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Change Makers #3: The Story of Albert Einstein

Every once in a while the world is given a gift. This gift is in the form of a brilliant mind, who sees the world differently and changes all the norms and makes way for a more advanced human race. 

We, have been blessed with several brilliant minds since times unknown. These are the change makers, the captains of the ship called humanity. Albert Einstein was one of the most brilliant minds the world has ever seen.

Early Life

Albert Einstein’s story begins in the year 1879, in the German Empire. From the very beginning Einstein showed a keen interest in Physics and Mathematics. Contrary to popular belief, he was actually brilliant in mathematics and reports that he actually struggled with Maths have been denounced as just rumours.

Einstein at age 3.

As a child Einstein was somewhat of a misfit. He usually clashed with authorities and resented the educational system. This is common of great minds as the system can’t keep up with their abilities. He was already considered a prodigy even before he turned 15, for his grasp of complex mathematical and scientific concepts.

Work at Patent Office

After he graduated in 1900, he struggled for 2 years, searching for a teaching post. He didn’t get the teaching job but he managed to land a job as an assistant examiner at the Federal Office for Intellectual Property in Bern. And in 1903, his position at the patent office became permanent.

It was at this patent office that Einstein did some of his most outstanding work. Apart from examining patents, his own work included probing into the questions of transmission of electric signals and electrical-mechanical synchronisation of time. 

These concepts went on to become smaller pieces of the bigger picture in 1905 when he came out with his radical conclusions about the nature of light and the fundamental connection between space and time.

1905, Einstein’s Miracle Year

This year was the beginning of a new era in physics. Einstein produced a total of four papers in the course of just 1 year. Through these papers, Einstein was able to tackle some of the era's most important physics questions and problems. 

These papers changed everything in the world of science and foretold bigger things to come. It started a kind of a ripple effect throughout the academic world. And, he was able to achieve all this at the age of just 26! He also received his PhD in the same year.

The 4 papers were about the following subjects:

1. The Photoelectric Effect 

The paper on the Photoelectric Effect explained the phenomenon by which a material will emit electrically charged particles when hit by light.

2. The Brownian Motion

This provided the experimental proof of the existence of atoms. He was able to achieve this by analysing the Brownian Motion Phenomenon.

3. Theory of Special Relativity  

This theory explains the relationship between space and time.

4. The Equivalence of Mass and Energy (E = mc^2) 

This is perhaps the most popular equation in physics and explains the fundamental relationship between mass and energy.

1915, Einstein’s Masterwork

In 1915, Einstein published his paper on the 'general theory of relativity' which found that gravity, as well as motion, can affect space and time. It was literally the equation that rules the universe. This theory was such a big deal that British newspaper, The Times, proclaimed it to be a revolution in science and a new theory of the universe. 

This is what truly made Einstein world famous. He began touring and giving speeches in United States, Britain, France and Japan to crowds of thousands of people.

For the first time in 250 years, a new theory of gravity had emerged overthrowing Newtonian ideas. And even after a century, it is guiding modern day scientists as they search for the elusive Theory of Everything. Even GPS owes its existence to Einstein’s theory.

Other Notable Work

1. In 1909, in one of his papers, he inspired the notion of wave-particle duality in quantum mechanics. 

2. In 1916, Einstein predicted gravitation waves, which he desribed as ripples in the curvature of spacetime which propagate as waves travelling outward from the source. 

It was only in 2016, a hundred years later, that this theory was proven experimentally by scientists. And Einstein had managed to figure out it’s workings all in his mind, a century ago!

3. In 1918, Einstein developed a general theory of the process by which atoms emit and absorb electromagnetic radiation, which is the basis of lasers.

4. In 1924, Einstein, along with S.N. Bose, predicted the existence of a fifth state of matter. It later came to be known as the Bose-Einstein condensate.

The Making of the Atomic Bomb

Soon after the second world war had started in Europe in 1939, a race had begun between Germany and the US to be the first to build a nuclear weapon. The US government had initially opposed the idea of creating the atomic bomb but Einstein’s letter to President Roosevelt changed their stance on the matter.

As a result of Einstein’s minor involvement, the US became the first country to develop a weapon and also the first country to use it in combat, against Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.

After this, he became a strong proponent of nuclear disarmament and implored governments to find peaceful means for the settlement of all disputes between them. 

During Einstein’s last days, he confessed to a friend that the creation of atomic bomb was the biggest mistake of his life. This was because of Einstein’s pacifist beliefs. He considered war a disease.

Interesting Tidbits About Einstein

1. He was a huge advocate of the One World Government leading many to believe that he was a part of the “illuminati agenda”.

2. He was asked to be the president of Israel but he declined.

3. Einstein’s brain was removed from his body upon death and is still preserved to this day.

4. The FBI spied on him for decades believing him to be a Soviet spy.

5. He offered his wife his Nobel Prize as part of their divorce settlement.

6. Einstein had an illegitimate daughter named Lieserl with a fellow physicist, Mileva Maric. Nobody knows what happened to her.

7. He was a great musician and loved playing his violin.

8. Albert Einstein’s eyes remain in a safe box in New York City.

9. Yoda, from Star Wars, was modelled after the appearance of Albert Einstein.

10. Just hours before his death, Einstein was still attempting to prove his Theory of Everything.

11. The Nazis placed a $5,000 bounty on Einstein’s head!

12. Einstein hated wearing socks.

13. Einstein married his first cousin. 



"Change Makers" is a series where I write about people who have had a major impact on the human race. It is to honour their contributions and visions, which have left a visible mark in history. These are great men and women that the world knows and loves.

I would love some suggestions on whom to write about next. Do check out Change Makers #2 and my Knowledge Base and WhatTheFacts series as well. If you like my content, please Follow Me @sauravrungta

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