those animation were so fluid and beautiful . Kudos to the maker. I wanna take a moment and appreciate the animators craft of putting thoughts in to images. I am really fond of such explanation and totally loved it. Well done.
I fail to comprehend how one person could produce theories on such diverse subjects within the scope of one year... i just turned 26, i feel lucky i survived till this age :P
He was working in a patent office and reviewing other people's work in the subject's. He was brilliant, but he stole a good portion of other people's work.
Steal is a harsh word, we all take influences from our surroundings. Everything you create is because of inspiration you've taken from another. Is Einsteins recognition hyped in light of the many other great scientists, inventors, thinkers (especially women) throughout history who go unnoticed? Definitely. It's not about who did it first, it's about who made the biggest impression. To see the interwoven connectivity between problem in diverse subjects and find creative solutions to consolidate them.
Dan Brew, What you said is not make any sense... 1. There's no one submit science knowledge through patent office because you CANNOT patent scientific theory or any theory describe the law of nature. You can only patent application which make uses of scientific theory. 2. All the knowledge of previous scientists that Einstein used to formulate his theory are in the public domain where everybody can view it. We know it precisely because it was written on the paper that Einstein publish. 3. Einstein's theory was a revolution. It's on the frontier that no one ever think this way before. As if he can steal an idea that no one ever imagine before or do you accusing him stole it from god? 4. Still, I'm kind of curious, can you elaborate what Einstein stole from other people's work? can you prove it? it might get you famous, you know?
He published 5 papers in 1905, the most cited paper in his time was one where he calculated the size of molecules which was useful to many theories and experiments in that age. Today, it is overshadowed by his other groundbreaking papers but even alone it would have been enough to put him in many physics books.
@@jeffcarroll1990shock sadly not my point, you know people can't submit science knowledge on patent right? It's purely undefined or even detailed now tell me how can he "stole" the "time is relative" from others??
@@omit4727 Einstein was SO smart that even his "biggest blunder" was proved to be, in fact, true. What Einstein called his worst mistake, scientists are now depending on to help explain the universe: The Cosmological Constant.
I created a formula so well know well known in the mathematics community that people say and it and immediately gasped as they have plagiarized me (joke). Also, I wrote a RUclips comment...
Da Vinci and Tesla in comparison produced their key contributions to humanity a bit later. ;) I suggest you two (and everyone else who feels 'significantly inadequate') to google a video called 'The Long Game Part 1: Why Leonardo DaVinci was no genius'. And its follow up 'The Long Game Part 2'. Enjoy!
Don't worry. I have PhD in astrophysics (interstellar medium in nearby colliding galaxies), and I am still sometimes struggling handling with Einstein's relativity and quantum physics.
It's mind-blowing how one genius managed to shatter our understanding of reality, to the point that we owe him an incalculable amount of discoveries and technologies, as of today, and his theories still perfectly predict so many phenomena.
One time, I went to Micro Center, and they had a bunch of famous scientists on banners on the wall. They all had their names printed on them. Except Einstein. I looked over at my mom and I was like, "Ha, they don't even need his name on that one." Damn. What a boss.
The 1905 papers were actually 5 and not 4: 1. On a new determination of molecular dimensions, Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Zurich, Bern, 1905.; 2. On a heuristic point of view concerning production and transformation of light, Annalen der Physik 17 (1905) 132-148. 3. On the motion of small particles suspended in liquids at rest required by the molecular-kinetic theory of heat, Annalen der Physik 17 (1905) 549-560. 4. On the electrodynamics of moving bodies, Annalen der Physik 17 (1905) 891-921. 5. Does the inertia of a body depend on its energy content?, Annalen der Physik 18 (1905) 639-641. Besides, the GPS accuracy (and working) derives from General Relativity (1915) and not from Special Relativity (1905).
One of the best, informative, entertaining, succinct videos about Einstein. Amazing animations and music. Well done. Always a pleasure to show it to my students.
I took a Special Theory of Relativity course on Coursera with Larry Lagerstrom. He's an awesome teacher! It's no wonder he has gotten so many teaching awards. Got an 84.6! :)
@@syedbasiljaved6201 Well, Yes, as I was a physics major in the late 1960s, but could never complete a degree because of my horrible math skills. I took the Special Theory of Relativity Course with Mr. Lagerstrom on Coursera. He does all the math using nothing more than high-school algebra and what was really great was he went through everything step-by-step. I highly recommend that course.
