Meanwhile: Einstein was right even when wrong 
Simon Singh The New York Times Tuesday, January 4, 2005

LONDON We have now entered what is being celebrated as the Einstein Year, 
marking the centenary of the physicist's annus mirabilis in 1905, when he 
published three landmark papers - those that proved the existence of the atom, 
showed the validity of quantum physics and, of course, introduced the world to 
his theory of special relativity. Not bad for a beginner. 
.
"It's not that I'm so smart," Albert Einstein once said, "It's just that I stay 
with problems longer." Whatever the reason for his greatness, there is no doubt 
that this determination allowed him to invent courageous new physics and 
explore realms that nobody else had dared to investigate. 
.
.
What he was not, however, was a perfect genius. In fact, when it came to the 
biggest scientific issue of all - the origin of the universe - he was utterly 
wrong. And while we should certainly laud his achievements over the next 12 
months, we may learn a more valuable lesson by investigating Einstein's 
greatest failure. 
.
The story starts in the late 19th century, when the scientific establishment 
believed in an eternal and unchanging universe. This was a neat theory of 
cosmology, because a universe that had always existed did not raise any awkward 
questions, such as "When was the universe created?" and "What (or Who) created 
it?" 
.
Einstein grew up in this era, and was similarly convinced that the universe had 
existed for an eternity. However, when he developed general relativity (his 
theory of gravity) in 1915, he became aware of a tricky problem. Gravity is an 
attractive force - it attracts coins to the ground and it attracts comets 
toward the sun. So why hadn't gravity caused the matter in the universe to 
collapse inward on itself? 
.
Gravity seemed to be incompatible with an eternal, unchanging universe, and 
Einstein certainly had no sympathy for the alternative view of a collapsing 
universe, stating that: "To admit such a possibility seems senseless." 
.
Isaac Newton had run into the same problem with his own theory of gravity 250 
years earlier. He, too, believed in an eternal universe, yet he knew that 
gravity would have to cause its collapse after a finite time. His solution was 
to propose that God was responsible for keeping apart all the celestial 
objects, adjusting their positions from time to time as part of his cosmic 
curatorial responsibilities. 
.
Einstein was reluctant to invoke God, so his solution was to fiddle with his 
theory of general relativity, adding an antigravity force alongside familiar 
gravity. There was no evidence for this antigravity force, but Einstein assumed 
that it had to exist in order to provide a platform for eternity. 
.
Although everything now seemed to make sense, there were some dissenters. A 
small band of renegade cosmologists suggested in the 1920s that the universe 
was not eternal but had been created at a finite moment in the past. They 
claimed it had exploded and expanded from a small, hot, dense state into what 
we see today. In particular, they argued that it had once been compacted into a 
primeval super atom, which had then ruptured and exploded. This model, which 
has since developed into the Big Bang theory, did not require any stabilizing 
antigravity. 
.
The Big Bang model was initially ridiculed by the scientific establishment. One 
of its pioneers, Georges Lemaître, was both a cosmologist and an ordained 
priest, so critics suspected that the model was Lemaître's way of sneaking a 
Creator into science. While Einstein was not biased against Lemaître's 
religious background, he did call the priest's physics "abominable." It was 
enough to banish the Big Bang model to the hinterlands of cosmology. 
.
However, in 1929 Einstein was forced to eat humble pie. Edwin Hubble, working 
at Mount Wilson Observatory in Southern California, showed that all the distant 
galaxies in the universe were racing away from one another as though they were 
debris from a cosmic explosion. 
.
The Big Bang model seemed to be correct. And, while it would take several 
decades before the theory was accepted by the scientific establishment, 
Einstein, to his credit, did not fight on. "This is the most beautiful and 
satisfactory explanation of creation to which I have ever listened," he said, 
and even called his repulsive force the biggest blunder of his career. 
.
In 1931, Einstein paid a visit to Hubble at Mount Wilson, where he renounced 
his own static cosmology and endorsed the expanding universe model. 
.
It might seem that Einstein emerges from this story as a flawed genius, one who 
was not perfect. In fact, there is a twist to the tale, one that implies he was 
perhaps better than perfect. If gravity pulls everything together, then the 
expansion of the Big Bang should be slowing, because all the receding galaxies 
would be attracted to one another. In 1998, however, when astronomers tried to 
measure this deceleration, they were astonished to find that the universe is in 
fact accelerating. The galaxies are apparently moving apart faster and faster 
as time passes. 
.
What is the best explanation scientists can come up with? The existence of an 
antigravity force. Theorists call this repulsive effect "dark energy," but it 
is exactly the sort of force that Einstein posited. It seems that even when 
Einstein thought he was wrong, he turned out to be right. 
.
And, as we celebrate the Einstein Year, let's also bear in mind the fact that 
he was prepared to admit that he was wrong. Perhaps humility, more than 
anything, is the mark of true genius. 
.
(Simon Singh is the author of ''Fermat's Enigma'' and the forthcoming ''Big 
Bang: The Origins of the Universe.'') 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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