Einstein and I

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    Einstein and I

    The man with the relativistic eyes

    Anytime you can drop in my 10x15 room flooded with all witty stuff, lots of contrabandand books. But from the un-distempered walls of my room, where my explicit graduate

    testimony, either in the form of second thermodynamics law or resonance frequencyformulas can be openly seen, to the always shining glass of my study table which I haveillegally borrowed, Einstein, as if searching for me in my own room, is copiously allaround. His passport to calendar size picture graffitis is the most widely spreadbelonging of my quadrilateral shaped room.I do not always associate him with his world famous E=mc2, for I know that he hasformulated a lot more than just that revolutionizing three variable relativistic equation. Ithink that, among all the worlds scientists who try to answer all impelling curiosities ofneurons in our brain and among all those marvels who research to understand ouruniverse as a whole, this Ulm born science renaissance is the most eminent of all, evenfar more than Sir Newton, Debroglie, Maxwell or Hawkings.

    Nature and natures laws, law lay hidden night.God said let Newton be and all was light..If I were the chief of International Science Committee, I would have edited it to Godsaid let Einstein be.

    Sir Isaac Newton was great as he theorized many great immortal discoveries of ourworld with gravity being his magnum opus. Being an optic student, (recall Newtonsrings) he discovered the first most beautiful fundamental interaction of our universe, which I tell you would be the most promising in devising the Grand unified theory(GUT) if we ever able to couple it with seemingly opposite Quantum mechanics.

    But there are a lot of reasons why my admiration leans maximum towards Einstein.

    Have you ever tried to go deep into the big mystery laden eyes of this Swiss patent clerkat 20, if not you can skip the entire following paragraph. Einstein, the legend of legends(or informally, the baap of all the legendry theoretical physicists) has his patent onsome of the worlds most wired discoveries that, as unlike others, are not naked whenmercilessly scrutinized with certain equated laws and equations. The world know himmore, as I said earlier, by E=mc2, or by his 1905 born special relativity, that transformhuman understanding of nature on every possible angle, or by his time proofcontributions to Statistical mechanics and cosmology or by his wizardness indeciphering Quantum laws, huh !! etc etc.But who have looked deeply into those relativistic eyes, as I said, know that he was morea wonderer, an imaginer rather than just a theoretical physicist.

    At the age of 76, when he died in his sleep, he was working to unify Quantum laws withGravity, so that the unification of Physics could follow and had it not be the death thatprevented him to go further, we would be celebrating his birthday as the GrandUnification Day. Today we do this either by studying Black holes where we apply gravity

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    because it has so much mass and Quantum Mechanics because the star is so small like apoint, or, in modern times, by postulating the Strings Concept.

    But hey, wheres I in all this, it looks as if I m writing a speech on The man with therelativistic eyes. I have specially fabricated this chapter to tell you that there is an

    Einstein, not in me or you but in all of us, a wonderer who loves to be lost in his ownworld where his laws are being followed and where there is no theory, working in hisabsence, and the Einstein who must not die out of any heart failure before finishing hiswork.

    Einstein, a man whose definition is not to be written by a pen but by history was the firsthuman who tried not to think like humans but like the creator himself. He deeplyinspired and instilled in every science generation of his time and possibly intothousands of the future generations to come that apart from science, our universe is fullof enigmatic wonders also which should not loose their values on account of beingexploded by telescopic eyes. He stood at the foundation cradle of all traditional scientificoutlooks and made the world believe that this universe really seems to be much beyondour scientific theories and laws upon which we expertise and focus all our energy andattentions. Your laboratory will fall tiny enough to accompany all inordinate reasons andensuing basis and that without a meticulous theory on imagination, we can not put thatlast full stop in physics or astronomy to understand the working secrets of our universe.

    Einstein universe is full of cosmic celebrations like Supernovae, geometricized bycoordinate points like singularity, incredible laws and para-wonderable theories thattake us closer to the understanding of the language upon which all this beautiful andseemingly infinite cosmos have been written, which we call in affection, the Universe.His theories and imaginations have no hunger of any Nobel because not in centuries ormere generations but it is in millennia that a person, like Gods own messenger, comes

    whose brain we can not afford to loose.

    I know that he was true while quoting the true sign of intelligence is not knowledge butimagination. And write my words, it will be some imagination only, no knowledge, thatwill write the final law and will explain the final mystery of this universe, empirically orimaginary.

    He made me believe that an unfeigned quest of ignorance may be far greater than thepower of the most widely established knowledge, so the imagination must satisfy thehunger.At his 130th Birth day on 14th March 2009, I wish for his return once again to lead the

    community of thousands of curious sheep like a divine shepherd.

    Let God nourishe the Einstein within me and within all of us.