Einstein didn't simply realize that making the speed of light constant in all reference frames (3:30) explained phenomena. This was proven previously by Maxwell's Equations. Einstein used this fact as his postulate oh which he based his special theory of relativity
slomo lex i believe you meant that 2 mathmematicians (one of them is Einstein and i do not remember the other) were in compete to be the first to formulate general relativity, which Einstein won eventually.
@@wlan810 The other one I guess, just developed the mathematics with no ambition.. He developed it way before Einstein. If he knew it, Einstein's work would have been a lot easier.
Albert was a genius, he taught himself calculus on his own where people of his age were learning basics of trigonometry. He was ahead of his peers and didn't find academic learning interesting. Academics has nothing to do with your self learning and thinking, Einstein is perfect example and for me he's like a God.
Cups Edits Respected Sir/Madam, Almighty God is the creator & sustainer of the universe. Who is similar to nothing & nothing is comparable to him. God is nothing like a human being or like anything that we can imagine. And he is the only ONE worthy of worship. There is NO picture, statue, photograph, idol, or painting of Almighty God. No one has ever actually seen God(at least not in this lifetime). So this gives us NO right to worship anything/anyone other than him. In the Qur'an, God tells mankind what he is and what he is not. Almighty God says in Qur'an: " Say, he is Allah(God), the one and only" "Allah(God), the eternal the absolute" "He neither begets nor is he born" "And there is none equivalent to him" Qur'an (30:112) Nobody should be called God except Allah(God) himself. Peace :)
@@hsaqib8995 no offense ut he didn't mean it like that bro he just meant like a very good at his profession like a god of physics too good at it not like religious god or somethuing
Why haven't we had a genius like Einstein in the 21st century yet? You would think with more people on Earth today than in 19th and 20th century, the probability of a mega genius person making a huge breakthrough in science would be higher.
@@tzakl5556 Hawking was born in 1942, 77 years ago, i'm talking about the current generations, we don't have anyone that has made breakthroughs like Einstein
i got goosebumps. i love his life story. he was a genius. also i like the factor he never gave up and kept on working. i am also fascinated by his imagination power
What really inspired me is that even though Einstein may not neccesarily be the best in regards to his mathematical knowledge, his remarkable intuition and penetrating insights still lead him to far greater results than many of those who seem to possess more prowess in technicalities.
@@xigong3009 Einstein's math chops are underrated. He beat Hilbert to the correct Field Equations for General Relativity. That takes some real mathematical gifts.
Douglas Stone, Deputy President of the Yale Quantum Institute and head of applied physics at Yale (even though he's actually a theoretical physicist) argues in his book "Einstein and the Quantum: The Quest of the Valiant Swabian" that Einstein should have received anywhere between 7 to 10 Nobel Prizes. Einstein created several FIELDS in physics: Condensed Matter Physics/Steady State Physics Relativistic Kinematics Relativistic Cosmology etc etc etc Hands down the greatest scientist of all time.
I feel like I'm building on every failure that I've ever had. But I know, deep inside me, that it's growing into something that will catapult forward with enough time. The best is yet to come! :)
Einstein is the greatest scientist to ever live, and is perhaps the most original genius science has ever produced. Most historians of science agree that he SHOULD have gotten the nobel prize for his brownian motion paper which in fact DOES explain brownian motion Einstein is the father of condensed matter physics too. If ANYTHING Einstein doesnt get enough credit for founding quantum theory. Einstein's work on the specific heat of solids should have won him another nobel prize. Einstein essentially discovered matter waves - the same Equation Einstein used for photons De Broglie used but applied it to electrons. Einstein's work on the BOSON (which should be called the Einsteinion seeing as it was Einstein who discovered this phenomenon not Bose). He did so many things that largely went under appreciated. He discovered THE equation for wave-particle duality 13 years before De Broglie did. His work on Stimulated and Spontaneous Emission, the foundation of LASER theory, should have netted Einstein another nobel prize. We still use the Einstein A and B Coefficients in steady state physics even today. Without Einstein, you cannot explain the Dulung-Petit law and the temperature of diamond. Without Einstein you don't have quantum entanglement - he was the one that discovered it in the EPR paper. According to head of applied physics at Yale University, Douglas A. Stone, Einstein should have received 7 - 10 Nobel prizes for his contributions to fundamental physics. Mind-blowing genius indeed. Incredible what one mind could do. Schrodinger never discovers the Schrodinger Equation (the wave function) without Einstein's help, and Max Born never wins the Nobel Prize without Einstein's help - both of which they have stated on the record. RUclips deletes links but type in "Douglas Stone Albert Einstein Huffington Post" into a Google search and you'll find the article in which he credibly argues that Einstein really should have won at least 7 Nobel Prizes. Incredible genius. And then you remember he also did General Relativity which would, alone, make any other scientist a top 3 scientist to ever live.
