Relativity Theory Explained in 4 Simple Steps



 plain and clear, and his conditions are for the most part variable based math—nothing that would trouble a common high-schooler.


That is on the grounds that extravagant math was never the point for Einstein. He jumped at the chance to think outwardly, concocting tests to his eye and working them around in his mind until he could see the thoughts and actual standards with glasslike clearness. (Peruse "10 Things You (Probably) Didn't Know About Einstein.")


To rejuvenate his cycle, National Geographic made an intelligent adaptation of one of Einstein's most renowned psychological tests: an anecdote about lightning strikes as seen from a moving train that shows how two eyewitnesses can get reality in totally different ways.

Here’s how Einstein got started on his thought experiments when he was just 16, and how it eventually led him to the most revolutionary equation in modern physics.



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