World War I: How Einstein Revolutionized The Scientific World

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In the modern world, the name Albert Einstein rings a bell in just about everybody’s mind. Anyone who has ever delved into the world of physics, even just the slightest feeling of the outer layer, will recognize the name Einstein. Why? Einstein revolutionized the scientific world, that’s why. Other famous scientists such as Max Planck, Erwin Schrödinger, and Niels Bohr might also be one you would recognize by name. How about Werner Karl Heisenberg? The time of the two world wars in Germany was bad. Before and after the wars weren’t much better. Werner was born in 1901. “According to one estimate, in 1902 the average annual living expenses for a working-class family of four in Würzburg amounted to 1200 marks, while the average annual wage of a skilled worker was 1200 to 1600 marks...In 1902, his (Werner’s father) gymnasium salary increased to more than 3000 marks, and after promotion to gymnasium professor in 1906, he received 4410 marks… (Freeman 10)” So before the first world war, the Heisenberg family had no financial worries. …show more content…

This principle is a rule that helps govern quantum mechanics and keep order in the universe. This theory discredited some of the older theories that we now know today to be inaccurate such as Bohr’s model of an atom which is fundamentally unsound, because Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle states, in the simplest form, that the more accurately an object's position is known, the less the object’s way of travel (speed, direction, etc.) would be known. Bohr’s model shows the electron orbiting in a fixed path that was obsolete. Such a path could not be determined because it is impossible to comprehend precisely the position and momentum of an object at the same time. Aside from disproving older theories, the uncertainty principle also helped introduce new