still not get to the lesson from einstein...but lovely animation and music...maybe the best mixture i ever seen. noted that both were so great that i enjoyed, distracted and missed the dub.
I'm feeling like a lot of geniuses today and throughout history can't work on their great ideas and lose their potential because they're stuck in our stupid system of having to make money for a living...
"By the special thoery of relativity it is understood that mass and energy are same. But this is an unfamiliar conception for the average minds". This was his statement when he explained his mass energy equivalence.
An unknown fact about Einstein was that he was very briefly a manufacturer of Methamphetamine. He produced some of the highest quality meth at 99% purity. He often asked colleagues "Say my Name!" They replied "Einstein!"
Kindly Remove by Debbie Miller. I’ve been trying hard to find the instrumental somewhere, but it’s like one doesn’t exist. I personally don’t like the vocals much, but maybe you do. Hope this helped 👌
those animation were so fluid and beautiful . Kudos to the maker. I wanna take a moment and appreciate the animators craft of putting thoughts in to images. I am really fond of such explanation and totally loved it. Well done.
jayesh jain as an animator... I appreciate every detail of this video... it's very good! an inspiration
plus music
Fr
Yeah
Animation is so damn hard
I fail to comprehend how one person could produce theories on such diverse subjects within the scope of one year... i just turned 26, i feel lucky i survived till this age :P
Lol
That's a bit over-dramatic but I get your point ;) Genius
He was working in a patent office and reviewing other people's work in the subject's. He was brilliant, but he stole a good portion of other people's work.
Steal is a harsh word, we all take influences from our surroundings. Everything you create is because of inspiration you've taken from another. Is Einsteins recognition hyped in light of the many other great scientists, inventors, thinkers (especially women) throughout history who go unnoticed? Definitely. It's not about who did it first, it's about who made the biggest impression. To see the interwoven connectivity between problem in diverse subjects and find creative solutions to consolidate them.
Dan Brew, What you said is not make any sense...
1. There's no one submit science knowledge through patent office because you CANNOT patent scientific theory or any theory describe the law of nature. You can only patent application which make uses of scientific theory.
2. All the knowledge of previous scientists that Einstein used to formulate his theory are in the public domain where everybody can view it. We know it precisely because it was written on the paper that Einstein publish.
3. Einstein's theory was a revolution. It's on the frontier that no one ever think this way before. As if he can steal an idea that no one ever imagine before or do you accusing him stole it from god?
4. Still, I'm kind of curious, can you elaborate what Einstein stole from other people's work? can you prove it? it might get you famous, you know?
He published 5 papers in 1905, the most cited paper in his time was one where he calculated the size of molecules which was useful to many theories and experiments in that age. Today, it is overshadowed by his other groundbreaking papers but even alone it would have been enough to put him in many physics books.
4 legendary papers in a year. absolutely amazing.
How are you verified
@@starboyjadenn omg same question he has 21 subscribers whereas i have 107 subcribers lmao
@@jeffcarroll1990shock you know how patent works right?? Hope you're just trolling or something cuz if not you can be a laughing stock
@@jeffcarroll1990shock sadly not my point, you know people can't submit science knowledge on patent right? It's purely undefined or even detailed now tell me how can he "stole" the "time is relative" from others??
@@jeffcarroll1990shock *not detailed
No matter what last year was like, this year could be your breakthrough. Like Einstein in 1905.
No
He was a genius from the beginning
He was so smart that he didnt even need teachers to learn calculus
Thanks Steve harvey
@@omit4727 Einstein was SO smart that even his "biggest blunder" was proved to be, in fact, true.
What Einstein called his worst mistake, scientists are now depending on to help explain the universe: The Cosmological Constant.
