Albert Einstein's Big Idea HD Documentary (With 17 Subtitles)
-
0:08 - 0:11(ticking)
-
0:14 - 0:15MAN:
When we think
of E equals m c-squared, -
0:15 - 0:18we have this vision of Einstein
as an old, wrinkly man -
0:18 - 0:19with white hair.
-
0:19 - 0:23MAN 2:
E equals m c-squared
is not about an old Einstein. -
0:26 - 0:29It's actually about a young,
energetic, dynamic, -
0:29 - 0:31even a sexy Einstein.
-
0:33 - 0:36ACTOR AS EINSTEIN:
What would I see if I rode
on a beam of light? -
0:43 - 0:44MAN:
Perhaps some sort -
0:44 - 0:47of electrical force is emanating
-
0:47 - 0:48outwards from
the wire. -
0:48 - 0:49What?
-
0:49 - 0:50MAN:
Faraday, my dear boy, -
0:50 - 0:52electricity flows
through a wire, -
0:52 - 0:54not sideways to it.
-
0:54 - 0:55You see, John?
-
0:55 - 0:56You see?
-
1:01 - 1:03MAN:
It is my great ambition
to demonstrate -
1:03 - 1:07that nature is a closed system;
-
1:07 - 1:09that in any transformation,
-
1:09 - 1:14no amount of matter, no mass,
is ever lost, -
1:14 - 1:16and none is gained.
-
1:18 - 1:19The people...
-
1:19 - 1:20Lavoisier.
-
1:20 - 1:22It is they who will determine
right and wrong. -
1:27 - 1:29( both laughing )
-
1:29 - 1:30MAN:
Emilie, -
1:30 - 1:31you are
being absurd! -
1:31 - 1:32Why ascribe
to an object -
1:32 - 1:35a vague and immeasurable
force like vis viva? -
1:35 - 1:38It is a return
to the old ways! -
1:38 - 1:42Are you capable of discovering
something of your own? -
1:42 - 1:44I discovered you!
-
1:44 - 1:47WOMAN:
There is no right time
for the truth. -
1:52 - 1:54Frãulein Meitner?
-
1:54 - 1:55Yes?
-
1:55 - 1:55Otto Hahn.
-
1:57 - 1:59The nucleus is our focus.
-
2:00 - 2:01The Jewess endangers
our institute. -
2:01 - 2:03We can't harbor
a Jew! -
2:03 - 2:06If she stays,
the regime will
shut us all down! -
2:10 - 2:12They've split the atom.
-
2:12 - 2:13No, no, no.
-
2:13 - 2:15You've split the atom!
-
2:17 - 2:23Energy equals mass
times the square of
the speed of light! -
2:23 - 2:24( laughs )
-
2:28 - 2:31Would you like me to check
your mathematics? -
2:45 - 2:49Major funding for NOVA
is provided by the following... -
2:51 - 2:54Shouldn't what makes
each of us unique -
2:54 - 2:57supporting NOVA and promoting
public understanding of science. -
3:00 - 3:04Funding for "Einstein's
Big Idea" is provided -
3:04 - 3:07by the National
Science Foundation, -
3:07 - 3:10where discoveries begins.
-
3:10 - 3:13And by the Alfred P. Sloan
Foundation, -
3:13 - 3:15to portray the lives
of men and women -
3:15 - 3:18engaged in scientific
and technological pursuit. -
3:18 - 3:21And the U.S. Department
of Energy, -
3:21 - 3:23fostering science and security.
-
3:23 - 3:28And the Universities
Research Association. -
3:28 - 3:30Major funding for NOVA
is also provided -
3:30 - 3:32by the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting, -
3:32 - 3:34and by PBS viewers like you--
thank you. -
3:48 - 3:51NARRATOR:
A hundred years ago, -
3:51 - 3:54a deceptively simple formula
revealed a hidden unity -
3:54 - 3:56buried deep in the fabric
of the universe. -
4:01 - 4:04It tells
of a fantastic connection -
4:04 - 4:07between energy,
matter and light. -
4:09 - 4:13Its author was
a youthful Albert Einstein. -
4:13 - 4:17It's the most famous equation
in the world: -
4:17 - 4:22E equals m c-squared.
-
4:24 - 4:26MAN:
All aboard! -
4:29 - 4:31( train whistle toots )
-
4:31 - 4:33LITHGOW:
But while we've all heard -
4:33 - 4:35of Einstein's big idea,
-
4:35 - 4:37very few of us know
what it means. -
4:40 - 4:45In fact, E equals m c-squared
is so remarkable -
4:45 - 4:49that even Einstein wasn't sure
if it was really true. -
4:52 - 4:53WOMAN:
Albert, darling, -
4:53 - 4:56you're later than I expected.
-
4:58 - 5:01We've only got sausage
and cheese tonight. -
5:02 - 5:04What is it?
-
5:04 - 5:06We need to talk.
-
5:06 - 5:07Has something happened?
-
5:07 - 5:08Oh, no, nothing.
-
5:08 - 5:10Sorry, no.
-
5:10 - 5:12I spent most of the day
-
5:12 - 5:16staring out
the window at work
looking at trains, -
5:16 - 5:17and I started
to think -
5:17 - 5:22about an object
and how much energy it had. -
5:22 - 5:23Can I explain it to you?
-
5:23 - 5:25Of course you can.
-
5:25 - 5:27But first...
( kisses ) dinner! -
5:27 - 5:29Hmm? Food, then talk.
-
5:33 - 5:35I think the gods
are laughing at me. -
5:39 - 5:42LITHGOW:
The gods were not laughing
at Einstein. -
5:42 - 5:46He'd united
in one stunning insight -
5:46 - 5:50the work of many
who had come before him-- -
5:50 - 5:53scientists who'd fought
and even died -
5:53 - 5:56to create each part
of the equation. -
5:56 - 5:59The story
of E equals m c-squared -
5:59 - 6:01starts long before Einstein
-
6:01 - 6:05with the discovery
of "E" for energy. -
6:18 - 6:20In the early 19th century,
-
6:20 - 6:24scientists didn't think
in terms of "energy"; -
6:24 - 6:29they thought in terms of
individual "powers" or "forces." -
6:29 - 6:32These were all disconnected,
unrelated things: -
6:32 - 6:37the power of the wind,
the force of a door closing, -
6:37 - 6:38a crack of lightning.
-
6:38 - 6:40( thunder rumbles )
-
6:40 - 6:41The idea that there might be
-
6:41 - 6:44some sort of overarching,
unifying energy -
6:44 - 6:50which lay behind all these
forces had yet to be revealed. -
6:50 - 6:51One lowly man's drive
-
6:51 - 6:55to understand the hidden
mysteries of nature -
6:55 - 6:57would begin to change all that.
-
7:04 - 7:07MAN:
Young Michael Faraday hated
his job. -
7:07 - 7:09He was uneducated,
the son of a blacksmith. -
7:09 - 7:12He'd been lucky to become
a bookbinder's apprentice. -
7:14 - 7:16But Faraday craved one thing.
-
7:16 - 7:17He craved knowledge.
-
7:17 - 7:19He read every book
that passed through his hands. -
7:19 - 7:21He developed
a passion for science. -
7:22 - 7:25All of his free time
and his meager wages were poured -
7:25 - 7:27into his self-education.
-
7:27 - 7:29He was on the threshold
of an incredible journey -
7:29 - 7:31into the invisible world
of energy. -
7:45 - 7:48LITHGOW:
Faraday had impressed
one of his master's customers -
7:48 - 7:52and was rewarded with a ticket
that would change his life. -
7:52 - 7:54Excuse me, please.
-
7:54 - 7:56Can I pass, please?
-
7:57 - 7:59"Can I pass?"
-
7:59 - 8:02Some of us are trying
to improve ourselves, -
8:02 - 8:05if people will let us.
-
8:05 - 8:06Of course, of course--
pass, pass. -
8:07 - 8:08This way
to a better life. -
8:08 - 8:10( chuckles )
-
8:10 - 8:14MAN:
In the early 1800s, science was
the pursuit of gentlemen, -
8:14 - 8:18something Faraday
was clearly not. -
8:18 - 8:20He had a rudimentary education,
-
8:20 - 8:26he'd read widely,
he'd gone to public lectures, -
8:26 - 8:30but in 1812 he was given tickets
to hear Sir Humphry Davy, -
8:30 - 8:32the most prominent chemist
of the age. -
8:36 - 8:37( groans )
-
8:37 - 8:40( laughing )
-
8:40 - 8:45LITHGOW:
Nineteenth-century scientists
were the pop stars of their day. -
8:45 - 8:47Their lectures were
hugely popular. -
8:47 - 8:53Tickets were hard to come by,
and Davy reveled in his status. -
8:53 - 8:55They're waiting.
-
8:55 - 8:56I know.
-
8:58 - 9:02LITHGOW:
He was also a keen follower
of the latest fashion-- -
9:02 - 9:05nitrous oxide, or laughing gas.
-
9:05 - 9:10He said it had all the benefits
of alcohol without the hangover. -
9:10 - 9:13( laughing )
-
9:13 - 9:14( clears throat )
-
9:14 - 9:16Electricity, ladies
and gentlemen, -
9:16 - 9:19a mysterious force that can
unravel the confusing mixture -
9:19 - 9:22of intermingled substances
-
9:22 - 9:26that surround us and produce
pure... pure elements! -
9:26 - 9:29GATES:
Davy was an absolutely
first-rate scientist. -
9:29 - 9:31However, many will come to say
-
9:31 - 9:34that his greatest discovery is
Michael Faraday. -
9:34 - 9:36DAVY:
Metals-- unknown, that is, -
9:36 - 9:40until I isolated potassium
from molten potash and sodium, -
9:40 - 9:42as I showed you last time,
from common salt. -
9:42 - 9:45( voice fades ):
That same magical electric... -
9:45 - 9:48LITHGOW:
Faraday may not have been born
a gentleman, -
9:48 - 9:51but he wasn't going to let
class barriers stop him -
9:51 - 9:53from pursuing
a career in science. -
9:56 - 9:57He worked for nights on end
-
9:57 - 10:02to bind his lecture notes
into a book for his new hero. -
10:04 - 10:09FARADAY:
Lord, help me to think
only of others... -
10:09 - 10:12to be of use to mankind.
-
10:12 - 10:14Help me be part
of the great circle -
10:14 - 10:16that is your work and love.
-
10:18 - 10:20Lord, I am your servant.
-
10:28 - 10:30This is excellent work, Faraday.
-
10:31 - 10:35So, what is it you aim
to do with your life? -
10:35 - 10:38My desire, sir, is
to escape from trade, -
10:38 - 10:41which I find vicious
and selfish, -
10:41 - 10:43and to become
a servant of science, -
10:43 - 10:48which, I imagine, makes its
pursuers amiable and liberal. -
10:48 - 10:49( laughs briefly )
-
10:51 - 10:52Really?
-
10:52 - 10:55Well, I shall leave it
to the experience of a few years -
10:55 - 10:56to set you right on that score.
-
10:56 - 11:00Look, I haven't anything
at the moment. -
11:00 - 11:02I'll send a note
if anything comes up. -
11:07 - 11:09LITHGOW:
Despite this
humiliating setback, -
11:09 - 11:13Faraday was determined to
break free from his daily toil. -
11:17 - 11:19His patience was rewarded.
-
11:29 - 11:30( explosion, then Davy screams)
-
11:39 - 11:40DAVY:
Newman... -
11:41 - 11:43meet Mr. Michael
Faraday. -
11:43 - 11:46He's going to be my helper
while I recover. -
11:46 - 11:49He assures me he is
a Christian fellow. -
11:49 - 11:52Perhaps with God
and Faraday in charge
of the chemicals, -
11:52 - 11:54you and I will be safe
in our place of work. -
11:54 - 11:57Thank you,
Professor Davy. -
11:57 - 11:58Welcome, Faraday.
-
11:58 - 11:59Oh, no, thank you,
-
11:59 - 12:01and thank you,
Sir Humphry. -
12:01 - 12:02Just stick to your job
and do as you're told -
12:02 - 12:04and you'll be fine, Faraday.
-
12:10 - 12:15LITHGOW:
Faraday became the laboratory
assistant, eagerly absorbing -
12:15 - 12:19every scrap of knowledge
that Davy deigned to impart. -
12:19 - 12:23But in time, the pupil
would surpass the master. -
12:29 - 12:32The big excitement of the day
was electricity. -
12:32 - 12:35Another charge, Newman.
-
12:35 - 12:37LITHGOW:
The battery
had just been invented, -
12:37 - 12:41and all manner of experiments
were being done. -
12:41 - 12:42But no one really understood
-
12:42 - 12:47what this strange force
of electricity was. -
12:49 - 12:52GATES:
The academic establishment
at the time thought -
12:52 - 12:55that electricity was, you know,
-
12:55 - 12:58like a fluid flowing through
a pipe, pushing its way along. -
12:58 - 13:01But in 1821,
a Danish researcher showed -
13:01 - 13:05that when you pass an electric
current through a wire -
13:05 - 13:07and place a compass near it,
-
13:07 - 13:10it deflected the needle
at right angles. -
13:10 - 13:11LITHGOW:
This was the first time -
13:11 - 13:15researchers had seen electricity
affect a magnet, -
13:15 - 13:16the first glimpse of two forces
-
13:16 - 13:20which had previously been seen
as entirely separate -
13:20 - 13:23now unified
in some inexplicable way. -
13:23 - 13:24Faraday, come
look at this. -
13:24 - 13:26You're the bright
spark around here. -
13:26 - 13:28Perhaps you
can work it out. -
13:28 - 13:30Oersted's reported
an amazing finding. -
13:30 - 13:32We're just
replicating it here. -
13:32 - 13:35Let's try the compass
on the other side. -
13:38 - 13:40MAN:
Now, that is -
13:40 - 13:42remarkable.
