Math, asked by Anonymous, 10 months ago

what was albert einstien problem? what was his plan to get rid of it and how yuri helped it?​

Answers

Answered by Krishna0007
1

❏ ANSWER:-

1. For the last 39 of his 76 years of life, physicist Albert Einstein (1879-1955) suffered from chronic illness. His health problems were primarily related to multiple complications of digestive system disorders; liver ailment, stomach ulcer, inflammation of gall bladder, jaundice and intestinal pains.

2. Yuri was a student of the medical school who was senior to Einstein. He was the who introduces Albert to Dr. Ernest Weil. He was very emotional and emotionally attached to Einstein. He is the one who understands the plight of Einstein to go to study abroad. He helped Albert in making a medical certificate from Dr. Weil as the way he desired. He helped him so that he can come out of the school.

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Answered by Anonymous
1

In early May 1952, 73-year-old Albert Einstein took a break from his three-decade pursuit of a unified field theory to provide a 14-year-old some help with a geometry problem.

The request for aid had arrived in the mail from Johanna Mankiewicz, a high school sophomore at the Westlake School for Girls in Los Angeles. Johanna was the daughter of Herman Mankiewicz, a writer who collaborated with Orson Welles on the movie Citizen Kane. Her uncle was the famous producer and director Joseph Mankiewicz. Some of her schoolmates, like Jane Fonda, would become movie stars.

Johanna’s Hollywood surroundings probably contributed to her willingness to contact the biggest celebrity of all in the American scientific scene when she and her geometry classmates were stumped by a tricky homework problem. Surely a star like Einstein would be far better to ask than the never-to-be-known-for-anything Westlake mathematics teacher. In her letter to Einstein she wrote, “I realize that you are a very busy man, but you are the only person we know of who could supply us with the answer.” After stating the problem for Einstein, she commented: “I think you will agree it is the hardest thing!”

Although Johanna would not have known it, Einstein had a consistent history of answering letters from children and others from the general public that he felt were genuine. He would often scrawl a reply on paper, and Helen Dukas, his personal secretary, would either type the reply or just send off the written response as he wrote it.

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