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  1. Apr 2, 2014 · Mileva Einstein-Maric was the first wife of Nobel Prize-winning physicist Albert Einstein. ... Lieserl, in early 1902. Stories vary as what happened to her. Some say that the girl was eventually ...

  2. Jul 1, 2000 · On p. 79 Zackheim writes, “Part of Einstein’s theory of relativity involved disproving Newton’s claim that light is deflected from the sun at 0.87 second of arc by proving that light is deflected by 1.7 seconds of arc.”. Leaving aside the fact that light is deflected toward the Sun, the calculation cited by Zackheim was not done by ...

  3. Jan 1, 2001 · 3.39. 167 ratings26 reviews. In 1902 an illegitimate daughter was born to Albert Einstein. In 1903 she vanished. The discovery in 1986 of early love letters between Albert Einstein and Mileva Maric, the woman who would become his first wife, revealed the birth of the child named Lieserl. But after a 1903 letter, there is no more mention of her.

  4. Lieserl Einstein was born on the 27th of January, 1902, in Novi Sad, present-day Serbia. She was the first child of theoretical physicists Albert Einstein and Mileva Maric. Einstein’s mother disapproved of Maric, so the couple kept Lieserl secret. While Albert worked in Switzerland, Maric and Lieserl stayed in Serbia. One of the reasons Einstein’s

  5. Aug 7, 2014 · Lieserl was born in 1902. She was the daughter of Albert Einstein and Mileva Marić. She was born premarital about the end of January or early February 1902 in Novi Sad, then part of the Austrian-Hungarian Monarchy. Her existence was publicly unknown until the "love letters" of her parents were published in 1987.

  6. www.snopes.com › fact-check › einstein-universal-forceA Universal Force | Snopes.com

    Apr 28, 2015 · David Mikkelson. Albert Einstein once described love as a "universal force" in a letter to his daughter Lieserl. A purported missive from renowned physicist Albert Einstein to his daughter about ...

  7. 3 days ago · Albert Einstein (born March 14, 1879, Ulm, Württemberg, Germany—died April 18, 1955, Princeton, New Jersey, U.S.) was a German-born physicist who developed the special and general theories of relativity and won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1921 for his explanation of the photoelectric effect.

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