-
13:42 - 13:44But if the electrical force
is flowing through the wire, -
13:44 - 13:45why does the needle
-
13:45 - 13:47not move in
the same direction, -
13:47 - 13:48parallel
to the wire? -
13:48 - 13:50Quite.
-
13:50 - 13:53Let's try turning
the whole apparatus round. -
13:58 - 13:59Again, Newman.
-
14:03 - 14:08So, the electrical force goes
this way. -
14:08 - 14:11The compass points that way.
-
14:11 - 14:13How can one affect the other?
-
14:13 - 14:14( utters sound )
-
14:15 - 14:18Perhaps the electricity
is throwing out -
14:18 - 14:19some invisible force
-
14:19 - 14:20as it moves
along. -
14:20 - 14:21What?
-
14:21 - 14:25Perhaps some sort of electrical
force is emanating -
14:26 - 14:27outwards from
the wire. -
14:27 - 14:29Oh, my dear boy, let me tell you
-
14:29 - 14:31that at
the University of Cambridge, -
14:31 - 14:33electricity flows
through a wire, -
14:33 - 14:35not sideways to it.
-
14:35 - 14:36That may be
what they teach
at Cambridge, -
14:36 - 14:38but it doesn't explain
what's happening -
14:38 - 14:39before our eyes.
-
14:39 - 14:41No, now, let's just get on.
-
14:41 - 14:43Let's swap the compass
to below the wire. -
14:43 - 14:47LITHGOW:
Why the compass was deflected
at right angles, -
14:47 - 14:50why the electricity was
affecting the compass at all, -
14:50 - 14:53dumbfounded Davy
and many others. -
14:56 - 14:59MINISTER:
As we celebrate the marriage
of Michael and Sarah... -
14:59 - 15:03LITHGOW:
For Faraday, however,
the problem became an obsession. -
15:03 - 15:07It was a fascination
inspired by his religion. -
15:07 - 15:09For him, the problem was a way
-
15:09 - 15:12to understand God's
hidden mysteries. -
15:14 - 15:17BODANIS:
There is a small, almost
persecuted group in London -
15:17 - 15:18called the Sandemanians.
-
15:18 - 15:20They were a religious...
not really a sect, -
15:20 - 15:22they were just a small subset,
sort of like Quakers. -
15:22 - 15:25Faraday was a member
of that group. -
15:25 - 15:26It was a very gentle,
decent group. -
15:26 - 15:29They believed that underneath
the whole surface of reality, -
15:29 - 15:32everything was created by God
in a unified way; -
15:32 - 15:34that if you opened up
one little part of it, -
15:34 - 15:36you could see
how everything was connected. -
15:40 - 15:42Michael Faraday was someone
-
15:42 - 15:45who, like Einstein, thought
in terms of pictures. -
15:47 - 15:50BODANIS:
Faraday was different
from anybody else. -
15:50 - 15:53He had a flair for understanding
his experiments, -
15:53 - 15:55for understanding what was
really going on inside them. -
15:58 - 16:00LITHGOW:
By methodically placing
a compass -
16:00 - 16:02all around an electrified wire,
-
16:02 - 16:04Faraday started
to notice a pattern. -
16:12 - 16:14What everyone else at the time
had been taught -
16:14 - 16:16was that forces travel
in straight lines. -
16:16 - 16:18Faraday was different.
-
16:18 - 16:20Faraday imagined
that invisible lines of force -
16:20 - 16:22flowed around an electric wire.
-
16:24 - 16:25And then he imagined
-
16:25 - 16:28that a magnet had similar lines
emerging from it -
16:28 - 16:30and that those lines would get
caught up in this flow. -
16:30 - 16:32It was a bit
like a flag in a wind. -
16:36 - 16:39LITHGOW:
But Faraday's great leap
of imagination -
16:39 - 16:43was to turn this experiment
on its head. -
16:43 - 16:46Instead of an electrified wire
moving a compass needle, -
16:46 - 16:51he wondered if he could get
a static magnet to move a wire. -
16:51 - 16:52I've never seen you
like this, Faraday. -
16:52 - 16:56( chuckling ):
You look like
a happy child. -
16:56 - 16:59I'm shaking, Newman.
-
16:59 - 17:01Underneath, I'm shaking.
-
17:08 - 17:09( gasps )
-
17:09 - 17:10You see, John?
-
17:11 - 17:12You see?
-
17:12 - 17:13Yes.
-
17:25 - 17:28GATES:
This is the experiment
of the century. -
17:28 - 17:31It's the invention
of the electric motor. -
17:31 - 17:34Scale up the magnets
and the wires, -
17:34 - 17:38make them really big,
attach heavy weights to them -
17:38 - 17:40and they'll be dragged along.
-
17:40 - 17:42But almost more importantly,
-
17:42 - 17:45he's inventing
a new kind of physics here. -
17:46 - 17:49LITHGOW:
Although he didn't realize it
at the time, -
17:49 - 17:52Faraday had also
just demonstrated -
17:52 - 17:54an overarching principle.
-
17:54 - 17:56The chemicals in the battery
-
17:56 - 17:59had been transformed
into electricity in the wire, -
17:59 - 18:04which had combined with
the magnet to produce motion. -
18:04 - 18:10Behind all these various forces
there was a common energy. -
18:21 - 18:23BODANIS:
A couple of months earlier, -
18:23 - 18:26Davy had been elected president
of the Royal Society, -
18:26 - 18:29which was the elite body
of English science. -
18:29 - 18:31But then he saw
this great discovery -
18:31 - 18:33published in the Quarterly
Journal of Science. -
18:33 - 18:34I don't know if he was envious,
-
18:34 - 18:36but he certainly saw
that this young man -
18:36 - 18:39who had been his assistant,
this mere blacksmith's son, -
18:39 - 18:42had come up with one
of the greatest discoveries -
18:42 - 18:43of the Victorian era.
-
18:49 - 18:55Davy accuses Faraday
of plagiarizing similar work -
18:55 - 18:59from another eminent British
scientist, William Wollaston. -
18:59 - 19:02So, Faraday, what
does Wollaston
make of all this? -
19:02 - 19:05He's written to me
and assures me -
19:05 - 19:06that he's taken
no offense, -
19:06 - 19:08and he acknowledges
that what I published -
19:08 - 19:10was entirely my own work.
-
19:10 - 19:11Quite, quite.
-
19:11 - 19:14Davy is just
being an ass. -
19:14 - 19:16But will Davy now retract
his allegation? -
19:16 - 19:17Sadly, no.
-
19:17 - 19:19In fact, he is still
vehemently opposed -
19:19 - 19:21to you being elected
a member of the society. -
19:21 - 19:23Really. And what do you think?
-
19:23 - 19:27Faraday, my dear boy,
you have my vote. -
19:27 - 19:28And mine.
-
19:28 - 19:30And I believe you
even have Wollaston's. -
19:30 - 19:33Oh... What a mess!
-
19:33 - 19:34Well, no matter,
no matter-- -
19:34 - 19:36it's the science
that counts. -
19:36 - 19:37So, tell me,
-
19:37 - 19:39how does this wire
of yours spin
round its magnet? -
19:39 - 19:42What mysterious
forces are at play? -
19:42 - 19:48There seems to be
an electromagnetic interaction. -
19:48 - 19:50In my mind, I see
a swirling array -
19:50 - 19:52of lines of force spinning
-
19:52 - 19:54out of
the electrified wire -
19:54 - 19:58like a spiraling web.
-
19:58 - 19:59But invisible
lines of force-- -
19:59 - 20:01it's all a bit vague,
isn't it? -
20:01 - 20:04Faraday, might I have
a word in private? -
20:05 - 20:07Certainly.
-
20:19 - 20:20Listen, Faraday,
-
20:20 - 20:22let's stop
this nonsense. -
20:22 - 20:24I want you
to take down
your ballot paper -
20:24 - 20:25from the notice board.
-
20:25 - 20:28Sir Humphry, I see
no reason to take it down. -
20:28 - 20:31My friends have
proposed me. -
20:31 - 20:33It is they
who put the paper up. -
20:33 - 20:34I will not take it down.
-
20:35 - 20:35Good day.
-
20:41 - 20:45LITHGOW:
Faraday was elected
to the Royal Society. -
20:45 - 20:47Davy died five years later,
-
20:47 - 20:51a victim of his
many gaseous inhalations. -
20:51 - 20:55In time, Faraday's world
of invisible forces would lead -
20:55 - 20:58to a whole new
understanding of energy. -
20:58 - 21:03He'd started what Einstein would
call the "great revolution." -
21:10 - 21:14It was in the very heart of this
exciting new world of energy -
21:14 - 21:17that Einstein grew up.
-
21:27 - 21:30EINSTEIN:
My father and uncle wanted
to make their fortune -
21:30 - 21:33by bringing electric light
to the streets of Germany. -
21:36 - 21:39From an early age,
I loved to look at machines, -
21:39 - 21:41understand how things work.
-
21:45 - 21:47He's going to kill himself.
-
21:50 - 21:52Albert, stay there.
-
21:52 - 22:02( man scolding in background)
-
22:02 - 22:07EINSTEIN:
I experienced a miracle when
my father showed me a compass. -
22:07 - 22:10I trembled and grew cold.
-
22:12 - 22:16There had to be something behind
objects that lay deeply hidden. -
22:23 - 22:26At high school, they had their
ideas about what I should learn. -
22:26 - 22:27I had my own.
-
22:27 - 22:29Einstein!
-
22:29 - 22:31EINSTEIN:
I was merely interested
in physics, maths, philosophy -
22:31 - 22:34and playing the violin.
-
22:34 - 22:36Everything else was a bore.
-
22:36 - 22:37Einstein!
-
22:37 - 22:39On your feet!
-
22:42 - 22:45As you obviously
know everything -
22:45 - 22:48about geology,
tell me, -
22:48 - 22:51how do the rock strata run here?
-
22:51 - 22:54It's pretty much the same to me
-
22:54 - 22:56whichever way they run,
Herr Professor. -
23:04 - 23:07LITHGOW:
Einstein's teachers tried
to drum into him, -
23:07 - 23:08as Faraday had shown,
-
23:08 - 23:12that energy could be converted
from one form into another. -
23:12 - 23:15They also believed
that all forms of energy -
23:15 - 23:17had already been discovered.
-
23:17 - 23:20Einstein was going
to prove them wrong. -
23:20 - 23:24He would discover a new,
vast reservoir of energy, -
23:24 - 23:27hidden where no other scientist
had ever thought of looking-- -
23:27 - 23:31deep in the heart of matter.
-
23:42 - 23:46A hundred years
before Einstein's birth, -
23:46 - 23:49King Louis XV was
on the throne of France. -
23:49 - 23:53But the ancient, absolute power
of the monarchy over the people -
23:53 - 23:54was starting to be challenged.
-
23:54 - 23:56MAN:
Jacques, -
23:56 - 23:57leave the windows.
-
23:57 - 23:58Forget the rain.
-
23:58 - 23:59We need air.
-
24:01 - 24:06LITHGOW:
The French Revolution was
just around the corner. -
24:06 - 24:08( thunder rumbles )
-
24:09 - 24:11WOMAN:
This was the era
of enlightenment, -
24:11 - 24:14when intellectuals
believed very firmly -
24:14 - 24:17that the way forward
lay in science. -
24:17 - 24:19And they felt that
one of the first tasks -
24:19 - 24:21that lay ahead of them
was to rationalize -
24:21 - 24:24and to classify
every single kind of matter -
24:24 - 24:27so they could see how it
all interacted together. -
24:27 - 24:32LITHGOW:
Antoine Lavoisier, a wealthy,
aristocratic young man, -
24:32 - 24:33decided to take up this task,
-
24:33 - 24:35to see if there was
some basic connection -
24:35 - 24:38between all the stuff
of everyday life: -
24:38 - 24:41all the different substances
in the world. -
24:46 - 24:49But what worked for Lavoisier
as a scientist-- -
24:49 - 24:53his meticulous, even obsessive
attention to detail-- -
24:53 - 24:56was also to be his downfall.
-
24:58 - 25:02Monsieur Lavoisier, you are,
if my eyes do not deceive me, -
25:02 - 25:04consuming only milk
this evening. -
25:04 - 25:07First you had a glass of milk,
-
25:07 - 25:09now you are "eating"
a bowl of milk. -
25:09 - 25:12Will you next move on
to a plate of milk? -
25:12 - 25:13( chortles )
-
25:13 - 25:15LAVOISIER:
Your precise observations -
25:15 - 25:18commend you as a lady
of scientific curiosity, -
25:18 - 25:19Mademoiselle.
-
25:19 - 25:20Most unusual.
-
25:20 - 25:22As you seek knowledge,
-
25:22 - 25:23so I shall dispense it.
-
25:23 - 25:28For the last five weeks,
I have taken nothing but milk. -
25:28 - 25:30MAN:
Good God, man, -
25:30 - 25:32I would rather die than fast
-
25:32 - 25:34on milk
for five weeks! -
25:34 - 25:37Are you in the grip
of some horrendous ailment? -
25:37 - 25:39On the contrary.
-
25:39 - 25:42I am investigating the effects
-
25:42 - 25:44of diet on health.
-
25:44 - 25:46MAN:
Monsieur, with the
greatest of respect -
25:46 - 25:49to a member of the Royal
Academy of Sciences, -
25:49 - 25:53your gut must think
your throat has been slit! -
25:54 - 25:55( laughs loudly )
-
25:56 - 25:59( laughter spreads )
-
25:59 - 26:03Whereas your gut, Count, is
no doubt petitioning the Academy -
26:03 - 26:05for a widening
of your throat. -
26:05 - 26:06WOMAN ( gasping ):
Marie Anne! -
26:06 - 26:08How dare you
-
26:08 - 26:10insult
the count? -
26:13 - 26:14Don't forget what
the count offers... -
26:16 - 26:19not just marriage,
but think -
26:19 - 26:21of how you will be introduced
-
26:21 - 26:22to all the salons.
-
26:24 - 26:25You will be
-
26:25 - 26:26the toast of Paris.
