If you ask the average person to name one scientist from any time or place in history, one of the most common names youre likely to hear is Albert Einstein. The iconic physicist was responsible for a remarkable number of scientific advances during the 20th century, and perhaps single-handedly overthrew the Newtonian physics that had dominated scientific thought for more than 200 years. His most famous equation, E = mc, is so prolific that even people who dont know what it means can recite it. He won the Nobel Prize for advances in quantum physics. And his most successful idea the General theory of Relativity as our theory of gravity remains undefeated in all tests more than 100 years after Einstein first put it forth.
But what if Einstein had never existed? Would others have come along and made precisely the same advances? Would those advances have come quickly, or would they have taken such a long time that some of them might not have occurred, even at present? Would it have taken a genius of equal magnitude to bring his great achievements to fruition? Or do we severely overestimate just how rare and unique Einstein was, elevating him to an undeserved position in our minds based on the fact that he was simply in the right place at the right time with the right set of skills? Its a fascinating question to explore. Lets dive in.
Einstein had whats known as his miracle year in 1905, where he published a series of papers that would have revolutionary effects on a wide variety of areas in physics. But just prior to that, there were a great number of advances that had occurred recently, throwing many long-held assumptions about the Universe into great doubt. For over 200 years, Isaac Newton had stood unchallenged in the realm of mechanics: both in the terrestrial and celestial realms. His law of Universal Gravitation applied just as well to objects in the Solar System as it did to balls rolling down a hill or cannonballs fired from a cannon.
In the eyes of a Newtonian physicist, the Universe was deterministic. If you could write down the positions, momenta, and masses of every object in the Universe, you could calculate how each of them would evolve to arbitrary precisions at any moment in time. Additionally, space and time were absolute entities, and the gravitational force traveled at infinite speeds, with instantaneous effects. Throughout the 1800s, the science of electromagnetism was developed as well, uncovering intricate relationships between electric charges, currents, electric and magnetic fields, and even light itself. In many ways, particularly given the successes of Newton, Maxwell, and others, it seemed that physics was almost solved.
Until, that is, it wasnt. There were puzzles that seemed to hint at something new in many different directions. The first discoveries of radioactivity had already taken place, and it was realized that mass was actually lost when certain atoms decayed. The momenta of the decaying particles didnt appear to match the momenta of the parent particles, indicating that either something wasnt conserved or that something unseen was present. Atoms were determined to not be fundamental, but to be made of positively charged atomic nuclei and discrete, negatively charged electrons.
But there were two challenges to Newton that seemed, somehow, more important than all of the others.
The first confusing observation was the orbit of Mercury. Whereas all of the other planets obeyed Newtons laws to the limits of our precision in measuring them, Mercury did not. Despite accounting for the precession of the equinoxes and the effects of the other planets, Mercurys orbits failed to match predictions by a minuscule but significant amount. The extra 43 arc-seconds-per-century of precession led many to hypothesize the existence of Vulcan, a planet inner to Mercury, but none was there to be discovered.
The second was, perhaps, even more puzzling: when objects moved close to the speed of light, they no longer obeyed Newtons equations of motion. If you were on a train at 100 miles-per-hour and threw a baseball at 100 miles-per-hour in the forward direction, the ball would move at 200 miles-per-hour. This is what youd expect, intuitively, to occur, and also what does occur when you perform the experiment for yourself.
But if youre on a moving train, and you shine a beam of light in the forwards direction, the backwards direction, or any other direction, it always moves at the speed of light, regardless of how the train is moving. In fact, its also true regardless of how quickly the observer watching the light is moving.
Moreover, if youre on a moving train and you throw a ball, but the train and ball are both traveling close to the speed of light, addition doesnt work the way were used to. If the train moves at 60% the speed of light and you throw the ball forward at 60% the speed of light, it doesnt move at 120% the speed of light, but only at ~88% the speed of light. Although we were able to describe whats happening, we couldnt explain it. And thats where Einstein came onto the scene.
It was with this backdrop that Einstein came onto the scene. Although its difficult to condense the entirety of his achievements into even a single article, perhaps his most momentous discoveries and advances are as follows.
The equation E = mc: when atoms decay, they lose mass. Where does that mass go, if its not conserved? Einstein had the answer: it gets converted into energy. Moreover, Einstein had the correct answer: it gets converted, specifically, into the amount of energy described by his famous equation, E = mc. It works the other way as well; weve since created masses in the form of matter-antimatter pairs from pure energy based on this equation. In every circumstance its ever been tested under, E = mc is a success.
Special Relativity: When objects move close to the speed of light, how do they behave? In a variety of counterintuitive ways, but all described by the theory of Special Relativity. There is a speed limit to the Universe: the speed of light in a vacuum, and all massless entities in a vacuum move precisely at that speed. If you have mass, you can never reach, but only approach that speed, and the laws of Special Relativity dictate how objects moving near the speed of light accelerate, add-or-subtract in velocity, and how time dilates and lengths contract for them.
