Abert Thegreat The Second
Abert Thegreat The Second
Abert Thegreat The Second
Albert Einstein was born in Ulm, Germany on March 14, 1879. His
father, Hermann, managed a featherbed business in Ulm, which was
situated on the River Danube in southern Germany. Around a year after
Albert was born, his father's featherbed business failed and the family
moved to Munich, Germany where Hermann went to work for an
electrical supply company. Einstein spent his childhood and his early
education in the city of Munich.
Einstein's mother, Pauline, came from a fairly wealthy family and was
known to have a sharp wit and be outgoing. His father tended to be more
quiet and gentle. They were both intelligent and educated.
When Einstein turned two, his parents had a daughter named Maria.
Maria went by the nickname "Maja." Like most siblings, they had their
differences growing up, but Maja would grow to be one of Albert's
closest and best friends throughout his life.
When Albert was around the age of five or six, he fell ill. To try and
make him feel better, his father bought him a compass to play with.
Einstein became fascinated with the compass. How did it work? What
was the mysterious force that caused the compass to point north?
Einstein claimed as an adult that he could remember how he felt
examining the compass. He said it made a profound and lasting
impression on him even as a child and sparked his curiosity to want to
explain the unknown.
EDUCATION
After three years attending the local Catholic school, eight-year-old
Albert changed schools to the Liutpold Gymnasium where he would
spend the next seven years. Einstein felt that the teaching style at
Liutpold was too regimented and constraining. He did not enjoy the
military discipline of the teachers and often rebelled against their
authority. He compared his teachers to drill sergeants.
ADULT LIFE
Despite having a day job at the patent office, Einstein spent much of his time developing
his own scientific theories. By 1905, he was ready to present his theories to the world. He
published four scientific papers that year, each covering a different subject, in a physics
journal called the Annalen der Physik. These papers were groundbreaking and set the
foundation for modern physics. This burst of scientific discovery is often called the "Miracle
Year" by historians.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS
Albert Einstein predicted the equivalence of mass (m) and energy (E) through his famous
mass–energy equivalence formula E=mc2, where c is the speed of light in vacuum. This
was of paramount importance because it showed that a particle possesses an energy
called the “rest energy”, distinct from its classical kinetic and potential energies. It
implied that gravity had the ability to bend light and could be used to calculate the
amount of energy released or consumed during nuclear reactions.
In 1921, Albert Einstein was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics “for his services to
theoretical physics and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric
effect”. In 1925, he was awarded the Copley Medal by the Royal Society, which is
perhaps the oldest surviving scientific award in the world. Einstein received numerous
other awards and honors including Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in
1926, Matteucci Medal in 1921, Max Planck Medal in 1929 and Franklin Medal in 1935. In
1999, Time magazine named Albert Einstein as the Person of the Century.