-
26:28 - 26:30LAVOISIER:
Would it not be
a shame, Madame, -
26:30 - 26:32to burden you
-
26:32 - 26:36with the duties of matrimony
before you have had a chance -
26:36 - 26:38to experience
your curiosity for nature? -
26:41 - 26:43Shall we all go through?
-
26:43 - 26:46It's getting rather hot in here.
-
26:54 - 26:57Do you really plan
to marry d'Amerval? -
26:57 - 26:59There is a plan,
but it is not mine. -
26:59 - 27:00Then I must contrive
to save you. -
27:06 - 27:10LITHGOW:
Lavoisier wasn't a scientist
by profession. -
27:10 - 27:13He was the head of tax
enforcement in Paris. -
27:13 - 27:17His great idea was to build
a huge wall around the city -
27:17 - 27:20and to tax everything
that came and went. -
27:20 - 27:23But his taxes on the simple
things in life-- -
27:23 - 27:25bread, wine and cheese--
-
27:25 - 27:29did not endear him
to the average Parisian. -
27:29 - 27:32This scrupulous,
fastidious young man -
27:32 - 27:37did still allow himself
the occasional act of passion. -
27:40 - 27:44In 1771, Lavoisier married
Marie Anne Paulze, -
27:44 - 27:48the daughter of his colleague
in the tax office. -
27:50 - 27:52Thus he saved her,
as he had promised, -
27:52 - 27:57from an arranged marriage
to a count 40 years her elder. -
28:02 - 28:04Allow me to show
you something. -
28:09 - 28:12FARA:
Lavoisier, I think, found
his job as a tax collector -
28:12 - 28:13really rather tedious,
-
28:13 - 28:16and the times he looked
forward to were the evenings -
28:16 - 28:19and the weekends, when
he could indulge his passion -
28:19 - 28:21for chemical experimentation.
-
28:21 - 28:24And he called those times
his jours de bonheur, -
28:24 - 28:25his "days of happiness."
-
28:27 - 28:29Madame.
-
28:33 - 28:40What will happen if I take a bar
of copper or iron -
28:40 - 28:41and leave it outside
-
28:41 - 28:43in the rain
for months on end, -
28:43 - 28:46Madame Lavoisier?
-
28:46 - 28:47Mmm...
-
28:47 - 28:49( giggles ):
Monsieur Lavoisier? -
28:49 - 28:50The metals--
-
28:50 - 28:52what will become of them?
-
28:52 - 28:56Is this a verbal
examination -
28:56 - 28:59prior to an examination
proper, sir? -
28:59 - 29:02I merely seek the truth.
-
29:02 - 29:04Then you toy with me,
monsieur, -
29:04 - 29:06for you know the truth.
-
29:06 - 29:09The copper will become covered
in a green verdigris, -
29:09 - 29:12and the iron will rust.
-
29:12 - 29:14I believe the term is
-
29:14 - 29:16"calcined."
-
29:16 - 29:19Most impressive,
my charming wife. -
29:19 - 29:20But let me press
you further. -
29:20 - 29:22Hmm?
-
29:22 - 29:25When the metal rusts,
does it get heavier -
29:25 - 29:27or lighter?
-
29:27 - 29:30Why, sir, I think
you mean to trap me. -
29:30 - 29:31Oh.
-
29:31 - 29:34Then perhaps this little
butterfly should land -
29:34 - 29:37and allow me to take
a closer look. -
29:37 - 29:41Every last citizen in France
of sensible age knows -
29:41 - 29:43that when a metal rusts,
it wastes away, -
29:43 - 29:45it gets lighter
and eventually
disappears. -
29:45 - 29:46Ah, but...
-
29:46 - 29:48Ah, stop.
-
29:48 - 29:50I have not finished.
-
29:50 - 29:52Contain yourself, sir.
-
29:52 - 29:54There is more.
-
29:54 - 29:57In a recently published pamphlet
-
29:57 - 29:59by a brilliant
young chemist, -
29:59 - 30:01Antoine Lavoisier
demonstrates -
30:01 - 30:04that the iron combines
with the air. -
30:04 - 30:06It, in fact, becomes heavier.
-
30:06 - 30:08Most impressive.
-
30:08 - 30:09I intend...
-
30:09 - 30:12Now, whatever you
intend, monsieur, -
30:12 - 30:14I intend to be
by your side. -
30:14 - 30:16I will learn all I can
about your science -
30:16 - 30:18and become your
worthy colleague. -
30:18 - 30:21Then let me show you
how the iron combines
with the air -
30:21 - 30:23to form such
a delicate union. -
30:23 - 30:26Tomorrow, monsieur.
-
30:26 - 30:28Tomorrow.
-
30:43 - 30:46LITHGOW:
Marie Anne learned chemistry
at her husband's side, -
30:46 - 30:51but soon sought other ways
to contribute to his work. -
30:51 - 30:52She learned English
-
30:52 - 30:56so that she could translate
contemporary scientific works. -
30:56 - 30:57She took drawing lessons
-
30:57 - 31:00so that she could record
in forensic detail -
31:00 - 31:03the minutiae of their work
together. -
31:03 - 31:06She ran their laboratory
-
31:06 - 31:09and was the public face
of Lavoisier, Inc. -
31:09 - 31:12She was central
to the whole research effort. -
31:14 - 31:15Monsieur,
-
31:15 - 31:17that is a terrible thing to say.
-
31:17 - 31:18( giggles )
-
31:18 - 31:20You are a cheeky man.
-
31:20 - 31:21( both laugh )
-
31:21 - 31:23LAVOISIER:
This way, please, gentlemen. -
31:32 - 31:34Messieurs...
-
31:36 - 31:38it is my great ambition
-
31:38 - 31:44to demonstrate
that nature is a closed system, -
31:44 - 31:46that in any transformation,
-
31:46 - 31:51no amount of matter, no mass
is ever lost -
31:51 - 31:54and none is gained.
-
31:54 - 31:55Over here, please.
-
32:01 - 32:07This precise amount of water
is heated to steam. -
32:07 - 32:08This steam is brought
into contact -
32:08 - 32:14with a red-hot iron barrel
imbedded in the coals. -
32:16 - 32:19From this end we cool the steam
-
32:19 - 32:26but, interestingly, we collect
less water than we started with. -
32:26 - 32:31So clearly we lose
a certain amount of water. -
32:31 - 32:36However, we also collect a gas,
-
32:36 - 32:40and the weight
of the iron barrel increases. -
32:42 - 32:45Now, when we combine
these two increases-- -
32:45 - 32:47the new weight
of the iron barrel -
32:47 - 32:49and the gas we have collected--
-
32:49 - 32:56they are exactly equal to
the weight of the lost water. -
32:56 - 32:58Ah, but is it
-
32:58 - 33:00atmospheric air,
Monsieur Lavoisier? -
33:00 - 33:01No.
-
33:01 - 33:04No, because I am measuring it
to the very last grain, -
33:04 - 33:08I can see that it is lighter
than the air around us -
33:08 - 33:09and, moreover...
-
33:13 - 33:14it is flammable.
-
33:16 - 33:17( whoosh and pop )
-
33:17 - 33:18Voilà.
-
33:21 - 33:23BODANIS:
Water is made out of hydrogen
and oxygen. -
33:23 - 33:25So what he had done is
get the oxygen to stick -
33:25 - 33:28to the inside
of a red-hot iron rifle barrel. -
33:28 - 33:30He was basically just making
rust, which is oxygen and iron, -
33:30 - 33:32but he was making the rust
really quickly. -
33:32 - 33:35Now, that left the hydrogen,
what he called combustible air, -
33:35 - 33:37and that was just floating
around as a gas. -
33:37 - 33:38( whoosh and pop )
-
33:38 - 33:40No mass had been lost.
-
33:40 - 33:41It had merely been transformed,
-
33:41 - 33:45and now he wanted to transform
it all back into water. -
33:51 - 33:53This is only the beginning.
-
33:53 - 33:54In the next few months
I hope to demonstrate -
33:54 - 33:59that I can recombine this
combustible air with vital air -
33:59 - 34:02and transform them both
back into water. -
34:02 - 34:06I will re-create exactly
the same amount of water -
34:06 - 34:08that was lost here
in this process. -
34:10 - 34:14It is my hope
to complete the cycle-- -
34:14 - 34:19water into gas into water...
-
34:21 - 34:22and not a drop lost.
-
34:26 - 34:28For a long time,
Lavoisier had suspected -
34:28 - 34:29that the exact amount of matter,
the mass -
34:29 - 34:33involved in any transformation
was always conserved. -
34:33 - 34:35But to prove this,
-
34:35 - 34:37he had to perform thousands
of experiments, -
34:37 - 34:39and he had to do
the measurements -
34:39 - 34:40with incredible accuracy.
-
34:42 - 34:44That's where his great wealth
-
34:44 - 34:45from being a tax collector
came in. -
34:45 - 34:48He could afford to commission
-
34:48 - 34:50the most sensitive instruments
ever built. -
34:52 - 34:55He became
obsessed with accuracy. -
35:01 - 35:05LITHGOW:
But Lavoisier's exacting methods
were also starting to anger -
35:05 - 35:08the growing mob of hungry,
disenchanted Parisians. -
35:08 - 35:10( people yelling )
-
35:12 - 35:13MARIE ANNE:
Antoine. -
35:13 - 35:15Antoine.
-
35:15 - 35:16Oh, wake up, Antoine.
-
35:19 - 35:21I'm sorry.
-
35:22 - 35:24What time is it?
-
35:24 - 35:27It is almost time
to receive Monsieur Marat. -
35:27 - 35:28The Academy asked you
-
35:28 - 35:31to assess his designs.
-
35:31 - 35:34He claims to have made
a great discovery. -
35:34 - 35:37Oh, Antoine, have you forgotten?
-
35:38 - 35:39Oh, God.
-
35:39 - 35:42Another charlatan
with an idea to peddle. -
35:42 - 35:43God, give me patience.
-
35:51 - 35:52( Lavoisier coughs )
-
35:54 - 35:55Ah, Monsieur Marat.
-
35:55 - 35:56Monsieur.
-
35:56 - 35:58I have invented
a device -
35:58 - 36:00which projects
an image -
36:00 - 36:02of the substance of fire
onto a screen. -
36:04 - 36:05You see,
-
36:05 - 36:09when a lantern is
shone through a flame, -
36:09 - 36:12we see a shimmering pattern
above the flame. -
36:12 - 36:14My device renders
-
36:14 - 36:18the substance of fire visible.
-
36:19 - 36:22Have you collected it,
this substance of fire? -
36:22 - 36:24Have you trapped it
and measured it? -
36:24 - 36:26Well, no, but...
-
36:26 - 36:28but one can see it.
-
36:28 - 36:30I'm sorry.
-
36:30 - 36:32In the absence
of exact measurements, -
36:32 - 36:34of precise observations,
-
36:34 - 36:36without rigorous reasoning,
-
36:36 - 36:38one can only be engaging
in conjecture, -
36:38 - 36:40so this is not science.
-
36:41 - 36:42I am not given
-
36:42 - 36:44to conjecture, monsieur.
-
36:44 - 36:46No, no.
-
36:46 - 36:47If you will you excuse me.
-
36:47 - 36:49I am extremely busy today.
-
36:49 - 36:51Thank you.
-
36:51 - 36:53Thank you.
-
36:53 - 36:54So that is all?
-
36:57 - 36:58Then good day, monsieur!
-
37:04 - 37:06( slams on table )
-
37:17 - 37:20Let me guess, Marat.
-
37:20 - 37:23The king's
scientific despot
has decreed -
37:23 - 37:25that your invention
does not conform -
37:25 - 37:27to the version
of the truth -
37:27 - 37:31as laid down
by the Academy. -
37:31 - 37:33Lavoisier.
-
37:33 - 37:37He talks about facts,
he worships the truth. -
37:37 - 37:40Listen to me, my friend.
-
37:40 - 37:43They are all the same,
the Royal Academies-- -
37:43 - 37:45they insult the liberty
of the mind. -
37:47 - 37:52They think they are
the sole arbiters of genius. -
37:52 - 37:55They are rotten
to the core-- -
37:55 - 38:00just like every other
tentacle of the king. -
38:00 - 38:06The people-- it is they
who will determine
right and wrong. -
38:06 - 38:07Don't worry.
-
38:07 - 38:13In my next pamphlet
I will expose this
persecutor of yours. -
38:23 - 38:27LITHGOW:
For years, the Lavoisiers
burned, chopped, melted -
38:27 - 38:29and boiled every conceivable
substance. -
38:29 - 38:32They'd shown that
as long as one is scrupulous -
38:32 - 38:35about collecting all the vapors,
liquids and powders -
38:35 - 38:40created in a transformation,
then mass is not decreased. -
38:40 - 38:44Liquids might become gases,
metals may rust, -
38:44 - 38:46wood may become ash and smoke,
-
38:46 - 38:51but matter, the tiny atoms
that make up all substances, -
38:51 - 38:53none of it is ever lost.
-
38:54 - 38:56The crowning glory
of this opus was -
38:56 - 38:59their remarkable use
of static electricity -
38:59 - 39:04to cause oxygen and hydrogen
to recombine back into water. -
39:13 - 39:14What is happening?
-
39:17 - 39:22( explosions in distance )
-
39:28 - 39:30LITHGOW:
As the French Revolution
exploded, -
39:30 - 39:34the royal family
and whole swaths of aristocrats -
39:34 - 39:37lost their heads
on the guillotine. -
39:41 - 39:44FARA:
To the French revolutionaries
of 1790, -
39:44 - 39:47Lavoisier meant one thing
and one thing only: -
39:47 - 39:50he was the despised
tax collector -
39:50 - 39:51who'd built that wall
around Paris. -
39:51 - 39:55LITHGOW:
Lavoisier's job
as a tax collector -
39:55 - 39:57brought him under suspicion.
-
39:57 - 39:58He was denounced
-
39:58 - 40:01by a failed scientist
turned radical journalist, -
40:01 - 40:03Jean Paul Marat.
