Please answer I will mark you brainliest "150 words on 'tribute to einstein'. "
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Six stamps commemorating 100 years of Professor Albert Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity have been released by The Isle of Man Post Office.
One stamp features Einstein while another features Stephen Hawking. The other stamps feature well-known equations produced by the physicists over the past century, that have helped shape scientific discoveries today.
The series has been produced to celebrate both the pioneering physicists and their contribution to the world of science.
The stamps have been personally endorsed and approved by theoretical physicist Professor Hawking and are receiving support from The Stephen Hawking Foundation.
They have also received the royal seal of approval, having been approved by HM Queen Elizabeth II.

Hawking said: “I am honoured to have both my face and my life’s work featured alongside Albert Einstein and the commemoration of 100 years since the publication of his general theory of relativity.
“Much of my life’s work has been to encourage young people in the study of cosmology and astrophysics and to help inspire them to better understand our universe and beyond. I hope that this unique set of stamps goes some way towards achieving this.”
Einstein's General Theory of Relativity continues to shape the scientific community, with Professor Hawking as the leading voice and driving force for continued research and discoveries.
Allan Bell, Isle of Man Chief Minster, said: “Professor Albert Einstein and Professor Stephen Hawking have made outstanding contributions to the world’s understanding of the universe around us.
“Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity may be a century old, but it is fundamental today to the operation of such features of our daily lives as GPS and satellites.
“In addition to Professor Hawking’s ground-breaking research his ability to make science exciting to the general population deserves to be celebrated as well, as these stamps do.”
One stamp features Einstein while another features Stephen Hawking. The other stamps feature well-known equations produced by the physicists over the past century, that have helped shape scientific discoveries today.
The series has been produced to celebrate both the pioneering physicists and their contribution to the world of science.
The stamps have been personally endorsed and approved by theoretical physicist Professor Hawking and are receiving support from The Stephen Hawking Foundation.
They have also received the royal seal of approval, having been approved by HM Queen Elizabeth II.

Hawking said: “I am honoured to have both my face and my life’s work featured alongside Albert Einstein and the commemoration of 100 years since the publication of his general theory of relativity.
“Much of my life’s work has been to encourage young people in the study of cosmology and astrophysics and to help inspire them to better understand our universe and beyond. I hope that this unique set of stamps goes some way towards achieving this.”
Einstein's General Theory of Relativity continues to shape the scientific community, with Professor Hawking as the leading voice and driving force for continued research and discoveries.
Allan Bell, Isle of Man Chief Minster, said: “Professor Albert Einstein and Professor Stephen Hawking have made outstanding contributions to the world’s understanding of the universe around us.
“Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity may be a century old, but it is fundamental today to the operation of such features of our daily lives as GPS and satellites.
“In addition to Professor Hawking’s ground-breaking research his ability to make science exciting to the general population deserves to be celebrated as well, as these stamps do.”
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Albert Einstein's name has become synonymous with genius but his contributions to science might have been cut short had he stayed in Germany , where he was born on March 14, 1879.
It was 1933 and a charismatic politician called
Adolf Hitler had just become Chancellor.
Einstein, a Jew, learned that his name was on a
Nazi list of people earmarked for assassination and a bounty had been put on his head.
One German magazine even included him on a list of enemies of the state under the phrase: “Not yet hanged.”
He had already been used to being something of a migrant as, by the age of 17, his parents had already taken him to live in Italy and Switzerland, where he began training to be a physics and maths teacher in 1896.
It was 1933 and a charismatic politician called
Adolf Hitler had just become Chancellor.
Einstein, a Jew, learned that his name was on a
Nazi list of people earmarked for assassination and a bounty had been put on his head.
One German magazine even included him on a list of enemies of the state under the phrase: “Not yet hanged.”
He had already been used to being something of a migrant as, by the age of 17, his parents had already taken him to live in Italy and Switzerland, where he began training to be a physics and maths teacher in 1896.
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