BIOGRAPHY, FAMOUS PERSON
Born March 14, 1879 Ulm, Kingdom of Württemberg, angry Germany Died 18 April 1955 (aged 76) Princeton, New Jersey, United States Residence Germany, Italy, Switzerland, Austria (now the Czech Republic), Belgium, United States Citizen
The subject of the Kingdom of Württemberg during German times (1879–1896) [note 1] Stateless (1896–1901) Swiss citizen (1901–1955) Austrian subject to Austrian-Hungarian happiness (1911–1912) The subject of the Prussian Kingdom on German anger (1914–1918) [note 1] German citizen of the Independent State of Prussia (Weimar Republic, 1918–1933) United States citizen (1940–1955) Education Federal polytechnic school (1896–1900; B.A., 1900) University of Zurich (Ph.D., 1905)
Known above General relativity Special relativity Photoelectric effect E = mc2 (mass-energy equivalence) E = hf (Planck - Einstein relation) Brown's theory of motion Einstein's field equations Bose - Einstein statistics Bose - Einstein condensate Gravitational Waves Cosmological constant Integrated field theory The EPR paradox Ensemble interpretation List of other concepts Husband and wife Mileva Marić (k.1903; c.1919) Elsa Löwenthal (k. 1919; died [1] [2] 1936) Child Einstein's "Lieserl" Hans Albert Einstein Eduard "Tete" Einstein appreciation Barnard Medal (1920) Nobel Prize in Physics (1921) Matteucci Medal (1921) ForMemRS (1921) [3] Copley Medal (1925) [3] Gold Medal from the Royal Astronomical Society (1926) Max Planck Medal (1929) Member of the National Academy of Sciences (1942) Time of Figures of the Century (1999)
Scientific career Field Physics, philosophy Institution Swiss Patent Office (Bern) (1902–1909) University of Bern (1908–1909) University of Zurich (1909–1911) Charles University Prague (1911–1912) ETH Zurich (1912–1914) Prussian Academy of Sciences (1914–1933) Humboldt University Berlin (1914–1933) Kaiser Wilhelm Institute (director, 1917–1933) German Physical Society (president, 1916–1918) Leiden University (guest, 1920) Institute for Advanced Study (1933–1955) Caltech (guests, 1931–1933) University of Oxford (guest, 1931–1933) Thesis Eine neue Bestimmung der Moleküldimensionen (New Determination of Molecular Dimensions) (1905) Doctoral advisor Alfred Kleiner Another academic supervisor Heinrich Friedrich Weber Be inspired Arthur Schopenhauer Baruch Spinoza Bernhard Riemann David Hume Ernst Mach Hendrik Lorentz Hermann Minkowski Isaac Newton James Clerk Maxwell Michele Besso Moritz Schlick Thomas Young To inspire Almost all branches of modern physics

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