-
40:11 - 40:12( pounding at door )
-
40:16 - 40:19( pounding at door )
-
40:19 - 40:20( knocking at door )
-
40:22 - 40:23Où est Lavoisi?
Je ne sais pas. -
40:23 - 40:24Lavoisier!
-
40:25 - 40:26Lavoisier!
-
40:43 - 40:44Lavoisier!
-
40:59 - 41:06( sobbing )
-
41:21 - 41:26( crowd yelling )
-
41:26 - 41:28( crowd cheering )
-
41:28 - 41:30BODANIS:
What Lavoisier did -
41:30 - 41:32was absolutely central
to science -
41:32 - 41:33and especially
to E equals m c-squared. -
41:33 - 41:35Because what he said is,
if you take a bunch of matter, -
41:35 - 41:39you can break it apart,
you can recombine it, -
41:39 - 41:40you can do anything to it
-
41:40 - 41:43and the stuff of the matter
won't go away. -
41:43 - 41:46If the mob burned Paris
to the ground, utterly razed it, -
41:46 - 41:48shattered the bricks
into rubble and dust -
41:48 - 41:51and burned the buildings
into ashes and smoke, -
41:51 - 41:54it turns out if you put
a huge dome over Paris -
41:54 - 41:56and weighed all the smoke
and all the ashes -
41:56 - 41:57and all the rubble,
-
41:57 - 42:00it would add up to the exact
sameeight as the original city -
42:00 - 42:02and the air around it before.
-
42:02 - 42:04Nothing disappears.
-
42:23 - 42:27LITHGOW:
A century later, all of nature
had been classified -
42:27 - 42:30into two great domains.
-
42:30 - 42:34There was energy-- the forces
that animated objects; -
42:34 - 42:35and there was mass--
-
42:35 - 42:39the physical stuff
that made up those objects. -
42:39 - 42:42The whole of 19th-century
science rested -
42:42 - 42:44on these two mighty pillars.
-
42:44 - 42:49The laws that governed one
did not apply to the other. -
42:49 - 42:53But young, newly enrolled
physics student Albert Einstein -
42:53 - 42:56didn't like laws.
-
42:56 - 42:57Good grief,
Einstein. -
42:57 - 42:59What happened
to you? -
42:59 - 43:00It is more
than a little
ironic, -
43:00 - 43:03having been
reprimanded
yesterday -
43:03 - 43:05by that idiot
Professor Pernet
for poor attendance, -
43:05 - 43:08that I should in fact attend
a practical lesson -
43:08 - 43:09which was as long
as it was boring, -
43:09 - 43:11and utterly pointless,
by the way, -
43:11 - 43:13only to be the victim
of an explosion -
43:13 - 43:15of my own apparatus.
-
43:15 - 43:16It was your own fault, then?
-
43:16 - 43:18Thank you.
-
43:18 - 43:21And how are you today,
Fraulein Maric? -
43:21 - 43:22Extremely well, Herr Einstein.
-
43:22 - 43:23All the better for seeing
-
43:23 - 43:26you have escaped the physics
laboratory with your life. -
43:26 - 43:31Well, in order not to alarm
you any further, I pledge -
43:31 - 43:33to forever continue my studies
here at the Cafe Bahnhof, -
43:33 - 43:36reading only the great masters
of theoretical physics -
43:36 - 43:39and eschewing the babbling
nonsense of the polytechnicians. -
43:39 - 43:40( chuckles )
-
43:40 - 43:42That's about
all you ever do. -
43:42 - 43:46It's getting a little stuffy
in here, Fraulein Maric. -
43:46 - 43:49Would you care to take
a walk with me? -
43:49 - 43:51There's something
I'd like to discuss with you. -
43:51 - 43:55Why, Herr Einstein...
-
43:55 - 43:56of course.
-
43:59 - 44:01Perhaps you'd like
me to tell you -
44:01 - 44:04what you have missed
in lectures this week? -
44:10 - 44:13MAN:
Einstein wasn't exactly
a model student. -
44:13 - 44:16He excelled in certain subjects,
especially physics and math, -
44:16 - 44:19but he wasn't very diligent
in a lot of his other classes. -
44:19 - 44:22He was undoubtedly
very questioning, -
44:22 - 44:25which seems to have annoyed
most of his professors -
44:25 - 44:26throughout his life.
-
44:26 - 44:27He would pursue his fascinations
-
44:27 - 44:29with just incredible
determination. -
44:32 - 44:34MAN:
We know from his letters -
44:34 - 44:36that Einstein,
even from the age of 16, -
44:36 - 44:40was literally obsessed
with the nature of light. -
44:44 - 44:47Everyone he could speak to--
his friends, his colleagues, -
44:47 - 44:50even his then girlfriend,
Mileva Maric, -
44:50 - 44:52who would become his wife--
-
44:52 - 44:56everyone he badgered with
the question: what is light? -
44:57 - 45:00( laughing )
-
45:04 - 45:07What would I see
if I rode on a beam of light? -
45:07 - 45:09What?
-
45:09 - 45:11A beam of light?
-
45:11 - 45:15By what method do you propose
to ride on this beam of light? -
45:15 - 45:17The method is not important.
-
45:17 - 45:18Let us just imagine
we two are -
45:18 - 45:20( loudly ):
young... -
45:20 - 45:21Shh!
-
45:21 - 45:25( loudly still ):
radical, bohemian experimenters, -
45:25 - 45:29hand-in-hand,
on a journey to the outer
reaches of the universe, -
45:29 - 45:34and we are riding on
the front of a wave of light. -
45:34 - 45:35( laughs )
-
45:35 - 45:36I really don't know
-
45:36 - 45:38what you are suggesting,
Herr Einstein. -
45:38 - 45:40Do you wish to hold my
hand or ridicule me? -
45:40 - 45:41Ridicule you?
-
45:41 - 45:42No, never.
-
45:46 - 45:48I merely want you
to help me to understand. -
45:50 - 45:52What would we see,
do you think... -
45:52 - 45:53Um...
-
45:53 - 45:59if we were together
and we sped up... and up -
45:59 - 46:04until we caught up
to the front of
a beam of light? -
46:14 - 46:17LITHGOW:
It was Einstein's relentless
pursuit of light -
46:17 - 46:20which would bring about
a revolution in science. -
46:21 - 46:24With light he would reinvent
the universe -
46:24 - 46:26and find a hidden pathway
-
46:26 - 46:30that would unite
energy and mass. -
46:35 - 46:41Light moves incredibly fast,
670 million miles per hour. -
46:41 - 46:44That's why scientists use
the term "c". -
46:44 - 46:49It stands for celeritas--
Latin for "swiftness." -
47:02 - 47:04Long before the 19th century,
-
47:04 - 47:07scientists had computed
the speed of light, -
47:07 - 47:11but no one knew
what light actually was. -
47:11 - 47:15Back in England, a man we've
already met was willing to make -
47:15 - 47:19an educated guess.
-
47:19 - 47:21After Sir Humphry Davy's death,
-
47:21 - 47:24Michael Faraday became
Professor Faraday, -
47:24 - 47:28one of the most important
experimenters in the world. -
47:30 - 47:33The scientific establishment
still found it hard to accept -
47:33 - 47:36that electricity and magnetism
were just two aspects -
47:36 - 47:38of the same phenomenon,
-
47:38 - 47:42which Faraday called
"electromagnetism." -
47:42 - 47:44But now he has
-
47:44 - 47:48an even more outrageous proposal
for his audience. -
47:52 - 47:57Invisible lines
that can emanate -
47:57 - 48:00from electricity in a wire,
-
48:00 - 48:05from a magnet
or... even from the sun. -
48:05 - 48:07( crowd laughs )
-
48:07 - 48:10For it is my contention
-
48:10 - 48:18that light itself is just one
form of these vibrating lines -
48:18 - 48:21of electromagnetism.
-
48:21 - 48:22( laughter )
-
48:22 - 48:26LITHGOW:
For 15 years, Faraday struggled
to convince the skeptics -
48:26 - 48:28that light was
an electromagnetic wave, -
48:28 - 48:33but he lacked the advanced
mathematics to back up his idea. -
48:33 - 48:36Eventually, someone came
to his rescue. -
48:39 - 48:43Professor James Clerk Maxwell
believed -
48:43 - 48:45in Faraday's far-sighted vision,
-
48:45 - 48:48and he had the mathematical
skill to prove it. -
48:56 - 49:01Maxwell and the aging Faraday
became close friends. -
49:07 - 49:09James.
-
49:10 - 49:11James, forgive me.
-
49:11 - 49:13( gasps )
-
49:13 - 49:16A word of advice:
don't get old. -
49:16 - 49:17( chuckles )
-
49:17 - 49:18Michael, how are you?
-
49:18 - 49:20Oh, I'm fine.
-
49:20 - 49:22Memory isn't too good,
but... -
49:22 - 49:24Well, I thought
you might like to see -
49:24 - 49:26what I've just published.
-
49:26 - 49:27Oh, yes, yes.
-
49:32 - 49:33Splendid.
-
49:37 - 49:42So your results show that when
electricity flows along a wire, -
49:42 - 49:45what it actually does is create
a little bit of magnetism. -
49:45 - 49:48Now, as that magnetic
charge moves, -
49:48 - 49:51it creates a little piece
of electricity. -
49:51 - 49:52Electricity.
-
49:52 - 49:56Electricity and magnetism
are interwoven, -
49:56 - 49:58like a... a never-ending braid.
-
49:58 - 50:00So it is always pulsing forward.
-
50:03 - 50:04That's wonderful.
-
50:06 - 50:07Wonderful.
-
50:08 - 50:10Michael.
-
50:10 - 50:14Michael, there's
something very crucial
in maths. -
50:14 - 50:16This electricity
producing magnetism -
50:16 - 50:17and magnetism
producing electricity-- -
50:17 - 50:20it can only ever happen
at a very particular speed. -
50:20 - 50:23The equations are
very clear about it. -
50:23 - 50:26They come up
with just one number: -
50:26 - 50:30670 million miles per hour.
-
50:31 - 50:33I'm not sure I...?
-
50:33 - 50:35That's the speed of light.
-
50:35 - 50:38That is the speed of light!
-
50:38 - 50:40Well, that means you
were right all along. -
50:40 - 50:44Light is
an electromagnetic wave. -
50:48 - 50:51LITHGOW:
Maxwell had proven Faraday
right. -
50:51 - 50:57Electricity and magnetism
are just two aspects -
50:57 - 51:01of a deeper unity, a force
now called electromagnetism, -
51:01 - 51:05which travels
at 670 million miles per hour. -
51:05 - 51:12In its visible form, it is
nothing other than light itself. -
51:15 - 51:19And nothing fascinated the young
Einstein more than light. -
51:19 - 51:23( playing light romantic piece)
-
51:38 - 51:40( sighs )
-
51:40 - 51:41We have lectures
in half an hour. -
51:41 - 51:43Oh, let me think.
-
51:43 - 51:45Professor Weber and his
life-draining monologue -
51:45 - 51:48or you... ( kisses )
-
51:48 - 51:52Mozart and James Clerk Maxwell?
-
51:52 - 51:53We can't.
-
51:53 - 51:54We'll get a warning.
-
51:54 - 51:55Our project
is too precious -
51:55 - 51:57to waste time listening
to those dullards. -
51:57 - 51:59Come with me,
-
51:59 - 52:01we'll read Maxwell
-
52:01 - 52:03and think about
the electromagnetic theory
of light! -
52:03 - 52:05( giggling )
-
52:05 - 52:07Oh, why, my dear
little Johnnie, -
52:07 - 52:09how you enchant a lady.
-
52:33 - 52:35MARIC:
She's very pretty. -
52:36 - 52:42Yes, but can she
soar and dance like
our dark souls do? -
52:42 - 52:44( sighs )
-
52:46 - 52:49BODANIS:
Maxwell's equations contained
an incredible prediction. -
52:49 - 52:52They said you could never
catch up to a beam of light. -
52:52 - 52:56Even if you were traveling
at 670 million miles an hour, -
52:56 - 52:58you would still see light
squiggle away from you -
52:58 - 53:00at 670 million miles an hour.
-
53:03 - 53:05Do you see how she stares
at that wave? -
53:05 - 53:07Yes.
-
53:07 - 53:08You see how for her
it is static? -
53:08 - 53:09Yes.
-
53:09 - 53:14She and the wave are traveling
at the same speed. -
53:14 - 53:17We see the wave moving
through the water. -
53:17 - 53:21But relative to her,
it just sits there. -
53:21 - 53:23So is light like that?
-
53:23 - 53:27Common sense would say that if
you caught up to a light beam, -
53:27 - 53:30there would be a wave of light
just sitting there. -
53:30 - 53:32Maybe it would be shimmering,
-
53:32 - 53:34a bit of electricity
and a bit of magnetism. -
53:34 - 53:38So if she was traveling
alongside the light wave, -
53:38 - 53:39it wouldn't be moving.
-
53:39 - 53:40It would be static.
-
53:40 - 53:44But Maxwell says
you can't have static light. -
53:44 - 53:45Maybe Maxwell is wrong.
-
53:45 - 53:47Maybe if you catch up to light,
-
53:47 - 53:51it is static, Albert,
like a wave next to a boat. -
53:53 - 53:58Imagine if I were sitting still
and holding a mirror to my face. -
53:58 - 54:02The light travels from my face
to the mirror and I see my face. -
54:02 - 54:03Yes.
-
54:03 - 54:07However, if I and the mirror
-
54:07 - 54:11were traveling
at the speed of light? -
54:11 - 54:14You're going at the same speed
as the light leaving your face? -
54:14 - 54:16Exactly.
-
54:16 - 54:18The light never reaches
the mirror? -
54:18 - 54:21So would I be invisible?
-
54:21 - 54:22Hmm.
-
54:25 - 54:27That doesn't make sense.
