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         Einstein Albert:     more books (100)
  1. Albert Einstein, creator and rebel (The collection of biography and autobiography) by Banesh Hoffmann, 1986
  2. Dear Professor Einstein: Letters to and from Children by Albert Einstein, 2002
  3. Einstein on Peace by Albert Einstein, 1988-12-12
  4. Einstein's 1912 Manuscript on the Special Theory of Relativity 1ST Edition by Albert Einstein, 1996
  5. What's the Matter with Albert?: A Story of Albert Einstein by Frieda Wishinsky, Jacques Lamontagne, 2004-08-03
  6. Who Was Albert Einstein? by Gero Von Boehm, 2005-04-15
  7. Albert Einstein and His Inflatable Universe (Horribly Famous) by Dr. Mike Goldsmith, 2010-06-07
  8. Albert Einstein, 1879-1955: A Centenary Exhibit of Manuscripts, Books, and Portraits Selected from the Humanities Research Center Collections by Albert C. LEWIS, 1979
  9. Einstein's Cosmos: How Albert Einstein's Vision Transformed Our Understanding of Space and Time by Michio Kaku, 2010-03-01
  10. Einstein's Universe by Nigel Calder, 1988-11-02
  11. The Meaning of Relativity, Fifth Edition: Including the Relativistic Theory of the Non-Symmetric Field (Princeton Science Library) by Albert Einstein, 2004-11-01
  12. Einstein's 1912 Manuscript on the Special Theory of Relativity by Hanoch Gutfreund, 2004-05-17
  13. Out of My Later Years by Albert Einstein, 1995-06
  14. Works of Albert Einstein: On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies, Relativity: The Special and General Theory, Sidelights on Relativity, Dialog about Objections ... the Theory of Relativity & more (mobi) by Albert Einstein, 2009-12-15

61. Einstein, Albert
Albert Einstein. Photographed by Oren J. Turner (1947) Born March 14 1879 (187903-14) Ulm, W rttemberg, Germany. Died April 18 1955 (aged 76) Princeton, New Jersey, U.S.
http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Albert_Einstein
Einstein, Albert
From New World Encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation search Previous (Albert Camus) Next (Albert Ellis) Albert Einstein
Photographed by Oren J. Turner (1947) Born March 14 1879
Ulm, Württemberg, Germany Died
Princeton, New Jersey U.S.
Residence Germany, Italy
Switzerland
USA Nationality Germany, Switzerland
USA
Ethnicity Jewish Field Physics Institutions Swiss Patent Office (Berne)
Univ. of Zürich
Charles Univ.
Prussian Acad. of Sciences
Kaiser Wilhelm Inst. Univ. of Leiden Inst. for Advanced Study ETH Zürich Alfred Kleiner General relativity Special relativity Brownian motion Photoelectric effect Mass-energy equivalence Einstein field equations Unified Field Theory Bose–Einstein statistics EPR paradox Nobel Prize in Physics Copley Medal (1925) Max Planck medal (1929) Albert Einstein (March 14, 1879 – April 18, 1955) was a German-born theoretical physicist. He is best known for his theory of relativity and specifically the equation E m c , which indicates the relationship between mass and energy (or mass-energy equivalence). Einstein received the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics "for his services to Theoretical Physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the

62. Einstein, Albert | Chemistry: Foundations And Applications | Find Articles At BN
Einstein, Albert from Chemistry Foundations and Applications provided by Find Articles at BNET
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    Reference Publications
    Einstein, Albert
    Chemistry: Foundations and Applications by Todd W. Whitcombe
    Einstein, Albert Einstein is perhaps best known for his work on relativity, and his simple but elegant equation E = mc 2 , which expresses an equivalence between energy and matter. It is this equation that describes the possibility of the transformation of mass into energy, and the phenomenon that is operational in a nuclear power plant or nuclear bomb. Very little matter can become an inordinate amount of energy, as the speed of light is a constant having an inordinately large value.
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63. Culture3-Albert Einstein For Kids
A short biography written just for kids. Includes introduction geared toward teachers.
http://www.wesleyan.edu/synthesis/culture-cubed/haas/maintemp.htm
Albert Einstein for Kids
By: Jason Haas
Teacher's Foreword Hello, teachers! I am a student at Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut, and I have a dream. My dream is that children will be able to see this article, and that it will strike a cord in them. I wish that students in the 3rd-6th grade levels would read this article and see the importance and the magic of Albert Einstein. Perhaps they will take it so close to heart that they will choose a career in science and/or assimilate Einstein's ingenious way of viewing the world, his gentle nature, and vision into their own person. I chose Einstein to be the topic of my article in this magazine because I am not a particularly good scientist, and I thought that biography would be an interesting way for me to explore science. Einstein is probably one of the most influential figures in science in the twentieth century, but more importantly, he was a man of great character. I chose to present this outstanding scientific figure to children due to his appeal to humanity in general, and not just scientists. He was a kind and modest man who did not accept social convention, who thought about more than science and who was always eager to learn. Children need role models like Einstein; they need role models who wished to learn no matter how old they were. They need role models who will teach them that it is OK to stray from the pack and be themselves. They need a dreamer like Einstein to inspire their own dreams. For those children who may have budding interest in science, I hope to steer them towards this view of science, making science as a concept easier to deal with and more attractive. For students who are less interested in science, I hope to instill in them a curiosity and sense of wonder that Albert Einstein the man imparts in me. Hopefully, even if the student doesn't like science, they can learn from Einstein's approach to science and to the rest of the world. I would hope they could learn from Einstein's decision to approach everything with a fresh perspective and without prejudice.

