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  1. Luc Prokop
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  3. Mrs. Roof
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  5. AP World History
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  7. 3/21/18
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  9. Einstein
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  13. Because of his publication of the Theory of General Relativity, Albert Einstein is widely known as the most famous physicist and perhaps scientist to ever live. Not only did Einstein's Theory of General Relativity give way to the presumed existence of black holes, and the theorization of the big bang, but it also has had many implications on items we use today. Things such as time-zones, and the GPS (Global Positioning System) are taken from granted daily and would have no purpose had it not been for the Einstein's Theory of General Relativity.
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  15. Einstein was born on March 14th, 1879, in the city of Ulm at the southern tip of Germany. Shortly after he was born, Einstein moves to Munich, a city just east of where he was born. Having been raised by Hermann and Pauline Einstein, a Jewish couple, Albert had a moderate, middle-class, upbringing. While young, Einstein loved the topics of Math and Science, while also managing to play the violin very well. In 1895, at the age of 16, however, Albert dropped out of school and applied to the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Einstein failed to pass the entry exam, and therefore became a student at the Swiss Federal Polytechnic Institute at Zurich. Shortly after beginning his studies, Einstein met and married Mileva Maric, a fellow student of his. This marriage came shortly before Einstein's famous year of 1905.
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  17. From the time of Albert meeting Mileva to the year 1905, Einstein worked for the Swiss Patent Office. Bored with his profession Albert still continued to do other work on the side. In 1905 Einstein published four of his most famous articles. In his third paper of 1905, titled "On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies", Einstein used his newly formed Theory of Special Relativity to combine Newtonian physics, and James Maxwell's discovery of a constant speed of light. Although this theory was fundamental in it's year, it only gave way to the more famous Theory of General Relativity.
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  19. Although becoming a widely recognized name after his papers, Einstein continued to work at the Swiss Patent Office until 1909 when he was offered a job at the University of Zurich. Einstein continued his studies here until 1913 when he moved to Berlin and began work at the University of Berlin. Little did Einstein know that this move would be vital in the following years.
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  21. In 1915, while still practicing teaching at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics, Einstein published the greatest accomplishment of his life, the Theory of General Relativity. In this theory it was demonstrated that not only motion but also gravity has effects on time and space. Having shown previously in his Theory of Special Relativity, Einstein demonstrated the universe to be made of a sort of "fabric" where time and space were combined. Now, not only did Einstein solidify this through mathematical equations, but he also stated that "if light is bent by acceleration, it must also be bent by gravity"1. This was a revolutionary though and accomplishment in physics, putting scientists one step closer to creating a "Grand Unified Theory" (GUT)2. With no scientific accomplishment of this size having taken place since Newton's laws of gravity, almost 300 years prior, Einstein's Theory of General Relativity was just beginning its journey in the world.
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  23. As a result of Einstein's publication of the Theory of General Relativity the theorization of the black hole and a singularity was brought to the forefront of science. With this new theory, astronomers such as Karl Swarzschild were able to solve problems previously thought impossible. Swarzschild was the first major scientific mind to realize the importance of Einstein's theory, and attempt to solve Einstein's equations. In Swarzchild's book, "On the Field of Gravity of a Point Mass in the Theory of Einstein", he presented work-throughs of Einstein's unpolished equations, and provided evidence for "a, then, implausible situation about the effects of severely compressed matter on gravity and energy"3. From this point on, Swarzschild's book which was based on Einstein's Theory of General Relativity, astrophysicists such as John Archibald Wheeler could almost certify the existence of black holes.
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  25. As stated previously, Einstein
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