-
54:30 - 54:32LITHGOW:
Young Einstein was starting
to realize -
54:32 - 54:36that light was unlike
any other kind of wave. -
54:43 - 54:47Einstein was about to enter
a surreal universe -
54:47 - 54:50where energy, mass and
the speed of light intermingled -
54:50 - 54:53in a way no one
had ever suspected. -
54:54 - 54:56But there was one last
mathematical ingredient -
54:56 - 54:58that Einstein would need:
-
54:58 - 55:02the everyday process
of squaring. -
55:13 - 55:15Long before
the French Revolution, -
55:15 - 55:19scientists were not sure how
to quantify motion. -
55:19 - 55:20Challenge.
-
55:21 - 55:24LITHGOW:
Equations that explained -
55:24 - 55:26how objects moved and collided
were in their infancy. -
55:26 - 55:27( growls )
-
55:27 - 55:29( kisses and giggles )
-
55:32 - 55:34LITHGOW:
A crucial contribution
to this subject -
55:34 - 55:37would come
from an unusual source. -
55:42 - 55:45Meet the aristocratic
16-year-old daughter -
55:45 - 55:49of one of King Louis XIV's
courtiers, Émilie du Châtelet. -
55:49 - 55:52( both grunting )
-
55:56 - 55:57( groaning )
( giggling ) -
56:00 - 56:02Quickly, Father
is coming! -
56:05 - 56:09LITHGOW:
Émilie du Châtelet would have
a huge effect on physics -
56:09 - 56:12in her tragically short
lifetime. -
56:12 - 56:14Unheard of for a woman
of her time, -
56:14 - 56:17she would publish
many scientific works, -
56:17 - 56:21including a translation
of Sir Isaac Newton's Principia, -
56:21 - 56:24the greatest treatise on motion
ever written. -
56:24 - 56:27Du Châtelet's translation
is still -
56:27 - 56:31the standard text in France
today. -
56:31 - 56:35Musa, mihi
causas memora... -
56:35 - 56:37Muse, my memory causes...
-
56:37 - 56:40O Muse! The causes
and the crimes relate -
56:40 - 56:43What goddess was provoked,
and whence her hate -
56:43 - 56:45For what offence
the Queen of Heaven began -
56:45 - 56:49To persecute so brave,
so just a man! -
56:49 - 56:51Do not be cross
with your sister, -
56:51 - 56:53because she persecutes
many a just man! -
56:53 - 56:54Only the other night,
-
56:54 - 56:56Émilie silenced
the duc du Luynes -
56:56 - 57:00when she divided a ridiculously
long number in her head -
57:00 - 57:01in a matter of seconds.
-
57:01 - 57:03You should have seen the
incredulity on their faces -
57:03 - 57:06when they realized Émilie
was correct. -
57:06 - 57:09Was it my sister's
astounding intelligence -
57:09 - 57:10or her boundless beauty
-
57:10 - 57:12that made their mouths gape,
I wonder? -
57:12 - 57:14Ah well, yes, you have
a point, monsieur. -
57:14 - 57:17Messieurs, I thank you
for your kindness. -
57:17 - 57:21I fear, however,
that my wit is only
a curiosity to others. -
57:21 - 57:23If only my mind were
permitted opportunity. -
57:23 - 57:25My dearest Émilie.
-
57:25 - 57:28You are blessed
with intellect and courage. -
57:28 - 57:32Use them both and the world
will fall at your feet. -
57:32 - 57:33No...
-
57:37 - 57:38WOMAN:
In one sense, -
57:38 - 57:41she is a woman utterly out of
her true time and place. -
57:41 - 57:44She's a philosopher,
a scientist, -
57:44 - 57:47a mathematician,
a linguist. -
57:47 - 57:48She demands a freedom
-
57:48 - 57:51that women didn't begin to enjoy
until over 150 years later-- -
57:51 - 57:53a freedom to study science,
-
57:53 - 57:56to write about it,
and to be published. -
57:59 - 58:04LITHGOW:
Du Châtelet married a general
in the French army at age 19 -
58:04 - 58:06and had three children.
-
58:06 - 58:07She ran a busy household,
-
58:07 - 58:11all the while pursuing
her passion for science. -
58:11 - 58:15She was 23 when she discovered
advanced mathematics. -
58:15 - 58:17She enthusiastically
took lessons -
58:17 - 58:19from one of the greatest
mathematicians of the day, -
58:19 - 58:22Pierre de Maupertuis.
-
58:22 - 58:24He was an expert on Newton,
-
58:24 - 58:26and she was his eager
young student; -
58:26 - 58:28it seems they had
a brief affair. -
58:28 - 58:32But then he set off
on a polar expedition. -
58:32 - 58:35Du Châtelet then fell
passionately in love -
58:35 - 58:39with Voltaire,
France's greatest poet. -
58:39 - 58:42A fierce critic of the king
and the Catholic Church, -
58:42 - 58:44Voltaire had been in prison
twice -
58:44 - 58:46and exiled to England,
-
58:46 - 58:49where he became enthralled
by the ideas of Newton. -
58:49 - 58:50Back in France,
-
58:50 - 58:54it wasn't long before he again
insulted the king. -
58:54 - 58:59Du Châtelet hid him
in her country home. -
58:59 - 59:01The poor little creature
is devoted to him. -
59:01 - 59:05LITHGOW:
Isolated far from Paris,
du Châtelet and Voltaire -
59:05 - 59:09turned her chateau into a
palace of learning and culture, -
59:09 - 59:11complete with
its own tiny theater, -
59:11 - 59:16and all with the apparent
blessing of her husband. -
59:16 - 59:19FARA:
There's a great deal of myth
surrounding du Châtelet -
59:19 - 59:20and her love life
-
59:20 - 59:22and most of it is
very exaggerated. -
59:22 - 59:26But her husband did accept
Voltaire into his household, -
59:26 - 59:29and he often went to Paris
on behalf of Voltaire; -
59:29 - 59:31he went to his publisher
to plead Voltaire's case -
59:31 - 59:34to keep Voltaire out of jail.
-
59:34 - 59:37And it is also true
that Émilie du Châtelet -
59:37 - 59:40did have several affairs
of a fleeting nature. -
59:42 - 59:44( audience applauding )
-
59:44 - 59:46Bravo! Bravo!
-
59:46 - 59:49ZINSSER:
She created an institution
to rival that -
59:49 - 59:51of France's Royal
Academies of Sciences. -
59:51 - 59:54Many of the great
philosophers, poets -
59:54 - 59:56and scientists of the day
visited. -
59:59 - 60:03Ah, monsieur...
you are young. -
60:03 - 60:05I hope that soon
you will judge me -
60:05 - 60:07for my own merits,
or lack of them, -
60:07 - 60:09but do not look upon me
-
60:09 - 60:11as an appendage
to this great general -
60:11 - 60:14or that renowned scholar.
-
60:14 - 60:15I am in my own right
-
60:15 - 60:17a whole person,
-
60:17 - 60:18responsible
to myself alone -
60:18 - 60:20for all that I am,
-
60:20 - 60:22all that I say...
-
60:22 - 60:23( blows )
-
60:23 - 60:24all that I do.
-
60:27 - 60:30LITHGOW:
Du Châtelet learned from
the brilliant men around her, -
60:30 - 60:33but she quickly developed
ideas of her own. -
60:33 - 60:36Much to the horror
of her mentors, -
60:36 - 60:39she even dared to suspect
that there was a flaw -
60:39 - 60:44in the great
Sir Isaac Newton's thinking. -
60:44 - 60:47Newton stated that
the energy of an object, -
60:47 - 60:50the force with which it
collided with another object, -
60:50 - 60:52could very simply be
accounted for -
60:52 - 60:56by its mass
times its velocity. -
60:56 - 60:58In correspondence
with scientists in Germany, -
60:58 - 61:01du Châtelet learned
of another view, -
61:01 - 61:04that of Gottfried Leibniz.
-
61:04 - 61:08He proposed that moving objects
had a kind of inner spirit. -
61:08 - 61:12He called it Vis Viva,
Latin for "livinforce." -
61:12 - 61:16Many discounted his ideas,
but Leibniz was convinced -
61:16 - 61:18that the energy of an object
was made up -
61:18 - 61:22of its mass
times its velocity squared. -
61:26 - 61:28Taking the square of something
is an ancient procedure. -
61:28 - 61:29If you say a garden is
four square, -
61:29 - 61:31you mean that it might be
built up -
61:31 - 61:34by four slabs along one edge
and four along the other. -
61:34 - 61:36So the total number of
paving slabs is -
61:36 - 61:38four times four: 16.
-
61:38 - 61:40If the garden is eight square--
eight by eight-- -
61:40 - 61:42well, eight squared is 64.
-
61:42 - 61:44It'll have 64 slabs in it.
-
61:44 - 61:46This huge multiplication,
this building up by squares, -
61:46 - 61:49is something you find in nature
all the time. -
61:50 - 61:52Émilie?
-
61:52 - 61:54Émilie, you are
being absurd! -
61:54 - 61:56Why ascribe
to an object -
61:56 - 62:00a vague and
immeasurable force
like Vis Viva? -
62:00 - 62:01It is a return
to the old ways! -
62:05 - 62:07It is the occult!
-
62:09 - 62:11When movement commences,
-
62:11 - 62:12you say it is true
that a force is produced -
62:12 - 62:14which did not exist until now.
-
62:14 - 62:16Think of our bodies--
to have free will -
62:16 - 62:18we must be free
to initiate motion. -
62:18 - 62:20So all Leibniz is asking is,
-
62:20 - 62:22where does all
this force come from? -
62:22 - 62:23In your case, my dear,
-
62:23 - 62:25the force, I am sure,
is primeval. -
62:25 - 62:27Oh! You're infuriating!
-
62:27 - 62:29You hide behind wit and sarcasm.
-
62:29 - 62:31You only think
you understand Newton. -
62:31 - 62:34You are incapable
of understanding
Leibniz. -
62:34 - 62:35You are a provocateur.
-
62:35 - 62:37Everything you do is
about something else -
62:37 - 62:39and makes trouble
for you. -
62:39 - 62:41Criticize this,
denounce that. -
62:41 - 62:43Are you capable of discovering
something of your own? -
62:49 - 62:51I discovered you!
-
62:57 - 63:00LITHGOW:
Despite the overwhelming support
for Newton, -
63:00 - 63:03du Châtelet did not waver
in her belief. -
63:11 - 63:14Eventually, she came across
an experiment -
63:14 - 63:17performed by a Dutch scientist,
Willem 'sGravesande, -
63:17 - 63:19that would prove her point.
-
63:21 - 63:23S'Gravesande in Leiden
has been dropping lead balls -
63:23 - 63:25into a pan of clay.
-
63:25 - 63:29( sarcastically ):
Dropping lead balls into clay! -
63:29 - 63:31How very
imaginative. -
63:31 - 63:34DU CHATELET:
Using Newton's formulas,
Monsieur Voltaire, -
63:34 - 63:37he then drops a second ball
from a higher height, -
63:37 - 63:39calculated to exactly
double the speed -
63:39 - 63:41of the first ball on impact.
-
63:41 - 63:45So, messieurs, care
for a little wager? -
63:47 - 63:50Newton tells us that by doubling
the speed of the ball, -
63:50 - 63:53we will double the distance
it travels -
63:53 - 63:54into the clay.
-
63:54 - 63:57Leibniz asks us
to square that speed. -
63:57 - 64:00If he is correct,
the ball will travel not two, -
64:00 - 64:02but four times as far.
-
64:02 - 64:04So who is correct?
-
64:05 - 64:06Messieurs,
-
64:06 - 64:10I feel Mr. Newton's
reputation dwindling -
64:10 - 64:11ever so
slightly. -
64:11 - 64:12Oh,
Maupertuis! -
64:12 - 64:13Do not succumb to her!
-
64:13 - 64:14There is no
earthly reason -
64:14 - 64:16to ascribe
hidden forces -
64:16 - 64:19to this Dutchman's
lead balls! -
64:19 - 64:20( men laughing )
-
64:22 - 64:23Well...
-
64:23 - 64:28the ball travels
fo times further. -
64:31 - 64:33Turns out Leibniz is
the one who is right-- -
64:33 - 64:36it's the best way to express
the energy of a moving object. -
64:36 - 64:38If you drive a car
at 20 miles an hour, -
64:38 - 64:41it takes a certain distance to
stop if you slam on the brakes. -
64:41 - 64:42If you're going three times
as fast-- -
64:42 - 64:44you're going 60 miles an hour--
-
64:44 - 64:45it won't take you three times
as long to stop, -
64:45 - 64:49it'll take you
nine times as long to stop. -
64:49 - 64:52Oh. Well... it does seem
-
64:52 - 64:55worth consideration.
-
64:55 - 64:58Perhaps we might look over
his calculations? -
64:58 - 65:00I have already checked
his figures. -
65:00 - 65:02I am sure Leibniz is correct
on this point. -
65:02 - 65:04I intend
to include -
65:04 - 65:05a section on this matter
in my book. -
65:06 - 65:08MAUPERTUIS:
Really? -
65:08 - 65:11Do be careful, madame.
-
65:11 - 65:14Do you think the Academy
is ready for such an opinion? -
65:14 - 65:15Quite, quite.
-
65:15 - 65:17We really should be
careful. -
65:17 - 65:19"We"?
-
65:19 - 65:21I see no reason to delay.
-
65:21 - 65:24There is no right time
for the truth. -
65:27 - 65:29ZINSSER:
Émilie du Châtelet published -
65:29 - 65:31her Institutions of Physics
in 1740, -
65:31 - 65:34and it provoked
great controversy. -
65:38 - 65:40Voltaire wrote
-
65:40 - 65:45that "She was a great man whose
only fault was being a woman." -
65:45 - 65:48In her day,
that was a great compliment. -
66:03 - 66:06I am with child.
-
66:11 - 66:13You are sure?
-
66:13 - 66:14Undoubtedly.
-
66:14 - 66:16Two to three
months. -
66:18 - 66:19I'm afraid that...
