Einstein’s Masterwork: 1915 and the General Theory of
Relativity (2015) by John Gribbin
I picked up this book
simply because it’s about Albert Einstein, the title and persuasive BBC Sky at Night’s reviews, “An absorbing and readable account of
Einstein’s life and work.” I once saw this book while I was looking for
Walter Isaacson’s Einstein at
Kinukuniya KLCC Bookstore. I finally bought this one because I can’t find
Isaacson’s. No regret! Though he is a physicist and astronomer, John Gribbin writes in a simple language (in comparison) and gives easy illustrations to
difficult subjects (not all, of course). Gribbin, to me, successfully described
what an incomparable physicist Albert Einstein really was to the world of
science.
“The Special Theory of Relativity,” writes Gribbin, “one of the achievements of 1905 is
‘special’ in the sense that it is restricted and ‘only’ describes the behaviour
of things moving in straight lines at a constant speed. The name alone tells you
that the General Theory is a bigger deal, but because of the widespread the (mis)conception that the General Theory is too difficult for ordinary mortals
to understand, the events of 1915 have been less feted than the events of 1905…
Einstein’s greatest year was indeed 1915, not 1905.” But throughout this
book, Gribbin intend to demonstrate this by “putting Einstein’s science in the context of his life and work both
before and after 1915, including his breakthrough year of 1905.”
It all started when his
father gave the boy Einstein a magnetic compass to relieve his boredom. “He was fascinated by the idea of an
invincible force that kept a grip on the compass needle and baffled that none
of his teachers at the school had shown him anything half as interesting. This
helped to instil an early conviction that he was much better off working things
out for himself than working within the system.” This is typical for
geniuses, they are more productive and creative when they are alone. To cut the
story short, Einstein wasn’t “the Einstein” when he was young, it was hard for
him to further his study and even to find a job! He faced many rejections and
was once told by his professor, “a lazy
dog.” I think this is fair.
But as he gained great
interest in science, especially physics, and by the inspiration of people like
Galileo, Newton, Maxwell, Niels Bohr – and many more – he soon becomes
self-taught theoretical scientist. In 1905, what was called The Annus Mirabilis (The Year of
Miracle) he produced three papers that jump-start his career as world-class
physicist, simply put as #1 On Brownian
motion [which prove the existence of atoms], #2 On light quanta [on which at the same time prove that light is
both particle and wave], and #3 the
Special Theory of Relativity [I don’t understand all, but for sure, one of it
is that E=mc2, the only famous equation that almost everybody knows].
Then with ups and downs in
his life, particularly in his broken marriage and family in general, Einstein
tells me that he is a mere mortal, not a god. But in the midst of [also] wars, personal health, and loneliness,
Einstein completed his masterwork, namely the General Theory of Relativity.
The Theory was tested over and over again that “the General Theory of Relativity can now be regarded as one of the two
most securely founded theories in the whole of science, alongside quantum
electrodynamics.” From this Theory to my estimation comes ‘weird.’
consequences or positively put, give us the shock of nature’s reality such as
time is relative, universe space is curved, the universe is expanding, gravity can
bend light, the possibility of time travel, supernova, the black hole,
wormhole, timewarps, dark matter, black matter, quantum internet, theory of the
Big Bang (or vice versa, the existence of Intelligent Designer, God), and many
more.
Einstein died without
really finishing one of his ambitious dream, namely, “a single mathematical package – a unified theory – that would describe
both the material world and the world of electromagnetic radiation.” He
died as an icon of science, as a towering genius, as one of the founders of quantum
mechanics. Good book.
[P.s: Some of my
conclusions here might be inaccurate or too simplistic; I’m sorry, I’m not a
physicist. Correct me if I wrongly inform]
THINK BIG.
START SMALL. GO DEEP.
No comments:
Post a Comment