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Einstein's Big Idea

Einstein's Big Idea (2005)

October. 11,2005
|
7.8
|
G
| Drama Documentary

Over 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.

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Reviews

garymacphail-1
2005/10/11

I found this to be the most informative and delightful documentary I have seen in years. It shows how man knew of lightning, discovered the nature of electricity. How magnetism had been known for centuries and then that the two separate forces were brought together as one through brilliant experiments.Later light is found to be of the same properties of electricity and magnetism. Other, more elemental discoveries, would prove to be instrumental to help Einstein bring all of this together to figure out the mechanics of how the sub-molecular forces which allow everything in existence to thrive.Without one piece of this puzzle, people would have never have been able to realize how things work.This is the first report as to how to we came to understand the Universe and utilize its properties.

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harvin-1
2005/10/12

This is a drama about several groups of people including, Einstein and the members of his "Olympia Academy", Lise Meitner, her nephew Robert Frisch, and her collaborator Otto Hahn, Antoine Lavoisier and his wife Marie Anne, and Emilie du Châtelet and Voltaire, (I had never heard of Emilie du Châtelet before this program, and I think that's a terrible oversight.) This movie is not a physics lecture; it's a demonstration of the passion that the people who do science bring to their work. It's a passion every bit as profound as the passion attributed to the artists among us, and to me, these scientists have never seemed more alive as people than in this production.

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lindasko1999
2005/10/13

(hello other poster in Canada!) :) I just saw this show, too, and FINALLY a couple of things were explained to me in ways that I understood them! It's not that that was the AIM of the show, but a couple of interviewees just happened to say something, and PRESTO, I got it! I've been trying to wrap my head around travel at the speed of light, etc for decades, and now I get it (more or less, speaking as a lay-person!) I love history, biographies, and have always been interested in Albert Einstein, so this show was really really wonderful.I want to find out how to contact the producers of this show to commend them on it!

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hedzup7up
2005/10/14

i thought the movie was fascinating. the movie tells the story of famous scientist albert einstein and all of the other people that helped him achieve his famous equation E = mc^2 (all indirectly of course). i am a physics student right now and really learned a lot although i'm sure non-physics people will be interested just the same. although it does explain a lot of physics theory, it isn't so much information that it's boring or anything like that. the actors are great and so is the narration (john lithgow)... it also looks fantastic in hd! i highly recommend checking this movie out, it's playing now on pbs (under the title Nova) and i'm sure it will be replayed frequently.

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