-
66:19 - 66:21You are afraid?
-
66:21 - 66:23You should have...
-
66:32 - 66:33Well, this child is
obviously not mine. -
66:36 - 66:39Nor is it your husband's.
-
66:43 - 66:44( sighs )
-
66:44 - 66:45Oh, Émilie.
-
66:45 - 66:46Émilie.
-
66:50 - 66:52Émilie du Châtelet knew
that in the 18th century -
66:52 - 66:55for a woman to become pregnant
at the age of 43 -
66:55 - 66:56was really very dangerous,
-
66:56 - 66:58and all the while
she was pregnant -
66:58 - 67:01she had terrible premonitions
about what was going to happen. -
67:04 - 67:07LITHGOW:
All her life, du Châtelet
had tried to rise above -
67:07 - 67:09the limitations
placed on her gender. -
67:09 - 67:13In the end, it was an affair
with a young soldier -
67:13 - 67:15that led to her demise.
-
67:15 - 67:18Six days after giving birth
to her fourth child, -
67:18 - 67:21she suffered an embolism
and died. -
67:27 - 67:29Émilie du Châtelet's
conviction -
67:29 - 67:31that the energy of an object
-
67:31 - 67:33is a function
of the square of its speed -
67:33 - 67:36sparked a fierce debate.
-
67:36 - 67:37After her death,
-
67:37 - 67:41it took a hundred years
for the idea to be accepted-- -
67:41 - 67:46just in time for Einstein
to use this brilliant insight -
67:46 - 67:50to finally bring energy
and mass together with light. -
67:59 - 68:04Einstein pursued light right
through university and beyond. -
68:04 - 68:07Unfortunately, he'd upset
so many professors -
68:07 - 68:10that no one would write him
a reference. -
68:10 - 68:15He accepted a low-paying job
in the Swiss patent office. -
68:15 - 68:18He and Mileva married
and had a child. -
68:18 - 68:20The young family struggled.
-
68:20 - 68:24But none of it seems
to bother Albert. -
68:24 - 68:25Einstein?
-
68:25 - 68:27I see you are busy,
-
68:27 - 68:29as usual.
-
68:29 - 68:31Look, Einstein...
-
68:31 - 68:34Albert.
-
68:34 - 68:38You have shown
some quite good
achievements. -
68:38 - 68:41But, listen...
-
68:41 - 68:43About your promotion.
-
68:43 - 68:45I really think it would be
better to wait -
68:45 - 68:47until you have
become more fully familiar -
68:47 - 68:49with mechanical
engineering. -
68:49 - 68:51I'm sorry.
-
68:51 - 68:54Perhaps
next time, hmm? -
68:59 - 69:00MILEVA:
But I wanted to hire a maid -
69:00 - 69:03so I can get back
and finish my degree. -
69:03 - 69:05Now I will never pass
my dissertation. -
69:05 - 69:07Oh, come, come,
my pretty little duck. -
69:07 - 69:10All will be fine, you'll see.
-
69:10 - 69:11But how will it be fine,
Albert?! -
69:11 - 69:13Do I have to just wait
another year -
69:13 - 69:15until you are promoted?
-
69:15 - 69:16( baby crying )
-
69:16 - 69:17Come on.
-
69:17 - 69:19Come on, my little one.
-
69:19 - 69:21Oh, there we are.
-
69:21 - 69:26( baby continues crying )
-
69:28 - 69:31All will be fine.
-
69:31 - 69:33All will be fine, you'll see.
-
69:36 - 69:38There really is a very charming,
-
69:38 - 69:40but kind of a self-centered
streak to Einstein. -
69:40 - 69:42He focuses only on
his particular obsessions. -
69:42 - 69:45If the rest of the world fits in
around him, that's fine, -
69:45 - 69:47if they can't,
it doesn't bother him. -
70:00 - 70:01( no voice )
-
70:32 - 70:34Albert, Albert, Albert.
-
70:34 - 70:36A pretty neck
and your head spins. -
70:36 - 70:41Besso, we must behold and
comprehend the mysterious. -
70:41 - 70:44Well, that kind of mysterious is
going to get you into trouble. -
70:44 - 70:46I'll tell you what is
truly mysterious: -
70:46 - 70:48the secret of a long
and happy marriage. -
70:50 - 70:53The mathematics are fine,
if a little unconventional, -
70:53 - 70:56but this only works
for big systems. -
70:56 - 70:58It'll fall down when
you apply it to small systems. -
70:58 - 71:00I disagree.
-
71:00 - 71:00BESSO:
Oh, no. -
71:00 - 71:01Here we go--
-
71:01 - 71:03another grand theory
by Herr Albert Einstein, -
71:03 - 71:04Patent Clerk,
-
71:04 - 71:06Third Class.
-
71:06 - 71:09What would happen
if one applied those formulae -
71:09 - 71:10to electromagnetic radiation?
-
71:10 - 71:12Albert,
-
71:12 - 71:14you can't just take one bit
of physics and apply it -
71:14 - 71:17without proper regard
to a completely different area. -
71:17 - 71:19Why not?
-
71:19 - 71:20Albert.
-
71:20 - 71:23I know you like
the grand linkages, -
71:23 - 71:25the big theories,
-
71:25 - 71:27but wouldn't things
be better all round -
71:27 - 71:30if you just got going
in some small area? -
71:30 - 71:31Got a university post.
-
71:31 - 71:34Get a decent wage,
for God's sake. -
71:34 - 71:35At least Mileva
could study again. -
71:35 - 71:37Then she'd be happy,
and you'd be happy. -
71:37 - 71:42Ah, the vulgar struggle
for survival: food and sex. -
71:42 - 71:45Spoken like
a true bourgeois. -
71:45 - 71:51Besso, I want to know
how God created this world. -
71:51 - 71:54I am not interested
in this or that phenomenon, -
71:54 - 71:57in the spectrum of this
or that element. -
71:57 - 71:59I want to know His thoughts.
-
71:59 - 72:03The rest... they're details.
-
72:03 - 72:05Yes, but you can't
feed your children -
72:05 - 72:07on His thoughts, Bertie.
-
72:18 - 72:21KAISER:
So it turns out,
Einstein was going for a walk -
72:21 - 72:23with his very close friend,
Michele Besso. -
72:23 - 72:24They'd studied physics together
-
72:24 - 72:26and talked about physics and
philosophy for years and years. -
72:26 - 72:28They were very close.
-
72:28 - 72:30They had cornered
the question of light -
72:30 - 72:31from every possible angle.
-
72:36 - 72:38See these clocks are over here?
-
72:38 - 72:40LITHGOW:
As Einstein and Besso
were ruminating -
72:40 - 72:42on how much time it would take
light to reach them -
72:42 - 72:45from clocks at different
distances, -
72:45 - 72:49Einstein had a monumental
insight. -
72:50 - 72:54( church bell tolling )
-
72:54 - 72:56( exhales deeply )
-
72:56 - 72:59Thank you.
-
72:59 - 73:02Thank you.
-
73:02 - 73:06I have completely solved
the problem. -
73:09 - 73:11Albert!
-
73:14 - 73:19BODANIS:
What Einstein did was completely
turn the problem on its head. -
73:19 - 73:21Other scientists
had found it impossible -
73:21 - 73:23to accept Maxwell's idea--
-
73:23 - 73:25that light would always move
away from you -
73:25 - 73:27at 670 million miles an hour,
-
73:27 - 73:29even if you, too, were traveling
really fast. -
73:29 - 73:32But Einstein just accepted that
as a fact: -
73:32 - 73:35light's speed
never ever changes. -
73:35 - 73:36Then what he did was bend
-
73:36 - 73:38everything we know
about the universe -
73:38 - 73:39to fit light's fixed speed.
-
73:41 - 73:44What he discovered
was that to do that -
73:44 - 73:46you have to slow down time.
-
73:47 - 73:50His extraordinary insight
is that time... -
73:50 - 73:52as you approach
the speed of light, -
73:52 - 73:55time itself will slow down.
-
73:55 - 73:58It's a monumental shift
in how we see the world. -
74:03 - 74:05The instant, the very instant
-
74:05 - 74:08when Einstein had
this brilliant insight -
74:08 - 74:10that time could slow down,
-
74:10 - 74:13well, the floodgates
began to open. -
74:13 - 74:16( clocks ticking )
-
74:16 - 74:20You see,
before then people had assumed -
74:20 - 74:24that time was like a wristwatch
on God's hand, -
74:24 - 74:27that it beat at a steady rate
throughout the universe, -
74:27 - 74:28no matter were you were.
-
74:28 - 74:30( clock's ticking slowing )
-
74:30 - 74:31Einstein said no--
-
74:31 - 74:34that the "tick, tick, tick"
of this wristwatch -
74:34 - 74:37was actually
the "click, click, click" -
74:37 - 74:39of electricity turning
into magnetism -
74:39 - 74:41turning into electricity.
-
74:41 - 74:44In other words,
the steadyace of light itself. -
74:54 - 74:58BODANIS:
1905 was a miraculous year
for Einstein and for physics. -
75:01 - 75:04He had an unbelievable
outpouring of creativity. -
75:04 - 75:06It starts with his publication
of a paper -
75:06 - 75:09on how to work out
the true size of atoms. -
75:09 - 75:10Two months later
-
75:10 - 75:13is the publication of his paper
on the nature of light-- -
75:13 - 75:15that's what will earn him
the Nobel Prize. -
75:15 - 75:17The third paper,
only a month later, -
75:17 - 75:19is on how molecules move
when heated, -
75:19 - 75:23and that finally ends the debate
on whether atoms really exist. -
75:23 - 75:25The fourth paper is published
-
75:25 - 75:27at the end
of this half-year period. -
75:27 - 75:28In it Einstein sets out
-
75:28 - 75:30his theory of light,
time and space. -
75:30 - 75:32It was the Theory
of Special Relativity. -
75:32 - 75:36That changed the way
we see the world. -
75:36 - 75:40LITHGOW:
In Einstein's new world, -
75:40 - 75:46the one true constant was not
time or even space, but light. -
75:49 - 75:52( steam whistle blowing,
train chugging ) -
75:54 - 75:58But Einstein's miracle year
was not over. -
75:58 - 76:01( steam hissing, fire roaring)
-
76:03 - 76:08In one last great 1905 paper,
-
76:08 - 76:11he would propose
an even deeper unity. -
76:11 - 76:12( steam whistle blowing )
-
76:12 - 76:14As he computed
-
76:14 - 76:18all the implications
of his new theory, -
76:18 - 76:21he noticed
another strange connection, -
76:21 - 76:25this one between energy,
mass and light. -
76:34 - 76:36( train whistle blowing )
-
76:39 - 76:41Einstein realizes
that the speed of light -
76:41 - 76:43is kind of like
a cosmic speed limit. -
76:43 - 76:46Nothing can go faster.
-
76:48 - 76:50So imagine we have a train
charging along, -
76:50 - 76:53and let's say it's getting
up to the speed of light -
76:53 - 76:56and we're stuffing
more and more energy in, -
76:56 - 76:58trying to get it to go
faster and faster. -
76:58 - 77:02But it's still bumping up
against the speed of light. -
77:02 - 77:04So all this energy,
where does it go? -
77:04 - 77:05It has to go somewhere.
-
77:05 - 77:08Amazingly, it goes
into the object's mass. -
77:09 - 77:13From our point of view,
the train actually gets heavier; -
77:13 - 77:15the energy becomes mass.
-
77:24 - 77:26It's an incredible idea.
-
77:26 - 77:29Even Einstein is amazed by it.
-
77:33 - 77:36I think I have
found a connection -
77:36 - 77:38between energy and mass.
-
77:38 - 77:43If I am right, then energy
and mass are not absolute. -
77:43 - 77:45They are not distinct--
-
77:45 - 77:48they can be converted
into one another. -
77:48 - 77:53Energy can become mass,
and mass can become energy. -
77:53 - 77:57And not just energy
equaling mass. -
77:57 - 78:03Energy equals mass times the
square of the speed of light. -
78:03 - 78:05( cackles; laughs softly )
-
78:05 - 78:08Would you like me to check
your mathematics? -
78:15 - 78:22LITHGOW:
Einstein sent his fifth great
1905 paper for publication. -
78:22 - 78:26In three pages he simply stated
that energy and mass -
78:26 - 78:31were connected by the square
of the speed of light-- -
78:31 - 78:35E equals m c-squared.
-
78:41 - 78:45With four familiar notes
in the scale of nature, -
78:45 - 78:51this patent ficer had composed
a totally fresh melody-- -
78:51 - 78:56the culmination of his ten-year
journey into light. -
78:59 - 79:01Here we are
for thousands of years -
79:01 - 79:04thinking that over here is
a world of objects, of matter, -
79:04 - 79:07and over there is
an entirely separate world -
79:07 - 79:09of movement,
of forces, of energy. -
79:09 - 79:11And Einstein says,
"No, they are not separate." -
79:11 - 79:13Energy can become mass,
-
79:13 - 79:16and crucially,
mass can also become energy. -
79:16 - 79:20There is a deep unity between
energy, matter and light. -
79:23 - 79:25KAKU:
E equals m c-squared. -
79:25 - 79:29That equation shows that every
piece of matter in our universe -
79:29 - 79:33has stored within it
a fantastic amount of energy. -
79:33 - 79:35The speed of light, for example,
-
79:35 - 79:38is about 300 million meters
per second. -
79:38 - 79:42You multiply that by itself
and you get 90 quadrillion. -
79:42 - 79:44So in other words,
what is matter? -
79:44 - 79:48In some sense, matter is nothing
but the condensation -
79:48 - 79:50of vast amounts of energy.