The photoelectric effect: When you shine direct sunlight on a piece of conducting metal, it can kick the most loosely-held electrons off of it. If you increase the lights intensity, more electrons get kicked off, while if you decrease the lights intensity, fewer electrons get kicked off. But heres where it gets weird: Einstein discovered that it wasnt based on the lights total intensity, but on the intensity of light above a certain energy threshold. Ultraviolet light only would cause the ionization, not visible or infrared, regardless of the intensity. Einstein showed that lights energy was quantized into individual photons, and the number of ionizing photons determined how many electrons got kicked off; nothing else would do it.
General Relativity: This was the biggest, most hard-fought revolution of all: a new theory of gravity governing the Universe. Space and time were not absolute, but made a fabric that all objects, including all forms of matter and energy, traveled through. Spacetime would curve and evolve owing to the presence and distribution of matter and energy, and that curved spacetime told matter and energy how to move. When put to the test, Einsteins relativity succeeded where Newton failed, explaining Mercurys orbit and predicting how starlight would deflect during a solar eclipse. Since it was first proposed, General Relativity has never been experimentally or observationally contradicted.
In addition to this, there were many other advances that Einstein himself played a major role in initiating. He discovered Brownian motion; he co-discovered the statistical rules under which boson particles operated; he contributed substantially to the foundations of quantum mechanics through the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox; and he arguably invented the idea of wormholes through the Einstein-Rosen bridge. His scientific career of contributions was truly legendary.
And yet, there are many reasons to believe that despite the unparalleled career that Einstein had, the full suite of advances that were made by Einstein would have been made by others in very short order without him. Its impossible to know for certain, but for all that we laud the genius of Einstein, and hold him up as a singular example of how one incredible mind can change our conception of the Universe as he, in fact, actually did pretty much everything that occurred on account of Einstein would have occurred without him just as well.
Prior to Einstein, back in the 1880s, physicist J.J. Thomson, discoverer of the electron, began thinking that the electric and magnetic fields of a moving, charged particle must carry energy with them, and attempted to quantify the amount of that energy. It was complicated, but a simplified set of assumptions allowed Oliver Heaviside to make a calculation: he determined the amount of effective mass that a charged particle carried was proportional to the electric field energy (E) divided by the speed of light (c) squared. Heaviside had a proportionality constant in there of 4/3 that was different from the true value of 1 in his 1889 calculation, as would Fritz Hasenhrl in 1904 and 1905. Henri Poincar independently derived E = mc in 1900, but didnt understand the implications of his derivations.
Without Einstein, we were already perilously close to his most famous equation; it seems unrealistic to expect we wouldnt have gotten the rest of the way there in short order had he not come along.
Similarly, we were already extremely close to Special Relativity. The Michelson-Morley experiment had demonstrated that light always moved at a constant speed, and had disproven the most popular aether models. Hendrik Lorentz had already uncovered the transformation equations that determined how velocities added and how time dilated, and independently along with George FitzGerald, determined how lengths contracted in the direction-of-motion. In many ways, these were the building blocks that led Einstein to develop the theory of Special Relativity, but it was, in fact, Einstein who put it together. Again, its difficult to imagine that Lorentz, Poincar, and others working at the interface of electromagnetism and the speed of light wouldnt have taken similar leaps to arrive at this profound conclusion. Even without Einstein, we were already so close.
Max Plancks work with light set the stage for the discovery of the photoelectric effect; it surely would have occurred with or without Einstein.
Fermi and Dirac worked out the statistics for fermions (the other type of particle, besides bosons) while it was Satyendra Bose who worked them out for the particles that bear his name; Einstein was merely the recipient of Boses correspondence.
Quantum mechanics, arguably, would have developed just as well in the absence of Einstein.
But General Relativity is the big one. With Special Relativity already under his belt, Einstein set about to fold in gravity. While Einsteins equivalence principle the realization that gravitation caused an acceleration, and that all accelerations were indistinguishable to the observer is what led him there, with Einstein himself calling it his happiest thought that left him unable to sleep for three days, others were thinking along the same lines.
Of all the advances that Einstein made, this was the one that his peers were farthest behind when he put it forth. Still, although it might have taken many years or even decades, the fact that others were already so close to thinking precisely along the same lines as Einstein leads us to believe that even if Einstein had never existed, General Relativity would eventually have fallen into the realm of human knowledge.
We typically have a narrative in how science advances: that one individual, through a sheer stroke of genius, spots the key advance or way of thinking that everyone else had missed. And that without that one individual, humanity would never have gained that remarkable knowledge that was stored away, just waiting to come out, in the mind of that key, brilliant realization.
Only, when we examine the situation in greater detail, we find that a great many individuals were often nipping at the heels of that discovery just before it was made. In fact, when we go back through history, we find that many people had similar realizations to one another at about the same time. Alexei Starobinskii put many of the pieces of inflation together before Alan Guth did; Georges Lematre and Howard Robertson put together the expanding Universe before Hubble did; even Sin-Itiro Tomonaga worked out the calculations of quantum electrodynamics before Julian Schwinger and Richard Feynman did.
Einstein was the first to cross the finish line on a number of independent and remarkable scientific fronts, but had he never come along, many others were close behind him. He may have possessed every bit of dazzling genius that we often attribute to him, but one thing is almost certain: genius is not as unique and rare as we often assume it to be. With a lot of hard work and a little luck, almost any properly trained scientist can make a revolutionary breakthrough simply by stumbling upon the right realization at the right time.
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