Thursday, 18 October 2012

Albert Einstein

Inventor Project
April 1, 1996
Albert Einstein
My name is Albert Einstein. I was born on March 14, 1879 in Ulm,
Germany. I was not an inventor in the conventional sense. I was a physicist
and theorist. My inventions were not tangible things, but ideas I put on paper
and may later on have led to inventions. I was not a good student in school. I
did not pay attention to teachers because I found their lectures and teachings
boring. Often I would skip class to go study physics on my own. By the age
of twelve I had taught myself Euclidean Geometry, and slowly beginning to
develope my own theories in physics.
My first theoretical paper was on Brownian motion. The paper
discussed the significant predictions I made about particles that are randomly
distributed in a fluid. My next paper was on the photoelectric effect, which
contained a revolutionary hypothesis on the nature of light. I proposed that
under certain circumstances light can be considered as consisting of particles,
and I also hypothesized that energy carried by any light particle, called a
photon, is proportional to the frequency of the radiation. The formula for this
is E=hv, where E is the radiation, h is a universal constant known as Planck's
constant, and v is the frequency of the radiation. This proposal, that the
energy contained within a light beam is transferred by individual units, or
quanta, contradicted the hundred year old tradition of considering light as a
manifestation of continuous processes.
My third and most impotant paper, "On the Electrodynamics of
Moving Bodies", contained what has become known as the special theory of
relativity. Since the time of Sir Issac Newton, scientists had been trying to
understand the nature of matter and radiation, and how they interacted in
some unified world picture. The position that mechanical laws are
fundamental has become known as the mechanical world view, and the
position that electrical laws are fundamental has become known as the
electromagnetic world view. Neither approach, however, is capable of
providing a consistent explanation for the way radiation and matter interact
when viewed from different inertial frames of reference, that is, an interaction
viewed simultaneously by an observer at rest and an observer moving at
unifrom speed.
In the Spring of 1905 after considering these problems for ten years, I
realized that the crux of the problem lay not in a theory of matter but in a
theory of measuerment. At the heart of my special theory of relativity was the
realization thet all measurements of time and space depend on judgments as
to whether two distant events occur simultaneously. This led me to develope
a theory based on two postulates: the principle of relativity, that physical laws
are the same in all inertial reference systems, and the principal of the
invariance of the speed of light, that the speed of light in a vacuum is a
universal constant. I was thus able to provide a consistent and correct
description of physical events in different inertial frames of reference without
making special assumptions about the nature of matter or radiation, or how
they interact. This theory is best summed up in the equation E=mc2. Where
E is energy, m is mass, and c is the speed of light squared.
My final work was a failed attempt at trying to understand all physical
interactions, including electromagnetic interactions and weak and strong
inetractions. This has come to be known as the Unified Field Theory. Today
this theory has still not been proven by modern scientists.
Probably the most noticable invention to come from my work was born
from necessity. During World War II, it was believed here in the United
States that Nazi Germany was attempting to create an atomic bomb. As a
result of this believed, and startlingly real, threat the U.S. put forth a major
effort at construction of an atomic bomb. Even though I myself had no part in
the actual creation of the bomb, many of my theories where used.
This invention that came from my ideas does not help society in any
way, but it does hinder it considerably. Because of my invention we live in a
world that may cease to exist at the touch of a button by a power hungry
dictator. My invention is one of the most serious threats to existance of
mankind in today's world.




Bibliography
Microsoft Encarta 95. Microsoft. IBM PC CD-ROM. 1995

Relativity: The Special and General Theory. Shelley Marion Publishing.
New York. 1975.

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