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  • There was physics before Einsteinin the same way that there was biology before Darwin.

  • Einstein didn't just add some new ideas to physics. And he didn't just add a unifying

  • framework for doing physics, like Newton. Einstein took what people thought was physics,

  • turned it upside down, then turned it inside out.

  • In the same way Darwin's work made people see life itself differently, Einstein's

  • work made humanity reexamine time and space.

  • [Intro Music Plays]

  • The classical worldviewassociated with names you know, like Euclid, Aristotle, and

  • Newtonheld that the rules governing space and time were absolute. One meter was always

  • one meter long; one hour would always be one hour long

  • Matter was made up of immutable and indivisible atoms.

  • And energy moved through a medium called etherbecause everything had to move through something,

  • right? God wouldn't just make, I dunno, a howling void?

  • And with new disciplines like thermodynamics and fun applications like steam power and

  • light bulbs, human understanding of the fundamental forces of nature seemed pretty solid.

  • To quote historian of science Milena Wazeck, by 1900, “physics

  • was perceived by many to be an almost completed discipline.”

  • But within this almost-completeness lurked many unanswered questions. One of the biggest

  • was the failure of the MichelsonMorley experiment in 1887. They'd attempted to

  • demonstrate that the speed of light changed just a little when measured from the earth,

  • which is always moving, relative to the ether, which never moves.

  • But despite meticulous efforts, they couldn't find any slowing-down. Light moved at a constant

  • speedalmost as if there was no ether. Then there was the electron and radioactivity.

  • In 1897, English physicist J. J. Thomson showed that cathode rays were made up of discrete

  • particles, way smaller than whole atomselectrons. And around the same time, Marie Curie proposed

  • the theory of radioactivity, which classical physics didn't predict.

  • Then, in the early 1900s, Ernest Rutherford experimented on radioactive decay. He named

  • radioactive alpha, beta, and gamma particles, classifying them by their ability to penetrate

  • different kinds of matter. And Henri Becquerel measured

  • beta particles and realized they were actually electrons exiting the nuclei of atoms at high

  • speeds. So by the early 1900s, radioactive decay was

  • understood, and the crisis of the immutable atom was as deep as the crisis of the ether.

  • A bunch of folks were investigating Maxwell's equations and looking at black-body radiation,

  • or the heat emitted by dark objects when they absorb light.

  • Then Heinrich Hertz, the original radio wave guy, discovered the photoelectric effect,

  • or the paradox that certain metals produce electrical currents when zapped with wavelengths

  • of light above a certain threshold. Things started to get messy. Energy was thought

  • to be a continuous wave. But according to wave-based theory, there might be infinite

  • energy radiated back by black bodies zapped with certain wavelengths. This seemingly violated

  • the newly established laws of thermodynamics. Like, infinite energy doesn't seem right. So, in trying to explain the weird results

  • about light and heat, German physicist Max Planck theorized that light

  • may not be a wave after all, but a series of particles or quantum units. All very non-“classical.”

  • Sorry, Aristotle! Check out Crash Course: Physics for more about

  • quantum weirdness! Enter Albert.

  • Einstein was born in 1879 and grew up in southern Germany, Italy, and Switzerland. He dropped

  • out of high school, then studied to teach physics and math and became a Swiss citizen.

  • But he couldn't get a teaching jobbecause he was Jewish.

  • So in 1901 he took a job at the patent office and started a Ph.D. at the University of Zurich,

  • which he finished in 1905. You're going to want to remember that year…. 1905.

  • Now, Al wasn't an academic hotshot or self-funded amateur. He was a working-class nobody who

  • did physics on the side. But he was also a patent officer who spent his days pouring

  • over technical documents. He was an outsider obsessed with math because

  • math is beautiful, and yet he was a deeply practical person who believed that good math

  • and science could be communicated plainly. Plus, he was young and bold. And he had a

  • super smart and supportive first wife, Serbian mathematician Mileva Marić.

  • So, the year he finished his Ph.D., 1905,

  • Al published his dissertation and four papers that changed physics overnight. This was his

  • annus mirabilis or miracle year, like 1666 had been for Newton.

  • Help us out, ThoughtBubble. At age twenty six, Einstein published revolutionary

  • work on:

  • 1. Brownian motion, or the random motion of particles in fluids;

  • 2. the photoelectric effect, supporting the idea of energy as a series of particles, not a wave;

  • 3. the equivalence of mass and energy; and

  • 4.special relativity.

  • Special relativity, especially made Einstein a scientific rock star. He proved that nothing

  • can move faster than light. This explained why Michelson and Morley hadn't observed

  • light slowing in ether. And a lot of other things. Einstein got rid of all reference frames for

  • space and time. There was no longer some universal space in which physics happened. All measurements

  • became relative to the position and speed of the observer.

  • Space and time became one mathematically continuous spacetime. So an event at one time for observer

  • A could take place at a completely different time for observer B.