64. Albert Einstein — FactMonster.com
Encyclopedia Einstein, Albert. Einstein, Albert (īn'stīn) , 1879–1955, American theoretical physicist, known for the formulation of the relativity theory, b.
http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/people/A0816892.html

65. Albert Einstein | Physicist
Short biography and portrait along with related links.
http://www.lucidcafe.com/library/96mar/einstein.html
Other Languages French Version German Version Italian Version Spanish Version Serving Coffee, Art, History and Literature Lovers on the World-Wide-Web since 1995 Revised: October 23, 2010
Home:
Library: Albert Einstein Library Categories Rules For Life Historical Documents Important US Court Decisions Great Flying Machines Real Life Adventures American Presidents American Presidents' Wives American Founding Fathers Architects Artists Astronauts Authors Aviation/Aerospace Civil-Rights Activists Entertainers Humanitarians Inventors Journalists Jurists Medicine Military Figures Nobel Prize Winners Philosophers Playwrights Poets Leaders - ALBERT EINSTEIN Albert Einstein
Physicist, 1879 -1955
Albert Einstein was born on March 14, 1879 in Ulm, Wurttemberg, Germany. Einstein contributed more than any other scientist since Sir Isaac Newton to our understanding of physical reality.
Einstein was slow to learn to talk, not beginning to speak until sometime after his second birthday. His slow verbal development combined with a native rebelliousness toward authority, led one schoolmaster to say that young Albert would never amount to much.
Mozart

In 1896, Einstein entered the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School in Zurich to be trained as a physics and mathematics instructor. He graduated in 1901, and unable to find a teaching position, accepted a job as technical assistant in the Swiss Patent Office in Bern. Einstein worked at the patent office from 1902 to 1909. During this period he completed an astonishing range of theoretical physics publications, written in his spare time, without the benefit of scientific literature or close contact with colleagues.

66. The Albert Einstein Experience: Jokes, Relativity And Black Holes
Jokes, quotes, science facts, pictures, links and relativity describing Einstein s life and work.
http://www.juliantrubin.com/einsteinjokes.html

jokes
and science Scientific American Likes Our Site Jokes and Science • Astronomy
• Psychology and Sigmund Freud

• Albert Einstein
...
What Is Relativity?

I wrote and submitted the following for the a limerick contest (Omni Magazine, 1979), however as far as I know it has never been published:
A black hole - a tremendous creation
Its physics defies imagination
Time and space it can bend
Wow! I can't comprehend
The gravity of this situation What Is a Black Hole, Really? A black hole is a celestial object of such extremely intense gravity that it attracts everything near it and prevents everything, including light, from escaping. The term was first used in reference to a star in the last phases of gravitational collapse. Gravitational collapse begins when a star has depleted its steady sources of nuclear energy and can no longer produce the expansive force, a result of normal gas pressure, that supports the star against the compressive force of its own gravitation. In some cases, nothing remains to prevent the star from collapsing without limit to an indefinitely small size and infinitely large density, to create a black hole. At this point the effects of Einstein's general theory of relativity become paramount. According to this theory, space becomes curved in the vicinity of matter (this is the meaning of gravity); the greater the concentration of matter, the greater the curvature (the greater the gravity). When the star shrinks below a certain size determined by its mass, the extreme curvature of space seals off contact with the outside world. The place beyond which no radiation can escape even not light.

