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Einstein became a citizen of the United States in 1940.
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- In 1933, Einstein immigrated to the United States and
settled down in Princeton, New Jersey. He became a citizen of the United States
in 1940.
- Einstein died in 1955. Until 1965 (ten years after his death),
many ambitious students wanted to go to Princeton to study physics and
to meet Einstein. He was a God-like figure.
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This video talks about a Korean boy who wanted to meet Einstein.
- On March 12, 1958, I received a letter from Princeton telling me that
I was one of the 15 students admitted to their graduate program in physics.
This was the happiest day in my life.
- How could I talk to a man in Heaven? How did Moses talk to God?
Click here for a story.
- Click here for my Princeton page.
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Click here for the first nuclear test on July 16, 1945.
A-bomb explosions on Hiroshima (August 6) (left) and
on Nagasaki (August 9) in Japan (1945).
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- Einstein became known to the world as the inventor of the nuclear
bomb after the end of World War II in 1945. This is not true.
- The nuclear bomb was developed by the scientists,
engineers, and administrators of the
Manhattan Project.
- Einstein's name is nowhere in the literature on this project. However,
the project needed a huge amount of money, and the president of the United
States was the only person who could supply this amount. The president
at that time was Franklin Roosevelt.
- However, nobody in the Manhattan Project was prominent enough to write a
letter which could reach Roosevelt's attention. Thus, they needed a
letter from Einstein. Roosevelt would read a letter from Einstein.
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Nazi poster depicting Einstein's immigration to the United States.
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- Then who could approach Einstein for this letter?
- It is my understanding that John von Neumann and Eugene Paul Wigner
wrote the letter and approached Einstein for his signature. They could
talk to Einstein, while not many American scientists could approch him.
- Wigner and von Neumann were the residents of Princeton as Einstein was.
- They were born in Hungary and went to the
same high school in Budapest,
but they were educated in Germany. Einstein was born and educated in Germany.
- Like Einstein, they spoke German, and they could talk about German
physicists, including
Werner Heisenberg, who could have developed nuclear bombs for Adolf Hitler.
- Their reasoning to Einstein was that Hitler and his German physicists
were working on the dreadful nuclear bomb. Einstein had to sign the
letter to Roosevelt in order to save this world.
- I spotted this Nazi poster
depicting Einstein's immigration to the United States at the
Einstein Museum in Bern,
Switzerland (2014). This poster tells Einstein was afraid of Hitler's possible nuclear bombs.
- This story is based on what I heard from Eugene Wigner, but
he is not responsible if the story is less than 100% accurate.
I am responsible. It is possible that my understanding of what I heard
from Wigner could be less than perfect.
During the period (1986-90), I went to Princeton often to tell the
stories Wigner wanted to hear. He also told me many interesting
stories. We published seven papers together.
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Einstein with nuclear explosion and his E = mc2
on the cover of the Time magazine (July 1, 1946).
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- After the nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
in 1945,
Einstein's name and his E = mc2
became widely known to the world. The nuclear bomb converts the mass of
the material into energy, but we cannot do this experiment too often.
Yet, we can do some fun calculations.
- During the second world war (1939-45), the Soviet Union produced
many combat tanks to destroy Hitler's German army. Their tank model
was called T-34. They were developed in the industrial
city of Kharkov (now in Ukraine), and were mass-produced, during
the war, at the open-air factories in the city of Chelyabinsk hidden
in the Ural Mountains.
There, 18,000 tanks were produced. Hitler was not aware of this.
Indeed, the T-35 tank is a historical machine.
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T-34 tank displayed at the WWII memorial park in Kharkov, Ukraine. I was
there in 1999.
Nuclear-powered aircraft carrier "Enterprize" of the U.S. Navy commisioned
in 1961.
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- The mass of this tank is about 50 tons (50,000 kg). If we covert its
entire mass to energy according to Einstein's formula, it produces
enough electrical energy consumed by the entire world for one year.
- There are these days many nuclear power generating stations in the
world. There are also many nuclear submarines and nuclear aircraft
carriers.
It would be interesting to calculate the mass difference between
the nuclear fuel and the nuclear waste, and compare this difference
with the energy produced. The produced energy is measurable, but
the mass difference could be very small. In any case, this calculation
does not seem to serve useful purposes.
- Einstein's E = mc2 has been and still is valid
in particle decay processes. When one heavy particle decays into several
light particles, the sum of those light masses and their kinetic
energies are equal to the mass of the initial heavy particle.
This formula is valid in all high-energy collision processes.
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