@@naytchh7 i know
No one can compare to him
At least no normal human like me or most people that waste their time watching youtube
Thanks man i need this
What have I done this year....geeezzz
I created a formula so well know well known in the mathematics community that people say and it and immediately gasped as they have plagiarized me (joke). Also, I wrote a RUclips comment...
I ask myself this every year
I watch ted this year
Ummmmmm.... I got fatter? ;-;
@@JD-rk2gq u mean...THICC
In this video, Einstein looks so cute.
your creepy
I KNOW AHAHAHAHAHAHAHH
Seriously, has Einstein ever *not* looked cute? Many of his contemporaries lusted after his glorious stache.
loooollll yes he looks so cute!
yeah I like the animation
I love how 26 year old Einstein has gray hair.
Its all relative
@@rohitjain9080 ayyyyyyy
It's genetic. All of my family members has grey hair, including me
@Jay WBell dude😅😶
me2
Imagine bringing Einstein back to life today and witness the things he would uncover with today's technology.
Oh. My. God. You've blown my mind 😱
he was a theoretical physicist. Tech will not make a major difference.
hassan ali He would probably feel satisfied knowing his gravitational waves and a few other things got proven though.
With todays tech and say 50-100 more years of study, he could probably figure out the secrets of the universe
Or he will get caught up in it like 99% of our generation and not make a significant contribution at all
its absolutely incredible how brilliant he was.
*makes 3 papers*
"Aw dammit fine we give up!"
Him: "oh btw E=MC^2
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Them: Bruh
He is overrated
@@mr.underhill5332 how?
@@mr.underhill5332 why?
As a 26-year-old who has done nothing of consequence in life, I feel significantly inadequate, now.
Oh, well. *pops on some cat videos*
After seeing this video I think we all feel significantly inadequate... So don't worry, you're not the only one 😅😔
Da Vinci and Tesla in comparison produced their key contributions to humanity a bit later. ;) I suggest you two (and everyone else who feels 'significantly inadequate') to google a video called 'The Long Game Part 1: Why Leonardo DaVinci was no genius'. And its follow up 'The Long Game Part 2'. Enjoy!
Alejandro Gllrd Lol, yes I do too! :/
The age is not important. You have many years left to improve your skills and accomplish something big ... but cat videos won't bring you closer :p
I love cat more than ever.
He accomplished more within a year than most people manage to accomplish in a lifetime
No
@@badrinath5069 ??
@@badrinath5069 its true
I think i have heard that before from planks assistant
I love watching videos/documentaries on Einstein’s theories. I can’t understand any of them really (I wish I could), but I still find them fascinating
Don't worry. I have PhD in astrophysics (interstellar medium in nearby colliding galaxies), and I am still sometimes struggling handling with Einstein's relativity and quantum physics.
I have a PhD in quantum physics and general relatively, still can't understand
I take pride in saying I'm a physicist and I use Einstein's theories everyday.
+darkenergylambda Do you make rent though?
im a MD now as well...so yeah
+darkenergylambda an MD physicist? doing what?
unappropadope i hope to do radiology research in the short future.
darkenergylambda did you have a change of heart towards your profession?
Einstein on september 1905: "oh, and by the way...."
TED-Ed, perfect combination of science and art.
One of the best animations from TED-Ed, everything so well arranged.
It's mind-blowing how one genius managed to shatter our understanding of reality, to the point that we owe him an incalculable amount of discoveries and technologies, as of today, and his theories still perfectly predict so many phenomena.
For anyone who's interested in the music:
Kindly Remove by Debbie Miller and Gavin Keese
One time, I went to Micro Center, and they had a bunch of famous scientists on banners on the wall. They all had their names printed on them. Except Einstein. I looked over at my mom and I was like, "Ha, they don't even need his name on that one." Damn. What a boss.
He's not just famous he's the symbol of intelligence , his name became synonym of intelligence !!
He's a legend
If anyone loves the background music like me, it's: Debbie Miller - "Kindly Remove"
thank you so much
I can't find the instrumental
I wonder what drove him, what compelled him to move on so sure...
+Blaze Blue "I have no special talent. I'm just passionately curious."
-Albert Einstein.
+ClawFalcon he couldnt make money, because at that time those there were only guesses
His father gave him a compass when he was young and he was intrigued by how it worked
But how can he be so intelligent? Is it the germany's education system back then?
@@alphasiera1757 Inherent talent. No way the Educational system at the time was so perfect as to produce Einstein.
