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Wonder Year

In Physics by Brian Koberlein5 Comments

In 1905 Einstein published four papers that revolutionized science. For this reason 1905 is sometimes called Einstein’s wondrous year.

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Poor Einstein, Dummy Boy

In Science by Brian Koberlein2 Comments

I’ve been seeing a lot of Albert Einstein quotes recently. It struck me how the quotes are attributed to Einstein as if it gives them more power. Einstein was such a genius that his views on education or new-age philosophy must be genius as well. Of course that’s not how it works. Being very talented or knowledgable in one area doesn’t make one an authority in others. And as history shows, Einstein even got things wrong in his own field.

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Einstein and Eddington

In Relativity by Brian Koberlein4 Comments

Newton’s laws of motion and gravity predicted the motions of the planets almost perfectly. Newton’s laws are so accurate that we use them to accurately send robotic probes to Mars and other planets, but Newton’s laws aren’t perfect. The motion of some planets differ very slightly from Newton’s predictions. In the case of Uranus, its small deviation led to the discovery of Neptune. In the case of Mercury, however, its small deviation led to a completely new understanding of gravity.

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There And Back Again

In Science Fiction by Brian Koberlein5 Comments

When someone mentions time machines, you might think of fantastical machines such as Dr. Who’s TARDIS or the DeLorean in Back to the Future, but several physicists have made a serious study of time machines. Most of this work focuses on “what if” scenarios, which are really about testing the limits of a particular theoretical model, rather than actually engineering a device that can travel to the past.

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A Muse of Fire

In Science by Brian Koberlein6 Comments

Part 1 in the equations series: It’s Einstein’s most famous equation. It changed the political landscape of the world, and it gave us a true understanding of the stars.

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Cosmic Pi

In Mathematics by Brian Koberlein3 Comments

Today is March 14, which many celebrate as Pi Day since the month and day mark 3.14, which is approximately pi.It is also Albert Einstein’s birthday, so it seems fitting to ask whether π can exist in a universe as Einstein described it. Just for fun, I’m going to outline why the answer is no.

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Hubble’s Constant

In Cosmology by Brian Koberlein18 Comments

Hubble’s constant shows a relationship between the distance of a galaxy and the speed at which it moves away from us. Its discovery was the first evidence that the universe is expanding.