  • And the only constant in the entire system became the speed of lightwhich classical

  • physics predicted could change! From special relativity followed the equivalence

  • of mass and energy proof. Which was also mind-blowing. It's probably the most memorable physics

  • formula ever, since it's printed on mugs and T-shirts the world over: E = mc2. Or,

  • energy equals mass times the speed of light, squared. Or, mass and energy can be converted

  • into each other! Or, as Einstein said: “…mass and energy

  • are both but different manifestations of the same thing—a somewhat unfamiliar conception

  • for the average mind.” Now, it's important to note that Einstein's

  • new system of physics is simply a different system than Netwon's. “Massandenergy

  • mean something different in the two systemsbecause, to put it bluntly, Newton's system turns

  • out to be not so universal. It only seems to work on earth, because we aren't particularly

  • massive or fast-moving, compared to stars.

  • Thanks Thought Bubble. We don't have time to explain all of the cool science that Einstein

  • and his generation of physicists did around World War One, but two things stand out:

  • In 1915, Einstein published the theory of general relativity. Special relativity was

  • all about comparing physical effects from different observer positions in terms of velocity,

  • or speed in a particular direction. General relativity provided all of the complicated

  • math regarding relativity and acceleration, or speeding up or down.

  • General relativity explains the physics of all situations. Special relativity is one

  • specific case of general relativity. General relativity nailed the coffin shut

  • on the classical, Euclidean worldview: now gravity itself was shown not to be a force like light,

  • but an effect, a distortion in the shape of space due to mass

  • So the planets didn't follow certain paths because of the attraction of the sun's gravity,

  • but because the space before them was curved by the sun's mass.

  • Einstein's universe wasn't a series of perfect spheres in an ether, but a void whose

  • very dimensionswhose rules, basically, other than the speed of lightcould change.

  • Many of his colleagues initially objected to this, but Einstein was confidentand

  • patient. Astronomers awaited a solar eclipse in 1919, that allowed them to experimentally

  • confirm Einstein's theory.

  • The confirmation of gravitational lensing made Einstein a scientific hero and an icon of

  • pop culture. As The Times of London reported, “Newtonian Ideas Overthrown.”

  • The second major act of science Einstein did around World War One was contribute to the

  • birth of modern particle physics. This story is about, in part, Einstein getting it wrong.

  • In 1911, Ernest Rutherford and Danish physicist Niels Bohr [“NEELS BOAR”] theorized a

  • model of the atom with electrons zipping around a heavy nucleus. Scientists began to study

  • the physics of the very small, just as Einstein was working out the physics of the very large.

  • But over the 1920s, these particle physicists saw a lot of weird quantum or particle-like

  • effects. Basically, Bohr's Copenhagen group showed

  • that very small particles tend to act like particles sometimes but like waves at other

  • times. Like waves, their behaviors have probabilities. But when measured, individual particles are,

  • well particles. They are or aren't there. In 1926, two German physicists worked out

  • the math behind these quantum mechanics: Werner Heisenberg invented matrix mechanics, which

  • [large exhale] are complex and Erwin Schrödinger, wave mechanics. And lots of dead/not-dead

  • cat jokes. Because, in 1927, Heisenberg proposed his

  • uncertainty principle: any observer can detect the position or velocity of any quantum particle,

  • at any given time interval, but not both at the same time.

  • Einstein haaated this. He believed in a universe ordered by an ultimate rationality, and he

  • famously quipped, “God doesn't play dice with the world.” But Al, who had contributed

  • in lots of ways to the emerging model of atoms and particles of energy, was wrong about uncertainty.

  • By the 1930s, Einstein was easily the most famous scientist since Darwin. There was just

  • one problem. He was still Jewish. And living in Germany.

  • So in 1933, Einstein renounced his German citizenship and took a professorship at Princeton.

  • As a celebrity genius with intimate knowledge of the cutting-edge of German scienceand

  • perfect hairEinstein had the ears of politicians anxiously planning for another great war in

  • Europe. And, after one of his physicist buddies demonstrated

  • that an atom could be straight-up, stone-cold split open, Einstein felt that he had a moral

  • obligation to explain to the American establishment just how powerful atomic energy could be

  • We'll pick up this thread next time. Suffice to say, World War Two eventually ended,

  • and a new Cold War startedwith scientific discovery, especially in the physics that

  • Einstein had created, as the new measuring stick of imperial might.

  • Israel offered Einstein the presidency, which he turned down. He lived the rest of his life

  • in the home of technological innovation andfat sandwiches”—New Jersey.

  • Einstein always regretted that his work was used for violent ends. In fact, he was generally

  • skeptical of modernity. Way back during World War One, he wrote: “Our entire much-praised

  • technological progress, and civilization generally, could be compared to an axe in the hand of

  • a pathological criminal.” And yet, in the end, even the horrors of two

  • world wars never shook his faith that there was great meaning in the universe—a code

  • to be deciphered by science. He died never quite accepting quantum randomness,

  • and believing that, one day, humans would crack the code.

  • Next timethe Americans use Einstein's world-threatening Bomb, and warfare changes

  • forever. It's the birth of nuclear physics, the end of World War Two, and the beginning

  • of the Cold War.

  • Crash Course History of Science is filmed in the Dr. Cheryl C. Kinney studio

  • in Missoula, MT and it's made possible with the help of all these nice people.

  • And our animation team is Thought Cafe.

  • Crash Course is a Complexly production. If you wanna keep imagining the world complexly with us,

  • you can check out some of our other channels like

  • Scishow, Eons, and Sexplanations.

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There was physics before Einsteinin the same way that there was biology before Darwin.

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