One of the best and apt use of animations in TED-ed
These animation makers and sound makers deserve an award
Einstein is my idol and my inspiration!
Excellent video!
who ever animated this is a *GENIUS*
Amazing. Just amazing. The way the animations went by so fluently.
The 1905 papers were actually 5 and not 4: 1. On a new determination of molecular dimensions, Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Zurich, Bern, 1905.; 2. On a heuristic point of view concerning production and transformation of light, Annalen der Physik 17 (1905) 132-148. 3. On the motion of small particles suspended in liquids at rest required by the molecular-kinetic theory of heat, Annalen der Physik 17 (1905) 549-560. 4. On the electrodynamics of moving bodies, Annalen der Physik 17 (1905) 891-921. 5. Does the inertia of a body depend on its energy content?, Annalen der Physik 18 (1905) 639-641.
Besides, the GPS accuracy (and working) derives from General Relativity (1915) and not from Special Relativity (1905).
Thank you. People often ignore the fifth paper.
I love the animation and music in this one! Minimal animation, epic music! Very effective.
pleas tell me what's that lovely musik in the background
I'd like to know aswell. The beginning reminded me of the Dexter soundtrack "House" by Daniel Licht
thank you
Stahlzange Darude - Sandstorm
darude sandstorm
"Kindly Remove" by Debbie Miller
Beautiful use of music. I love it...
It's actualy E² = (mc²)² + (pc)²
otherwise it will just discribe objects that are standing still (boring).
An now what happens when said matter is standing still?
RFalhar v=0 => p =m*v= 0 => E² = (mc²)² => E = mc².
Everything's standing still in the right frame of reference.
Holy shit that's the Pythagorean theorem
damascus21 Yeah, you can use the Pythagorean theorem to derive Einstein's equations.
One of the best, informative, entertaining, succinct videos about Einstein. Amazing animations and music. Well done. Always a pleasure to show it to my students.
You missed on whole paper - the Avogadro Number prediction, also 1905.
music and animation in this was so good
I took a Special Theory of Relativity course on Coursera with Larry Lagerstrom. He's an awesome teacher! It's no wonder he has gotten so many teaching awards. Got an 84.6! :)
Did you start with any background in physics?
@@syedbasiljaved6201 Well, Yes, as I was a physics major in the late 1960s, but could never complete a degree because of my horrible math skills. I took the Special Theory of Relativity Course with Mr. Lagerstrom on Coursera. He does all the math using nothing more than high-school algebra and what was really great was he went through everything step-by-step. I highly recommend that course.
Which thing I love the most in TED-Ed, is the Addison's narration.....👍
4 legendary level paper in one year working as a clerk without even a lab or a subordinate to help.
Amazing video and the end presentation of Albert as an Atom was awesome
Einstein = one stone
Spielberg = mountain of games
Zuckerberg = mountain of sugar
Katzenberg = mountain of cats
+Michael McNamara
mcnamara=son of namara
+Michael McNamara ?
Bruce Lee = Bruce Lee
+Lucas z German translations. Zucker means sugar, spiel means games, etc
Heisenberg= mountain of heisen :-)
Einstein didn't simply realize that making the speed of light constant in all reference frames (3:30) explained phenomena. This was proven previously by Maxwell's Equations. Einstein used this fact as his postulate oh which he based his special theory of relativity
also, didn't einstein formulated general relativity in 1915?
With general relativity..it was a mathematician who first discovered this ..when Einstein figuratively had a writers block
slomo lex i believe you meant that 2 mathmematicians (one of them is Einstein and i do not remember the other) were in compete to be the first to formulate general relativity, which Einstein won eventually.
@Heisenberg-SchrodingerEmc2 Did he really show why? Please tell me the reason.
@@wlan810 The other one I guess, just developed the mathematics with no ambition.. He developed it way before Einstein. If he knew it, Einstein's work would have been a lot easier.
Albert was a genius, he taught himself calculus on his own where people of his age were learning basics of trigonometry. He was ahead of his peers and didn't find academic learning interesting. Academics has nothing to do with your self learning and thinking, Einstein is perfect example and for me he's like a God.
Cups Edits
Respected Sir/Madam,
Almighty God is the creator & sustainer of the universe. Who is similar to nothing & nothing is comparable to him. God is nothing like a human being or like anything that we can imagine. And he is the only ONE worthy of worship.
