Albert Einstein was born in Ulm, Germany on March 14,
1879. Beginning with a flurry of papers in 1905, he turned classical
physics on its head with his special and general theories of relativity,
which revolutionized scientists’ understanding of everything from space
and time to gravity and energy. Einstein’s groundbreaking scientific
ideas made his name a synonym for genius, but he was also famous for his
pacifist views and support of the civil rights movement. Below, explore
nine surprising facts about one of the towering minds of the 20th
century.
Einstein didn’t fail math as a child.
Underachieving school kids have long taken solace in the claim that
Einstein flunked math as a youth, but the records show that he was
actually an exceptional, if not reluctant, student. He scored high
grades during his school days in Munich, and was only frustrated by what
he described as the “mechanical discipline” demanded by his teachers.
The future Nobel Laureate dropped out of school at age 15 and left
Germany to avoid state-mandated military service, but before then he was
consistently at the top of his class and was even considered something
of a prodigy for his grasp of complex mathematical and scientific
concepts. When later presented with a news article claiming he’d failed
grade-school math, Einstein dismissed the story as a myth and said,
“Before I was 15 I had mastered differential and integral calculus.”
No one knows what happened to his first daughter.
In 1896, Einstein renounced his German citizenship and enrolled at
the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School in Zurich. There, he began a
passionate love affair with Mileva Maric, a fellow physicist-in-training
originally from Serbia. The couple later married and had two sons after
graduating, but a year before they tied the knot, Maric gave birth to
an illegitimate daughter named Lieserl. Einstein never spoke about the
child to his family, and biographers weren’t even aware of her existence
until examining his private papers in the late-1980s. Her fate remains a
mystery to this day. Some scholars think Lieserl died from scarlet
fever in 1903, while others believe she survived the sickness and was
given up for adoption in Maric’s native Serbia.
It took Einstein nine years to get a job in academia.
Einstein showed flashes of brilliance during his years at the Zurich
Polytechnic, but his rebellious personality and penchant for skipping
classes saw his professors give him less than glowing recommendations
upon his graduation in 1900. The young physicist later spent two years
searching for an academic position before settling for a gig at the
Swiss patent office in Bern. Though menial, the job turned out to be a
perfect fit for Einstein, who found he could breeze through his office
duties in a few hours and spend the rest of the day writing and
conducting research. In 1905—often called his “miracle year”—the lowly
clerk published four revolutionary articles that introduced his famous
equation E=mc2 and the theory of special relativity. While the
discoveries marked Einstein’s entrance onto the physics world stage, he
didn’t win a full professorship until 1909—nearly a decade after he had
left school.
He offered his wife his Nobel Prize as part of their divorce settlement.
After his marriage to Mileva Maric hit the rocks in the early 1910s,
Einstein left his family, moved to Berlin and started a new relationship
with his cousin, Elsa. He and Maric finally divorced several years
later in 1919. As part of their separation agreement, Einstein promised
her an annual stipend plus whatever money he might receive from the
Nobel Prize—which he was supremely confident he would eventually win.
Maric agreed, and Einstein later handed over a small fortune upon
receiving the award in 1922 for his work on the photoelectric effect. By
then, he had already remarried to Elsa, who remained his wife until her
death in 1936.
A solar eclipse helped make Einstein world famous.
In 1915, Einstein published his theory of general relativity, which
stated that gravitational fields cause distortions in the fabric of
space and time. Because it was such a bold rewriting of the laws of
physics, the theory remained controversial until May 1919, when a total
solar eclipse provided the proper conditions to test its claim that a
supermassive object—in this case the sun—would cause a measurable curve
in the starlight passing by it. Hoping to prove Einstein’s theory once
and for all, English astronomer Arthur Eddington journeyed to the coast
of West Africa and photographed the eclipse. Upon analyzing the
pictures, he confirmed that the sun’s gravity had deflected the light by
roughly 1.7 arc-seconds—exactly as predicted by general relativity. The
news made Einstein an overnight celebrity. Newspapers hailed him as the
heir to Sir Isaac Newton, and he went on to travel the world lecturing
on his theories about the cosmos. According to Einstein biographer
Walter Isaacson, in the six years after the 1919 eclipse, more than 600
books and articles were written about the theory of relativity.
The FBI spied on him for decades.
Shortly before Hitler rose to power in 1933, Einstein left Berlin for
the United States and took a position at the Institute for Advanced
Study in Princeton, New Jersey. His support for pacifist, civil rights
and left-wing causes had already drawn suspicion from J. Edgar Hoover’s
FBI, and after his arrival on American shores, the Bureau launched what
would eventually become a 22-year surveillance campaign. Agents listened
to the physicist’s phone calls, opened his mail and rooted through his
trash in the hope of unmasking him as a subversive or a Soviet spy. They
even investigated tips that he was building a death ray. The project
came up empty handed, but by the time Einstein died in 1955, his FBI
file totaled a whopping 1,800 pages.
Einstein urged the building of the atomic bomb—and later became a proponent of nuclear disarmament.
In the late-1930s, Einstein learned that new research had put German
scientists on a path toward creating the atom bomb. The prospect of a
doomsday weapon in the hands of the Nazis convinced him to set aside his
pacifist principles and team up with Hungarian physicist Leo Szilard,
who helped him write a letter urging President Franklin D. Roosevelt to
conduct atomic research. Though Einstein never participated directly in
the Manhattan Project, he later expressed deep regrets about his minor
role in brining about the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. “Had I known
that the Germans would not succeed in producing an atomic bomb, I never
would have lifted a finger,” he told Newsweek. He went on to become an
impassioned advocate of nuclear disarmament, controls on weapons testing
and unified world government. Shortly before his death in 1955, he
joined with philosopher Bertrand Russell in signing the
“Russell-Einstein Manifesto,” a public letter that stressed the risks of
nuclear war and implored governments to “find peaceful means for the
settlement of all disputes between them.”
He was asked to be president of Israel.
Though not traditionally religious, Einstein felt a deep connection
to his Jewish heritage and often spoke out against anti-Semitism. He was
never a staunch Zionist, but when head of state Chaim Weizmann died in
1952, the Israeli government offered to appoint him as the nation’s
second president. The 73-year-old wasted little time in declining the
honor. “All my life I have dealt with objective matters,” Einstein wrote
in a letter to the Israeli ambassador, “hence I lack both the natural
aptitude and the experience to deal properly with people and to exercise
official function.”
Einstein’s brain was stolen after his death.
Einstein died in April 1955 from an abdominal aortic aneurysm. He had
requested that his body be cremated, but in a bizarre incident,
Princeton pathologist Thomas Harvey removed his famous brain during his
autopsy and kept it in the hope of unlocking the secrets of his genius.
After winning a reluctant approval from Einstein’s son, Harvey later had
the brain cut into pieces and sent to various scientists for research. A
handful of studies have been conduced on it since the 1980s, but most
have either been dismissed or discredited. Perhaps the most famous came
in 1999, when a team from a Canadian university published a
controversial paper claiming Einstein possessed unusual folds on his
parietal lobe, a part of the brain associated with mathematical and
spatial ability.
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