-
79:50 - 79:52So in other words,
if you could unlock... -
79:52 - 79:57somehow unlock all the energy
stored within my pen, -
79:57 - 80:01that would erupt with a force
comparable to an atomic bomb. -
80:13 - 80:16After Einstein's fifth
great 1905 paper, -
80:16 - 80:19physicists no longer spoke
of mass or energy-- -
80:19 - 80:22they are now
the same thing to us. -
80:22 - 80:22( steam hissing )
-
80:37 - 80:42LITHGOW:
Probably the most miraculous
year in science ends in silence. -
80:45 - 80:51The articles are published
to resounding. nothing. -
80:51 - 80:53EINSTEIN ( voice echoing ):
I think the Gods -
80:53 - 80:55are laughing at me.
-
80:57 - 81:01LITHGOW:
Then slowly it starts. -
81:01 - 81:03A letter here, a letter there.
-
81:03 - 81:08For four years Einstein swered
each inquiry dutifully, -
81:08 - 81:11trying to explain
his difficult, complex ideas -
81:11 - 81:14to a confused physics community.
-
81:17 - 81:21GATES:
I love the idea that life
just went on as normal. -
81:21 - 81:26Here are these universe-changing
papers circling around, -
81:26 - 81:29and the world is... struggling
to come to terms with them. -
81:33 - 81:35KAKU:
Einstein had a fan club -
81:35 - 81:37of just one.
-
81:37 - 81:41Luckily it happened to be the
most important living physicist. -
81:41 - 81:44SUPERVISOR:
Einstein. -
81:44 - 81:46Einstein.
-
81:46 - 81:49Max Planck has sent
someone to see you. -
81:49 - 81:50Max Planck?
-
81:50 - 81:51Yes.
-
81:51 - 81:53He has sent
his assistant. -
81:53 - 81:55He's here to see you.
-
82:01 - 82:05LITHGOW:
Max Planck encourages the
world's most eminent physicists -
82:05 - 82:07to take Einstein seriously.
-
82:08 - 82:10After four years of waiting,
-
82:10 - 82:15he is appointed professor of
physics at Zurich University. -
82:17 - 82:20From there his career
is meteoric. -
82:20 - 82:24He is made
professor of physics in Berlin, -
82:24 - 82:29achieves world renown
and becomes a household name. -
82:29 - 82:34He is the undisputed father
of modern physics. -
82:49 - 82:54But Einstein's success was
the downfall of his marriage. -
82:57 - 83:02In 1919 he divorced Mileva
and married his cousin. -
83:07 - 83:09His fame led to
numerous affairs. -
83:46 - 83:50E equals m c-squared became
the Holy Grail of science. -
83:50 - 83:54It held out the promise
of vast reserves of energy -
83:54 - 83:57locked deep inside the atom.
-
83:57 - 83:58Einstein suspected
-
83:58 - 84:01that it would take a hundred
years of research to unlock it. -
84:01 - 84:04But he hadn't banked on
the Second World War -
84:04 - 84:08and the genius of a Jewish woman
in Hitler's Germany. -
84:30 - 84:3528-year-old Austrian
Lise Meitner was painfully shy. -
84:35 - 84:37Despite her anxiety,
-
84:37 - 84:41the young doctor of physics
arrived in Berlin -
84:41 - 84:43determined to pursue a career
-
84:43 - 84:46in the exciting new field
of radioactivity. -
84:46 - 84:48Unfortunately, in 1907,
-
84:48 - 84:52German universities did not
employ female graduates. -
84:58 - 85:02Luckily,
one man came to her aid. -
85:04 - 85:06Fraulein Meitner?
-
85:06 - 85:08Yes?
-
85:08 - 85:10Otto Hahn. I'm a researcher
in the Chemistry Institute. -
85:10 - 85:12Professor Planck
suggested I... -
85:12 - 85:16Herr Hahn, I have read
your papers on thorium
and on mesothorium, -
85:16 - 85:17and Dr. Planck
suggested that I... -
85:17 - 85:19Yes, he suggested
that I speak with you. -
85:19 - 85:20I need someone
to collaborate... -
85:20 - 85:23I think I could really help
with the physical analysis. -
85:23 - 85:24And the mathematics?
-
85:25 - 85:28Yes, yes--
and the mathematics. -
85:28 - 85:29Studying radioactive atoms
-
85:29 - 85:30has become
so much a collaboration -
85:30 - 85:32between emistry
and physics these days. -
85:32 - 85:35Yes, yes.
-
85:35 - 85:37I'll ask Fischer
for a laboratory, then. -
85:37 - 85:39Excellent.
-
85:40 - 85:41I'll speak to you soon.
-
85:43 - 85:47LITHGOW:
Lise Meitner had just taken
the first step on a journey -
85:47 - 85:50that would irrevocably change
world history. -
85:50 - 85:53For her it would be a road
marked with success and renown, -
85:53 - 85:57but also with terror
and betrayal. -
86:03 - 86:06BODANIS:
At this time, not a lot
was known about the atom. -
86:07 - 86:09At first, people thought
-
86:09 - 86:11it was like
a miniature solar system; -
86:11 - 86:13there's a solid nucleus
of the center -
86:13 - 86:15and electrons would spin
around it, -
86:15 - 86:17sort of like planets
around our sun. -
86:17 - 86:19A little later, some researchers
proposed -
86:19 - 86:22that the nucleus itself
wasn't a solid chunk -
86:22 - 86:24but was made up
of separate particles, -
86:24 - 86:25of protons and neutrons.
-
86:25 - 86:28But then-- in what are called
radioactive metals, -
86:28 - 86:30things like radium and uranium--
-
86:30 - 86:33the nucleus itself
seemed to be unstable, -
86:33 - 86:35leaking out energy
and particles. -
86:35 - 86:38Perhaps this was an example
of E equals m c-squared-- -
86:38 - 86:41the mass of a nucleus
turning into energy. -
86:45 - 86:48LITHGOW:
Meitner and Hahn's collaboration -
86:48 - 86:52to unlock the secrets
of the atom started out -
86:52 - 86:54on an extremely unequal footing.
-
86:54 - 86:56He was given a laboratory.
-
86:56 - 86:59She was forced to work
in a wood shop. -
86:59 - 87:01I see you haven't set
your hair on fire. -
87:02 - 87:04Herr Hahn?
-
87:04 - 87:06The boss-- he thinks
that if he lets women -
87:06 - 87:07into the Chemistry Institute
-
87:07 - 87:09they'll set
their hair on fire. -
87:09 - 87:12Oh... so his beard
must be fireproof. -
87:13 - 87:14( footsteps approaching )
-
87:16 - 87:17Good day, Herr Hahn.
-
87:17 - 87:19Good day.
-
87:22 - 87:24You see?
-
87:24 - 87:26I am nonexistent
-
87:26 - 87:28to this place.
-
87:28 - 87:32At least physicists recognize me
for my abilities. -
87:32 - 87:33Yes, where would
we chemists be -
87:33 - 87:36without the steadying hand
of the physicist? -
87:52 - 87:56WOMAN:
It took years, but Lise lost
her shyness eventually. -
87:56 - 87:59In 1912, she and Hahn moved
-
87:59 - 88:02to the brand-new Kaiser Wilhelm
Institute for Chemistry, -
88:02 - 88:04where their status
was really that of equals. -
88:07 - 88:09Lise became the first woman
in Germany ever -
88:09 - 88:12to have the title of professor.
-
88:30 - 88:34Lise... I have news.
-
88:36 - 88:37Oh?
-
88:37 - 88:39You remember the art student
-
88:39 - 88:40I told you of?
-
88:40 - 88:42Yes, Edith.
-
88:42 - 88:47Yes, well, I have, um...
-
88:47 - 88:49asked her to marry me,
and she has accepted. -
88:53 - 88:54Oh...
-
88:54 - 88:57Oh, Dr. Hahn,
congratulations. -
88:59 - 89:01Yes, well...
-
89:01 - 89:05I wanted you to be
the first to know. -
89:05 - 89:08I'm very pleased for you.
-
89:11 - 89:12Very pleased.
-
89:21 - 89:24SIME:
Lise Meitner
was warm-hearted by nature. -
89:24 - 89:26She had many friends
-
89:26 - 89:31and she may have wanted to have
a closer relationship with Otto. -
89:31 - 89:35But it really does seem that
physics was Lise's first love-- -
89:35 - 89:37maybe even her passion.
-
89:39 - 89:44LITHGOW:
The 1920s and '30s were the
golden age of nuclear research. -
89:44 - 89:47The largest known nucleus
at the time -
89:47 - 89:49was that of the uranium atom,
-
89:49 - 89:53containing
238 protons and neutrons. -
89:53 - 89:55Meitner and Hahn
were leading the race -
89:55 - 89:58to see if even bigger nuclei
could be created -
89:58 - 90:01by adding more neutrons.
-
90:01 - 90:06So... the atom, pretty familiar:
-
90:06 - 90:11Nucleus in the center,
electrons... orbiting around. -
90:14 - 90:16The nucleus is ourocus.
-
90:16 - 90:22The nucleus, made up
of protons... and neutrons. -
90:22 - 90:25Now, the largest nucleus
that we know -
90:25 - 90:28is that of the uranium atom.
-
90:28 - 90:32Its nucleus is
a tightly packed structure -
90:32 - 90:38of 238 protons and neutrons.
-
90:38 - 90:45The thrust of our work
is to try to fire neutrons -
90:45 - 90:48into this huge structure,
-
90:48 - 90:53and if we can get a neutron
to stick in here, -
90:53 - 90:55that will be a breakthrough.
-
91:06 - 91:10LITHGOW:
Meitner may have been on
the brink of a major discovery, -
91:10 - 91:14but Germany in the 1930s
was a dangerous place to be, -
91:14 - 91:17even for a world-class
scientist. -
91:19 - 91:21The Jewess endangers
our institute. -
91:26 - 91:29When the Nazis came to power,
one of the first things they did -
91:29 - 91:33was to drive out Jewish
academics from the universities. -
91:33 - 91:35Einstein was very prominent
-
91:35 - 91:37and for that reason
he was one of the first to go. -
91:37 - 91:41He was hounded out of Germany
in 1933. -
91:41 - 91:44Lise was not dismissed
at that time. -
91:45 - 91:48She was able to stay
because she was Austrian. -
91:48 - 91:52But in March 1938,
Austria was annexed into Germany -
91:52 - 91:56and at that point her situation
became untenable. -
91:56 - 91:58( inaudible )
-
92:04 - 92:05What is it?
-
92:10 - 92:11Frightening news.
-
92:11 - 92:13What's happened?
-
92:15 - 92:18Kurt Hess is going around saying
that I should be got rid of. -
92:20 - 92:23I, um... I actually knew.
-
92:23 - 92:24I heard today.
-
92:24 - 92:25I was going to speak
-
92:25 - 92:26to the treasurer
of the institute -
92:26 - 92:28before I told you.
-
92:28 - 92:30We're speaking tomorrow.
-
92:32 - 92:34Come on,
let's get you home. -
92:34 - 92:36It's late.
-
92:42 - 92:43We'll finish up.
-
92:45 - 92:48LITHGOW:
The pressure on Meitner
was unbearable. -
92:48 - 92:52Hahn, who was known
for his anti-Nazi views, -
92:52 - 92:55did his best to protect her,
at least initially. -
92:57 - 92:59I need to talk to you
about Lise. -
92:59 - 93:00Not now,
I'm too busy. -
93:00 - 93:02We have to protect her.
-
93:02 - 93:04( sighs )
-
93:04 - 93:06How?
-
93:06 - 93:08What can we do?
-
93:08 - 93:10The situation
is the way it is. -
93:10 - 93:13Who knows what
will happen next? -
93:13 - 93:16She can't stay;
it's just not tenable. -
93:16 - 93:18But she hasn't got a visa
or even a valid passport. -
93:18 - 93:21And she may soon be
forbidden to leave Germany. -
93:24 - 93:27We can't harbor a Jew.
-
93:27 - 93:31If she stays, the regime
will shut us all down! -
93:42 - 93:43Lise...
-
93:48 - 93:51Horlein demands
that you leave. -
93:53 - 93:56You can't
throw her out. -
93:59 - 94:01Horlein says
you should not come -
94:01 - 94:03into the institute
anymore. -
94:05 - 94:06Well, I have to write up
-
94:06 - 94:09the thorium irradiation
tomorrow, -
94:09 - 94:10so I have to come in.
-
94:10 - 94:13You've given up.
-
94:32 - 94:34LITHGOW:
When it became clear that
Meitner would be dismissed -
94:34 - 94:36and probably arrested,
-
94:36 - 94:39physicists all around Europe
wrote letters -
94:39 - 94:41inviting her to conferences,
-
94:41 - 94:43giving her an excuse
to leave Germany. -
94:43 - 94:46The Nazis refused to let her go.
-
94:47 - 94:51In July of 1938,
-
94:51 - 94:53a Dutch colleague
traveled to Berlin -
94:53 - 94:55and illegally took Lise
back with him -
94:55 - 94:57on a train to Holland.
-
94:57 - 94:59The trip was so frightening
-
94:59 - 95:02that at one point
she begged to go back. -
95:02 - 95:06Despite the great danger,
she got through. -
95:13 - 95:17SIME:
She had lost everything--
her home, her position, -
95:17 - 95:21her books,
her salary, her pension, -
95:21 - 95:25even her native language.
-
95:25 - 95:28She had been cut off
from her work just at the time -
95:28 - 95:29when she was leading the field
-
95:29 - 95:33and was on the brink of
a major scientific discovery. -
95:36 - 95:38LITHGOW:
No matter what
privations she suffered, -
95:38 - 95:42Lise was still thinking
of physics. -
95:42 - 95:48Amazingly, she and Hahn were
able to collaborate by letter. -
95:48 - 95:51MEITNER ( composing ):
I hope, my dear Otto,
that after 30 years -
95:51 - 95:54of work together and friendship
in the institute, -
95:54 - 95:56that at least
the possibility remains -
95:56 - 95:58that you tell me
as much as you can -
95:58 - 96:00about what
is happening back there. -
96:20 - 96:23SIME:
Lise was invited by
an old student friend -
96:23 - 96:27to spend Christmas
on the west coast of Sweden. -
96:27 - 96:32Her nephew, Otto Robert Frisch,
who was also a physicist, -
96:32 - 96:33came to join her there.