There is NO picture, statue, photograph, idol, or painting of Almighty God. No one has ever actually seen God(at least not in this lifetime). So this gives us NO right to worship anything/anyone other than him. In the Qur'an, God tells mankind what he is and what he is not.
Almighty God says in Qur'an:
" Say, he is Allah(God), the one and only"
"Allah(God), the eternal the absolute"
"He neither begets nor is he born"
"And there is none equivalent to him"
Qur'an (30:112)
Nobody should be called God except Allah(God) himself.
Peace :)
@@hsaqib8995 I was expecting you THEY DONT LITTERALLY MEAN IT SHUT UPPP
Cough religion cough...
@@hsaqib8995 Salam brother, I don’t think he meant it like that
@@hsaqib8995 no offense ut he didn't mean it like that bro he just meant like a very good at his profession like a god of physics too good at it not like religious god or somethuing
That's just great synchronization with the music there at the end of the video, if you notice.
Just discovered TED-Ed. I have a feeling I will spend alooot of time on this channel.
greengo You will.
Dude didn't even have the internet and he was able to come up with such profound discoveries!
Why haven't we had a genius like Einstein in the 21st century yet?
You would think with more people on Earth today than in 19th and 20th century, the probability of a mega genius person making a huge breakthrough in science would be higher.
Hawking
@@tzakl5556 Hawking was born in 1942, 77 years ago,
i'm talking about the current generations, we don't have anyone that has made breakthroughs like Einstein
Sunny shah His brain was very different from others.
Another brilliant episode!
i got goosebumps. i love his life story. he was a genius. also i like the factor he never gave up and kept on working. i am also fascinated by his imagination power
What really inspired me is that even though Einstein may not neccesarily be the best in regards to his mathematical knowledge, his remarkable intuition and penetrating insights still lead him to far greater results than many of those who seem to possess more prowess in technicalities.
@@xigong3009 Einstein's math chops are underrated. He beat Hilbert to the correct Field Equations for General Relativity. That takes some real mathematical gifts.
No one could have made a more elegant video about Albert Einstein than Ted-Ed!
The music + animation really sticks out in this one in a good way. Idk, it's just really noticeable for me
These videos are so cool. Thanks for making them!!
This animation was so beautifully done! :)
Douglas Stone, Deputy President of the Yale Quantum Institute and head of applied physics at Yale (even though he's actually a theoretical physicist) argues in his book "Einstein and the Quantum: The Quest of the Valiant Swabian" that Einstein should have received anywhere between 7 to 10 Nobel Prizes.
Einstein created several FIELDS in physics:
Condensed Matter Physics/Steady State Physics
Relativistic Kinematics
Relativistic Cosmology
etc
etc
etc
Hands down the greatest scientist of all time.
The most amazing thing about this video is the idea that Einstein was actually young once. i always thought he was born 70 years old.
My favorite video of Ted ed
I feel like I'm building on every failure that I've ever had. But I know, deep inside me, that it's growing into something that will catapult forward with enough time. The best is yet to come! :)
I swear this video is only being recommended to people around the age of 26
DIG IT I'm 26
I'm 17
19 here
I’m 20
I'm 25
My favorite ted Ed video
Einstein after publishing every paper: There is Another
That background music made everything like a thousand times better xD
If Albert had been obedient, a conformist and deferrential to senior academics; we would never have heard of him.
everything about this video is perfect - the background music,the animation,and especially the narration. Brilliant!
I'm 26, I really want to make 2022 my personal 1905. That'd be awesome.
The music in this video is soo good
Fits the video really well
Someone find it and tell me
Did you find it
ok but imagine being a student at the time and just having to relearn everything after einstein published another paper
💀
Very good example of the truth that unexpected things come from unexpected sources
By - Shivansh gupta
Do watch NatGeo's Genius Season 1, They did a great job of showing his life.
People who made this remarkable video are genius too.
E = mc^2 is actually a simplified version of E = (m^2 x c^4 + p^2 x c^2)^0.5 (assuming the object isn't moving)
Psedonymous Cat E = the square root of p^2 x c^2 + m^2 x c^4, that's the correct equation.
Not really if you consider mass to be relative.
thank you so much
Turning 26 this year. Miracles about to start. 😂
We need an update.
Oh, what a beautiful beginning soundtrack! May I have name of this song,plz?
Beautiful animation.