67. Einstein, Albert
The name Albert Einstein will forever be synonymous with the word genius. Born on March 14th, 1879 in Ulm, Germany, Einstein was educated, had graduated, but was mostly selftaught
http://www.classbrain.com/artbiographies/publish/albert_einstein.shtml
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Last Updated: Nov 20th, 2009 - 07:06:39
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Einstein, Albert
By Sarah Lane
Mar 17, 2006, 15:45
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Courtesy of the Library of Congress The name Albert Einstein will forever be synonymous with the word genius. Born on March 14th, 1879 in Ulm, Germany, Einstein was educated, had graduated, but was mostly self-taught. He married his sweetheart Mileua Maric and together they had two sons. They divorced in 1919 and he married his second cousin, Elsa Lowenthal that same year. He continued to travel and give lectures all over Europe until he finally immigrated to America. He was offered a full time position at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. He continued to be largely involved in political activism until his death on April 18th, 1955 at age 76. He will be remembered for his intelligence and for never hesitating to speak his mind. Source:
Biography.com

68. Albert Einstein
Tells about the life of the renowned physicist.
http://starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/StarChild/whos_who_level2/einstein.html
Albert Einstein
Can You Believe It? There is a crater on the Moon named after Albert Einstein. Albert Einstein was born in 1879 in Ulm, Germany. He was the first child born to Hermann and Pauline Einstein. Though he attended school as a young boy, he also received instruction at home on Judaism and violin. By the age of twelve he had taught himself geometry. At the age of sixteen he failed an exam in order to qualify to train as an electrical engineer. He remained in school and developed anew plan for his future. Einstein decided to study math and physics so he could become a teacher. Einstein thought he would be good at this because he could think mathematically and abstractly while lacking imagination and practicality. In 1896 he renounced his German citizenship. He was not a citizen of any country until 1901 when he became a citizen of Switzerland. In 1900 he graduated as a teacher of math and physics. His teachers did not think very highly of him though so he had difficulty being recommended for a job at a university. In 1901 he took a job as a temporary high school teacher and married Mileva Maritsch. The couple had two sons prior to divorcing. Einstein later married his cousin Elsa Einstein. From 1902 through 1909, Einstein worked in a patent office in Bern, Switzerland. While working in the patent office he published many papers on theoretical physics. He earned a Ph.D. in 1905. In 1905 Einstein wrote a paper on what is now known as the special theory of relativity. This paper contained two hypotheses. The first stated that the laws of physics had to have the same form in any frame of reference. The second hypothesis stated that the speed of light was a constant. Later that year Einstein also showed how

69. Einstein, Albert - Definition Of Einstein, Albert In The Medical Dictionary - By
Ein stein (n st n), Albert 18791955. German-born American theoretical physicist whose special and general theories of relativity revolutionized modern thought on the nature
http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Einstein, Albert

70. The Energy Planet :: Albert Einstein (1879-1955) :: English
Provides a short biography along with a look at Einstein s greatest accomplishments.
http://library.thinkquest.org/C004471/tep/en/biographies/albert_einstein.html
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Albert Einstein Albert Einstein was born in Ulm, Germany on 14th of March 1879. Five years later, in 1884, he and his family moved to Munich because of his father's new job. In 1901 he was being naturalized as a Swiss citizen. Eight years later as a Swiss Einstein became professor of theoretical physics at the University of Zurich. From 1911 to 1912 he had the same job as a professor in Prague. In 1913 he was chosen to join the Academy of Science in Berlin. Einstein recieved his German nationality back in 1914. He worked for 19 years as professor in Berlin. He was able to be a special professor in Leiden, Holland, from 1920 to 1946 officially also, but because of his emigration, he didn't work for the university for a long time before 1946. Because of the NAZI's, Einstein renounced the German citizenship in 1933. He moved to the United States and worked as a professor in Princeton, New Jersey until 1945. He officially became American in 1941. Albert Einstein died on the 18th of April 1955.
Albert Einstein And Nuclear Power Nuclear Energy is based on this: atomic nuclei are built of protons and neutrons. The mass of the nucleus is always a little smaller than the mass of all neutrons and protons together. We call this difference the "mass defect". According to Einstein's Theory of Relativity which he finished in 1915, E=mc2, there is a certain similarity between mass and energy. This means that the neutrons and protons contain more energy when they're split up. This amount of energy is similar to the mass defect. The mass

