
of physics. However he was attempting problems of great depth and he wrote:-
I
have locked myself into quite hopeless scientific problems - the more so since,
as an elderly man, I have remained estranged from the society here...
In
1940 Einstein became a citizen of the United States, but chose to retain his Swiss
citizenship. He made many contributions to peace during his life. In 1944 he made
a contribution to the war effort by hand writing his 1905 paper on special relativity
and putting it up for auction. It raised six million dollars, the manuscript today
being in the Library of Congress.
By 1949 Einstein was unwell. A spell in hospital
helped him recover but he began to prepare for death by drawing up his will in
1950. He left his scientific papers to the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, a university
which he had raised funds for on his first visit to the USA, served as a governor
of the university from 1925 to 1928 but he had turned down the offer of a post
in 1933 as he was very critical of its administration.
One more major event
was to take place in his life. After the death of the first president of Israel
in 1952, the Israeli government decided to offer the post of second president
to Einstein. He refused but found the offer an embarrassment since it was hard
for him to refuse without causing offence.
One week before his death Einstein
signed his last letter. It was a letter to Bertrand Russell in which he agreed
that his name should go on a manifesto urging all nations to give up nuclear weapons.
It is fitting that one of his last acts was to argue, as he had done all his life,
for international peace.
Einstein was cremated at Trenton, New Jersey at 4
pm on 18 April 1955 (the day of his death). His ashes were scattered at an undisclosed
place.