TED-Ed make the best animation video essays
Arguably the greatest genious of physics
Einstein is the greatest scientist to ever live, and is perhaps the most original genius science has ever produced. Most historians of science agree that he SHOULD have gotten the nobel prize for his brownian motion paper which in fact DOES explain brownian motion Einstein is the father of condensed matter physics too. If ANYTHING Einstein doesnt get enough credit for founding quantum theory.
Einstein's work on the specific heat of solids should have won him another nobel prize. Einstein essentially discovered matter waves - the same Equation Einstein used for photons De Broglie used but applied it to electrons. Einstein's work on the BOSON (which should be called the Einsteinion seeing as it was Einstein who discovered this phenomenon not Bose). He did so many things that largely went under appreciated. He discovered THE equation for wave-particle duality 13 years before De Broglie did. His work on Stimulated and Spontaneous Emission, the foundation of LASER theory, should have netted Einstein another nobel prize. We still use the Einstein A and B Coefficients in steady state physics even today. Without Einstein, you cannot explain the Dulung-Petit law and the temperature of diamond. Without Einstein you don't have quantum entanglement - he was the one that discovered it in the EPR paper.
According to head of applied physics at Yale University, Douglas A. Stone, Einstein should have received 7 - 10 Nobel prizes for his contributions to fundamental physics. Mind-blowing genius indeed. Incredible what one mind could do. Schrodinger never discovers the Schrodinger Equation (the wave function) without Einstein's help, and Max Born never wins the Nobel Prize without Einstein's help - both of which they have stated on the record.
RUclips deletes links but type in "Douglas Stone Albert Einstein Huffington Post" into a Google search and you'll find the article in which he credibly argues that Einstein really should have won at least 7 Nobel Prizes. Incredible genius.
And then you remember he also did General Relativity which would, alone, make any other scientist a top 3 scientist to ever live.
still not get to the lesson from einstein...but lovely animation and music...maybe the best mixture i ever seen.
noted that both were so great that i enjoyed, distracted and missed the dub.
I love this!! And what is that background music ah need to know
"House" by Daniel Licht.
The music made it so powerful
video made me cry.... really
loved the animationsssssss
Whoops, I meant to say that the music is amazing. What is it, and can I download it somewhere?
I pretty much recommend the tv show Genius, the 1st season is about Einstein's life. It's fascinating !
very brilliant presentation .. ! Thank you TED-Ed
extraordinary! there is no other word for these works by Albert Einstein, and thank you very much for this video. Very explanatory!
who else had goosebumps???
One Word to Describe him GENIUS
Imagine if we could somehow bring him back to life and give him all of the information in science and see what he says
Well that is impossible. His brain has been taken and dissected. He’s permanently dead.
Damn you all messed up
Just hard work and passion.
I'm feeling like a lot of geniuses today and throughout history can't work on their great ideas and lose their potential because they're stuck in our stupid system of having to make money for a living...
virus.dll sadly that's true.
virus.dll You can work as a Scientist...
You mean like Einstein did?
@@Lol-fo2zq You need money to legally do that
There's always a way :)
nicely animated - thanks !!
Einstein literally took 'this my year' seriously.
The music in the back suited it perfectly
Please tell me what is the name of the background music. Thanks!
+Ƙɨɾɑ ɭ. Mɨcɦαεℓɨς キラ It's a piano only version of "Kindly Remove" by Debbie Miller
Angus MacIntyre alright. thanks :)
Siraulo 😂
I loved that background music.
Beautiful animation and music.
"By the special thoery of relativity it is understood that mass and energy are same. But this is an unfamiliar conception for the average minds". This was his statement when he explained his mass energy equivalence.
An unknown fact about Einstein was that he was very briefly a manufacturer of Methamphetamine. He produced some of the highest quality meth at 99% purity. He often asked colleagues "Say my Name!" They replied "Einstein!"
lol
Paul y You're God damn right!
+Paul y
He's the one who knocks the Newtonian motion out of you.
+Paul y I thought that was Heisenberg. Heh.
+Adam Leach I'm not so sure about that 😂
Beautiful animations!! Thank you for a simple and enriching video
*The Song In The Background Is Beautiful*
*What Is It Called?*
Kindly Remove by Debbie Miller. I’ve been trying hard to find the instrumental somewhere, but it’s like one doesn’t exist. I personally don’t like the vocals much, but maybe you do. Hope this helped 👌