71. Einstein, Albert - Space Sciences | HighBeam Research - FREE Trial
Einstein, Albert find Space Sciences articles. div id= bedoc-text h1Einstein, Albert/h1 pbiGerman-born, Swiss-educated Physicist 1879-1955/i /b
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G2-3408800134.html

72. NOVA | Einstein's Big Idea | PBS
NOVA presents a profile of Albert Einstein, with additional teaching resources, Shockwave demonstrations, and animations of relativity concepts.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/einstein/
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The Legacy of
E = mc
Einstein's big idea has been enormously influential, in ways that reach far beyond the purely scientific.
The Producer's Story

Filmmaker Gary Johnstone describes how creativity fuels both art and science.
The Equation Today

Three young physicists contemplate how a 100-year-old equation figures into their careers.
Einstein the Nobody

The patent clerk's career prospects looked bleak just before his "miracle year" of 1905.
The Theory

Behind the Equation
Explore the eureka moment when Einstein came up with special relativity, the theory that spawned E = mc Genius Among Geniuses To rank with Newton or Einstein, you have to reinvent the way we see the world. Relativity and the Cosmos E = mc Explained Hear how 10 top physicists describe the equation in a few minutes or less. The Power of Tiny Things How much energy does a paper clip pack? Test your intuition in this quiz. Ancestors of E = mc Meet the visionary scientists whose experiments paved the way for Einstein.

73. Albert Einstein Home Page
A note about this site I put information on this site that I thought would be useful to other students, but hopefully others will be able to get something out of it.
http://www.sonic.net/~gralsto/einstein/einstein.html
Welcome To The Albert Einstein Home Page A note about this site: I put information on this site that I thought would be useful to other students, but hopefully others will be able to get something out of it. "I want to know how God created this world. I am not interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to know His thoughts; the rest are details." Albert Einstein SEARCH the Einstein Home Page
Find: any terms all terms as a phrase Case: insensitive sensitive Introduction Early Life Scientific Works Later Life ... An Einstein Poem Personal Plug: My mom has just became a published author! If you're interested in a story of redemption in the Pacific Northwest, check out Some Things Are Obvious by Glory Ralston
Interested in books about Einstein? Go to Amazon.com to look for them.
Albert Einstein's World As I See It

Albert Einstein's Ideas and Opinions

Albert Einstein's The Meaning of Relativity

This site is owned by
Jesse Ralston. Want to join the Skip Prev Prev Next Skip Next ... List Sites People have accessed this page since 1-4-06 (I finally reset the counter) Get Your MBA Degree Today

74. Albert Einstein Biography Pictures
Describes the scientist s discovery of the wave-particle duality of light, Brownian motion and relativity. Includes biography and historic photos.
http://www.spaceandmotion.com/albert-einstein-biography-pictures.htm
Albert Einstein
Einstein Principles Metaphysics Newton Mechanics
Faraday's EM Field Maxwell's Equation The Lorentz Transformations Einstein Special
Theory Relativity Einstein General Theory Relativity Problems with Einsteins Relativity Einstein Cosmos Cosmological Con. Quantum Theory
Light 'Photon' Theology God Religion Morality Albert Einstein Wisdom Quotes Einstein Biography
Physics Site Map
Subjects
Truth Reality (Home) Simple
Science Metaphysics
Substance Mathematical
Physics Einstein
Relativity Quantum Physics Cosmology
Space Philosophy
Truth Theology Religion Evolution Ecology Health Nutrition Education Wisdom Politics Utopia The Spherical Standing Wave Structure of Matter (WSM) in Space Site Introduction (2010): Despite several thousand years of failure to correctly understand physical reality (hence the current postmodern view that this is impossible ) there is an obvious solution.

