Match these words with their definitions.




1. acknowledged

2. long-standing

3. patent

4. dedicated

5. overturned

6. weapons of mass destruction

7. expose

8. admission

9. pacifist


A. a legal document which protects an inventor's rights to his/her invention

B. bombs, etc for killing large numbers of people

C. changed

D. recognised

E. existing for many years

F. committed to

G. somebody who is against war

H. entry

I. make open to


Albert Einstein

Albert Einstein is widely acknowledged to be one of the greatest physicists of all time. Born in Ulm, Germany in 1879, his family soon moved to Munich, where he lived until he was 15. He attended the Luitpold Gymnasium and in 1894, wrote his first scientific work, The Investigation of the State of Aether in Magnetic Fields.

Einstein's family moved to Italy in the same year, but he stayed behind to finish school. However, one year later, he left school without telling his parents and went to Italy to be with them. Shortly afterwards, he applied for admission to the Swiss Polytechnic Institute but was not accepted; he had not done well in the non-science part of the test. He later attended the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School in Zurich, from which he received a degree and so was qualified to teach Physics and Mathematics. Unfortunately, however, he was not able to get a teaching position but with the help of his old classmate and friend, Marcel Grossman, was able to get a job in the Swiss Patent Office in 1902. In 1903, Einstein married his former classmate, Mileva Marie. They had three children -a daughter and two sons.

While Einstein was working at the Patent Office, he began to examine different problems in physics and came up with some remarkable discoveries. In 1905 he published three papers, one of which was about his Special Theory of Relativity, a concept which completely overturned Isaac Newton's long-standing Law of Universal Gravitation.

In the following years, Einstein and his family moved from one European capital to another. In each city he held teaching positions at local universities or in scientific institutions. He continued researching a number of different questions and published papers which had a great impact on the field of physics, including his work on the concept of relativity, which led to his Theory of General Relativity in 1915. He paid his price for creativity, however, and due to the great stress he was under, he became seriously ill in 1917.

When Einstein's General Theory of Relativity was proved to be true by British researchers in 1919, he became world famous. lie received the 1921 Nobel Prize for Physics in recognition of his work (in 1905) on the photoelectric effect (when electrons are produced if matter is exposed to electromagnetic radiation, for example, in X-rays), which had been thoroughly tested and widely accepted.

Einstein was very active in polities. He moved to the US from Europe just before the start of World War 11, and advised the American President Franklin Roosevelt to start building an atomic bomb before the Nazis produced one. However, he later said that had he realised the Nazis would not produce an atomic bomb, he would never have advised Roosevelt in this way. lie never personally worked on the bomb. In fact, he was against war and weapons of mass destruction. All his life Einstein had been a pacifist, only recognising the need to fight against the Nazis when it became apparent that they had to be stopped. After the war, he dedicated himself to working for nuclear disarmament.

Einstein believed that we should never stop questioning things and keep searching for answers about the natural world. On IS1'1 April, 1955 he died of heart failure.

Read the text and choose the correct answer.


1. Einstein left Munich in

a. 1879.

b. 1894.

c. 1895.

d. 1902.

2. After completing his education at the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School, Einstein

a. was not accepted at the Swiss Polytechnic Institute.

b. got a job teaching Physics and Mathematics.

c. got a job working with his friend, Marcel Grossman.

d. got a job working at the Swiss Patent Office.

3. After the publication of his 1905 papers, Einstein

a. became an international celebrity.

b. stopped working on the Theory of Relativity.

c. continued working on the Theory of Relativity.

d. spent his time teaching rather than doing research.

4. Einstein became an international celebrity

a. when his theories were proven to be true

b. when he discovered the General Theory of Relativity.

c. when he discovered the Special Theory of Relativity

d. when he won the Nobel Prize.

5. Einstein received the 1921 Nobel Prize

a. because of his discovery of relativity.

b. because his theories overturned Newton's Law.

c. because of his earlier work.

d. because of his contributions to world peace.

6. Einstein's attitude to war could be described as

a. tolerant in certain situations.

b. totally opposed.

c. supportive.

d. undecided.

Albert Einstein

1. Альберт Эйнштейн является одним из самых великих физиков в мире.

2. Свою первую научную работу «Исследование состояния эфира в магнитных полях» Эйнштейн написал, будучи учеником Луитпольдской гимназии.

3. Эйнштейн получил квалификацию, позволяющую ему преподавать физику и математику, но он не смог найти работу учителя.

4. Работая в патентном бюро, он начал заниматься научной работой в области физики и сделал ряд выдающихся открытий.

5. Теория относительности Эйнштейна потрясла научный мир, так как полностью опровергла существующий издавна закон всемирного тяготения.

6. Нобелевская премия в области физики в 1921 году была присуждена Эйнштейну за работу в области фотоэлектрического эффекта. Он доказал, что, когда материя подвергается воздействию электромагнитного излучения, наблюдается появление электронов.

7. Эйнштейн никогда не работал над созданием атомной бомбы, так как всегда был против войны и оружия массового поражения.

 



Вариант 6


Дата добавления: 2018-11-24; просмотров: 471; Мы поможем в написании вашей работы!

Поделиться с друзьями:






Мы поможем в написании ваших работ!