Einstein in Pasadena: Between Two Worlds - Diana K. Buchwald
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 Published On Mar 26, 2024

For months prior to Albert Einstein's arrival in California on December 31, 1930, newspapers across the United States and Europe reported breathlessly on his upcoming visit to Caltech: "Noted Guest Is Nearing Pasadena. Hundreds of Flower-Laden Schoolgirls and Boys' Choir to Greet Scientist on Arrival Today. Privacy Guarded While in City. Mathematical Wizard to Meet Theory Testers." At the time, the young science-and-engineering institute was already notable for its accomplished faculty and its association with the Mount Wilson Observatory. Nonetheless, the voyage from Berlin to Pasadena meant a monthlong journey, spanning 8,000 miles by ship through the Panama Canal. How and why did the then 51-year-old Einstein decide to make the visit? The Einstein Papers Project at Caltech is delving into Einstein's massive written legacy of more than 500,000 pages that contain his correspondence, notebooks, diaries, lectures, calculations, speeches, and interviews. The project's ongoing work—one of the most ambitious scholarly publishing ventures in science—aims to present the first complete picture of Einstein's writings in a printed series, The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein. Sixteen volumes have been published to date. In this talk, Diana K. Buchwald, director and general editor of The Einstein Papers Project and Caltech's Robert M. Abbey Professor of History, shares recent insights into Einstein's scientific work and private life during the late 1920s and the early 1930s, when the physicist visited Caltech for three winters in the California sunshine.

Learn more about:

- The Einstein Papers Project: https://www.einstein.caltech.edu
- Professor Buchwald's research: https://www.hss.caltech.edu/people/di...

About the Series:

Since 1922, The Earnest C. Watson Lecture Series has brought Caltech's most innovative scientific research to the public.

The series is named for Earnest C. Watson, a professor of physics at Caltech from 1919 until 1959. Spotlighting a small selection of the pioneering research Caltech's faculty is currently conducting, the Watson Lectures are geared toward a general audience, as part of the Institute's ongoing commitment to benefiting the local community through education and outreach. Through a gift from the estate of Richard C. Biedebach, the lecture series is able to highlight assistant professors' research each season.

View other Watson Lectures: https://bit.ly/Caltech_Watson_Lectures

For more information on the Watson Lecture Series: https://caltech.edu/watson

Produced in association with Caltech Academic Media Technologies.
©2024 California Institute of Technology

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