75. Einstein Albert | Facebook
Albert Einstein (18791955), renowned German-American physicist who, in 1905, published three papers, each of which had a profound effect on the development of physics.
http://www.facebook.com/einstein.einstein
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76. Albert Einstein. Biografía.
Su biograf a y su teor a de la relatividad, con fotos y v deos.
http://www.biografiasyvidas.com/monografia/einstein/
Inicio Buscador Las figuras clave de la historia Reportajes Los protagonistas de la actualidad Las monografías de
Albert Einstein Biografía Cronología La relatividad Fotos Vídeos Albert Einstein sigue siendo una figura mítica de nuestro tiempo; más, incluso, de lo que llegó a serlo en vida, si se tiene en cuenta que su imagen, en condición de póster y exhibiendo un insólito gesto de burla, se ha visto elevada a la dignidad de icono doméstico, junto a los ídolos de la canción y los astros de Hollywood. Sin embargo, no son su genio científico ni su talla humana los que mejor lo explican como mito, sino, quizás, el cúmulo de paradojas que encierra su propia biografía, acentuadas con la perspectiva histórica. Al Einstein campeón del pacifismo se le recuerda aún como al «padre de la bomba»; y todavía es corriente que se le atribuya la demostración del principio de que «todo es relativo» a él, que luchó encarnizadamente contra la posibilidad de que conocer la realidad significara jugar con ella a la gallina ciega. Albert Einstein nació en la ciudad bávara de Ulm el 14 de marzo de 1879. Fue el hijo primogénito de Hermann Einstein y de Pauline Koch, judíos ambos, cuyas familias procedían de Suabia. Al siguiente año se trasladaron a Munich, en donde el padre se estableció, junto con su hermano Jakob, como comerciante en las novedades electrotécnicas de la época.

77. Einstein, Albert - Culture
Definition of Einstein, Albert from The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy.
http://culture.yourdictionary.com/einstein-albert

78. UNA FACETA DESCONOCIDA DE EINSTEIN
Libro de Eliezer Braun sobre las contribuciones menos conocidas de Einstein.
http://bibliotecadigital.ilce.edu.mx/sites/ciencia/volumen1/ciencia2/19/htm/face
UNA FACETA DESCONOCIDA DE EINSTEIN
Autor: ELIEZER BRAUN
COMITÉ DE SELECCIÓN
EDICIONES
INTRODUCCIÓN
I. ALGO SOBRE LA TERMODINÁMICA. ...
CONTRAPORTADA

79. Manifeste Russell-Einstein
Lettre pour l abolition des armes nucl aires qui fut sign es par plusieurs scientifiques c l bres.
http://radio-canada.ca/par4/_Notas/manifeste_russell_einstein.htm
Le manifeste
Russell - Einstein
Professeur Max Born Professeur P.W. Bridgman (professeur de physique, Harvard University; Prix Nobel de physique) Professeur Albert Einstein Professeur L. Infeld Professeur J.F. Joliot-Curie Professeur H.J. Muller Professeur Linus Pauling (professeur de chimie, California Institute of Technology; Prix Nobel de chimie) Professeur C.F. Powell (professeur de physique, Bristol University; Prix Nobel de physique) Professeur J. Rotblat (professeur de physique, University of London; Medical College of St Bartholomew's Hospital) Bertrand Russell Professeur Hideki Yukawa

80. Philosophie Et Politique - Einstein Et Spinoza
Article de Gustavo Cevolani sur l influence du philosophe hollandais dans la pens e du physicien (dans le num ro de mai 2001 du bulletin Ethica).
http://denis-collin.viabloga.com/news/56.shtml
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Einstein et Spinoza
Par Gustavo Cevolani, (Aedes Spinoziana)
Par Denis Collin Spinoza, spinozisme • Samedi 26/03/2005 • 1 commentaire • Lu 12503 fois •
[Ce texte est traduit de l’italien. Il est publié dans le numéro de mai 2001 du bulletin Ethica et disponible sur le site http://www.fogliospinoziano.it/ Une confrontation entre Spinoza et Albert Einstein, génial scientifique du début du xx e siècle et père de la physique contemporaine, pourrait sembler hasardeuse s’il n’y avait pas le très grand nombre de citations qu’Einstein lui-même dédie au philosophe dans ses ouvrages non strictement mathématiques. Ce fait pourrait à son tour apparaître comme rien d’autre qu’une curiosité, mais c’est en réalité l’indice d’une profonde familiarité du physicien allemand avec la pensée et les idées de Spinoza, comme je voudrais le montrer dans les brèves notes qui suivent. La religiosité cosmique est l’expression la plus haute du sentiment religieux de l’homme, en tant qu’opposée à l’ensemble des normes et doctrines qui constituent, inversement, la religion traditionnelle. Selon Einstein, toutes les doctrines religieuses conventionnelles, telles qu’elles sont incarnées par les diverses églises existantes, sont erronées en tant qu’elles sont dogmatiques et par là opposées à la pensée rationnelle et à la science. Une telle réfutation, toutefois n’équivaut pas ni ne porte à l’athéisme, à moins que par "athée" on ne veuille désigner celui qui ne croit pas en dieu anthropomorphe et agissant dans le monde en tant que sujet supérieur et distinct.

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