-
96:33 - 96:36Aunt?
-
96:36 - 96:40Aunt?
-
96:40 - 96:42Aunt?
-
96:42 - 96:43Lise, how are you,
my dear? -
96:46 - 96:48Merry Christmas.
-
96:48 - 96:49Aunt?
-
96:49 - 96:51Hmm, I need your help.
-
96:51 - 96:53Come on, let's go out.
-
96:54 - 96:56But I was
hoping you'd help me. -
97:01 - 97:05LITHGOW:
Back in Berlin, Hahn
was getting strange results. -
97:05 - 97:07He found no evidence
to suggest -
97:07 - 97:10that bombarding the uranium
nucleus with neutrons -
97:10 - 97:12had caused it
to increase in size. -
97:12 - 97:16In fact, his experiments
seemed to be contaminated -
97:16 - 97:19with radium, a smaller atom.
-
97:19 - 97:24He desperately needed
Meitner's expert analysis. -
97:24 - 97:26From afar,
she was starting to suspect -
97:26 - 97:28that something very different
was happening -
97:28 - 97:29in their experiment.
-
97:31 - 97:34Hahn and Strassman are getting
some strange results -
97:34 - 97:35with the uranium work.
-
97:35 - 97:37Really?
-
97:37 - 97:39A couple of months ago,
Hahn told me -
97:39 - 97:43that they were finding radium
amongst the uranium products. -
97:43 - 97:45We are looking for
a much bigger element, -
97:45 - 97:49and... here we're finding
something much smaller. -
97:49 - 97:53I urged Hahn to check again--
it couldn't be radium. -
97:53 - 97:55And now he writes to me
-
97:55 - 97:59and tells me that
it's not radium,
it's barium. -
97:59 - 98:00But that's even smaller.
-
98:00 - 98:02Exactly.
-
98:02 - 98:04Hahn is sure
that it's another error, -
98:04 - 98:06but I don't know anymore.
-
98:06 - 98:09It is at least possible that
barium is being produced. -
98:09 - 98:12So Hahn still needs you
to interpret the data. -
98:12 - 98:15It is my work, too, you know.
-
98:15 - 98:17Exactly.
-
98:17 - 98:21Well, I can't be there, can I?
-
98:24 - 98:26Come on, let's walk.
-
98:34 - 98:36Surely he's made
a mistake, hasn't he? -
98:36 - 98:38He hasn't done
what you told him to. -
98:38 - 98:40My darling Robert,
-
98:40 - 98:42he may not be
a brilliant theorist, -
98:42 - 98:45but he's
too good a chemist
to get this wrong. -
98:52 - 98:55SIME:
If you imagine a drop of water--
a big drop-- -
98:55 - 98:59it's unstable, on the verge
of breaking apart. -
98:59 - 99:02It turns out
that a big nucleus like uranium -
99:02 - 99:04is just like that.
-
99:04 - 99:06Now for four years,
Meitner and Hahn -
99:06 - 99:08and all other physicists
had thought -
99:08 - 99:11that if you pump more neutrons
into this nucleus, -
99:11 - 99:14it'll just get
bigger and heavier. -
99:17 - 99:19But suddenly,
Meitner and Frisch-- -
99:19 - 99:22out in the midday snow--
realized -
99:22 - 99:24this nucleus
might just get so big -
99:24 - 99:26that it would split in two.
-
99:33 - 99:36If the nucleus is so big that
it has trouble staying together, -
99:36 - 99:41then couldn't just a little,
tiny jog from a neutron... -
99:41 - 99:43Yes, but if the nucleus
did split, -
99:43 - 99:46the two halves would fly apart
with a huge amount of energy. -
99:46 - 99:49Where's that energy going
to come from? -
99:49 - 99:51How much energy?
-
99:51 - 99:55Well, we worked out that
the mutual repulsion
between two nuclei -
99:55 - 99:57would generate
about 200 million
electron volts. -
99:57 - 100:00But something
has to supply that energy. -
100:00 - 100:04Wait, let me do
a packing fraction calculation. -
100:11 - 100:13The two nuclei
-
100:13 - 100:17are lighter than the original
nucleus of the uranium -
100:17 - 100:19by about one-fifth
of a proton in mass. -
100:19 - 100:22What?
-
100:22 - 100:23So some mass has been lost.
-
100:25 - 100:27Einstein's
E equals m c-squared. -
100:29 - 100:35If we multiply the lost mass
by the speed of light squared -
100:35 - 100:36we get...
-
100:36 - 100:37( scribbling )
-
100:40 - 100:42200 million electron volts.
-
100:44 - 100:47He's split the atom.
-
100:47 - 100:49No, no, no...
-
100:49 - 100:51you've split the atom.
-
100:59 - 101:03SIME:
It w an amazing discovery. -
101:03 - 101:04Of course, in the laboratory
-
101:04 - 101:06we're talking about
tiny amounts of uranium -
101:06 - 101:09and correspondingly
tiny amounts of energy. -
101:09 - 101:12But the point is that
the amount of energy released -
101:12 - 101:14was relatively large
-
101:14 - 101:18and that came from
the mass of the uranium itself. -
101:18 - 101:21The energy released
was entirely consistent -
101:21 - 101:25with Einstein's equation
E equals m c-squared. -
101:29 - 101:31LITHGOW:
Meitner and Frisch
published the discovery -
101:31 - 101:34of what they called
"nuclear fission" -
101:34 - 101:35to great acclaim.
-
101:35 - 101:38But betrayal awaited them.
-
101:41 - 101:44Otto Hahn was under pressure
from the Nazi regime -
101:44 - 101:47to write his Jewish colleague
out of the story. -
101:47 - 101:52He alone was awarded the 1944
Nobel Prize for the discovery. -
101:52 - 101:55In his speech,
he barely mentioned -
101:55 - 101:57the leading role of Meitner.
-
101:57 - 102:00Bizarrely, even after the war,
-
102:00 - 102:04Hahn maintained it
was he and not Meitner -
102:04 - 102:06who had discovered
nuclear fission. -
102:06 - 102:10MEITNER ( composing ):
Now, I want to write
something personal, -
102:10 - 102:14which disturbs me
and which I ask you to read -
102:14 - 102:17with our more than
40-year friendship in mind -
102:17 - 102:21and with the desire
to understand me. -
102:21 - 102:26I am now referred to
as "Hahn's long-time co-worker." -
102:26 - 102:29How would you feel
if you were only characterized -
102:29 - 102:32as the long-time
co-worker of me? -
102:35 - 102:37After the last 15 years--
-
102:37 - 102:41which I wouldn't wish
on any good friend-- -
102:41 - 102:46shall my scientific past
also be taken from me? -
102:46 - 102:48Is that fair?
-
102:48 - 102:51And why is it happening?
-
102:57 - 103:01BODANIS:
Lise Meitner had been working
on this for 30 years. -
103:01 - 103:04She'd only broken apart
a handful of atoms, -
103:04 - 103:05but that was enough.
-
103:05 - 103:09Once she had broken even one,
the genie was out of the bottle. -
103:11 - 103:13What Meitner had started...
after that, -
103:13 - 103:14physicists around the world
-
103:14 - 103:18began to realize they could
take it a lot further. -
103:18 - 103:22LITHGOW:
In 1942, an intense effort
to build an atom bomb was begun. -
103:22 - 103:25All over America,
secret installations sprang up -
103:25 - 103:30under the code name
"the Manhattan Project." -
103:30 - 103:32Meitner was asked to join
the Manhattan Project, -
103:32 - 103:33and she refused.
-
103:33 - 103:36She refused to have anything
to do with the atomic bomb. -
103:36 - 103:38But Robert Frisch was different.
-
103:38 - 103:40He was an important member
of the team, -
103:40 - 103:42because he was convinced
of the need -
103:42 - 103:45to beat the Nazis
in a nuclear arms race. -
104:01 - 104:04LITHGOW:
A nuclear bomb was
never used on Germany, -
104:04 - 104:09but the atomic bombs dropped
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki -
104:09 - 104:12demonstrated the terrible
destructive power -
104:12 - 104:14of E equals m c-squared.
-
104:29 - 104:31Vast amounts of energy,
-
104:31 - 104:34in the form
of electromagnetic radiation, -
104:34 - 104:38were released from a few pounds
of uranium and plutonium. -
104:47 - 104:49While the pure inquisitiveness
-
104:49 - 104:51of the world's
most gifted scientists -
104:51 - 104:55ironically had brought humanity
a weapon of mass destruction, -
104:55 - 104:59the equation's life
has a parallel story -
104:59 - 105:02of creation and beauty.
-
105:18 - 105:22Today, young physicists
carry on Einstein's quest. -
105:22 - 105:24Ever since its birth,
-
105:24 - 105:27E equals m c-squared
has been used -
105:27 - 105:29to delve into the depths
of time, -
105:29 - 105:32to answer the biggest question
of all-- -
105:32 - 105:34where did we come from?
-
105:42 - 105:44At particle accelerators,
-
105:44 - 105:47researchers propel
atomic particles -
105:47 - 105:51to the speed of light
and smash them together, -
105:51 - 105:54creating conditions
like those in the Big Bang. -
105:55 - 105:58KAISER:
E equals m c-squared
actually tells us -
105:58 - 106:00how the Big Bang itself
happened. -
106:04 - 106:06In the first moments
of creation, -
106:06 - 106:08the universe was
this immensely dense, -
106:08 - 106:11immensely concentrated eruption
of energy. -
106:11 - 106:15As it rushed apart and expanded,
huge amounts of energy, or "E," -
106:15 - 106:17were converted
into mass, or "m." -
106:17 - 106:18Pure energy became matter--
-
106:18 - 106:20it became the particles
and atoms -
106:20 - 106:22and it eventually formed
the first stars. -
106:27 - 106:30BODANIS:
Our sun is a huge furnace
floating in space -
106:30 - 106:32and it's powered
by E equals m c-squared. -
106:34 - 106:35Now it turns out, every second,
-
106:35 - 106:40four million tons of solid mass
of the sun disappears. -
106:40 - 106:41It comes out as energy.
-
106:41 - 106:43Not just a little bit of energy.
-
106:43 - 106:45It's enough to light up
our entire solar system, -
106:45 - 106:48make the solar system
glow with heat and light. -
106:50 - 106:52KAKU:
And not only
do stars emit energy, -
106:52 - 106:55in accordance
with E equals m c-squared. -
106:55 - 107:00The whole process
actually creates life itself. -
107:02 - 107:05Eventually, a massive star dies,
-
107:05 - 107:08the debris floats around,
clusters together, -
107:08 - 107:11gets pulled into the orbits
of another star -
107:11 - 107:13and becomes a planet.
-
107:15 - 107:20We humans and the earth we
stand on are made of stardust. -
107:20 - 107:25We are a direct product
of E equals m c-squared. -
107:29 - 107:33LITHGOW:
Building on the work
of scientists through the ages, -
107:33 - 107:36new generations are searching
for answs. -
107:38 - 107:42Using bold new tools that reach
almost to the speed of light, -
107:42 - 107:44they can now ask questions
-
107:44 - 107:47that their predecessors
could never have even imagined. -
107:57 - 107:59As Einstein himself knew,
-
107:59 - 108:03the journey of discovery
is sometimes painful, -
108:03 - 108:05sometimes joyful.
-
108:05 - 108:09It is as old
as human curiosity itself -
108:09 - 108:12and never, ever ends.
-
108:14 - 108:17( train whistle blowing )
-
108:53 - 108:56We gave top physicists
two short minutes -
108:56 - 108:59to explain Einstein's
big idea. -
108:59 - 109:01* NOVA's Web site,
you can hear how they did it,* -
109:01 - 109:04tell us what you think
about this program, -
109:04 - 109:05and much more.
-
109:05 - 109:07Find it on pbs.org.
-
109:09 - 109:11In a labyrinth of Roman ruins,
a chamber of mass death. -
109:25 - 109:28This NOVA program is available
on DVD. -
109:28 - 109:33To order, visit shopPBS.org,
or call 1-800-play-PBS.
- Title:
- Albert Einstein's Big Idea HD Documentary (With 17 Subtitles)
- Description:
-
CHECK OUT MY MOST RECENT SPACE DOCUMENTARY ABOUT MARS:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w280wTNFdXkOver 100 years ago, Albert Einstein grappled with the implications of his revolutionary special theory of relativity and came to a startling conclusion: mass and energy are one, related by the formula E = mc2. In "Einstein's Big Idea," NOVA dramatizes the remarkable story behind this equation. E = mc2 was just one of several extraordinary breakthroughs that Einstein made in 1905, including the completion of his special theory of relativity, his identification of proof that atoms exist, and his explanation of the nature of light, which would win him the Nobel Prize in Physics. Among Einstein's ideas, E = mc2 is by far the most famous. Yet how many people know what it really means? In a thought-provoking and engrossing docudrama, NOVA illuminates this deceptively simple formula by unraveling the story of how it came to be.
SUBSCRIBE, TURN ON THE NOTIFICATION BELL SO YOU DON'T MISS ANY COOL UPLOADS FROM ME AND SHARE WITH EVERY ONE YOU KNOW!! I APPRECIATE IT VERY MUCH IF YOU COULD DO THAT OR ME! THANKS :)
- Video Language:
- English
- Duration:
- 01:50:57
![]() |
NeoAmara edited English subtitles for Albert Einstein's Big Idea HD Documentary (With 17 Subtitles) | |
![]() |
NeoAmara edited English subtitles for Albert Einstein's Big Idea HD Documentary (With 17 Subtitles) | |
![]() |
NeoAmara edited English subtitles for Albert Einstein's Big Idea HD Documentary (With 17 Subtitles) | |
![]() |
NeoAmara edited English subtitles for Albert Einstein's Big Idea HD Documentary (With 17 Subtitles) | |
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Rafael Mello edited English subtitles for Albert Einstein's Big Idea HD Documentary (With 17 Subtitles) |