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Visitors look at some of Albert Einstein?s manuscripts on display in the Jerusalem's Hebrew University of Jerusalem AFP |
Jerusalem (AFP) - An Albert Einstein "puzzle" has been solved thanks to a missing page of manuscript emerging in a collection of his writings acquired by Jerusalem's Hebrew University, officials announced Wednesday.
The
handwritten page, part of an appendix to a 1930 paper on the Nobel winner's
efforts towards a unified field theory, was discovered among the 110-page trove
the university's Albert Einstein archives received some two weeks ago.
Most of the
documents constitute handwritten mathematical calculations behind Einstein's
scientific writings in the late 1940s.
There are
also letters that Einstein, born in Germany in 1879, wrote to collaborators
which deal with a range of scientific and personal issues, including one to his
son, Hans Albert.
The 1935
letter to his son expresses concern about the rise of the Nazi party in
Germany.
Nearly all
the documents had been known to researchers and available in the form of copies
-- "sometimes better copies, sometimes very poor copies", said Hanoch
Gutfreund, scientific advisor to the university's Einstein archives.
Gutfreund,
a physics professor and former president of the university, said the eight-page
appendix of the 1930 unified theory paper had never been published, though
researchers had copies of it.
"But
in the copies we had, one page was missing, and that was a problem. That was a
puzzle," Gutfreund told AFP.
"And
to our surprise, to our delight, that page is now here. It came with the new
material," he said.
Hebrew
University said: "This article was one of many in Einstein?s attempts to
unify the forces of nature into one, single theory and he devoted the last 30
years of his life to this effort."
The
collection, acquired through a donation from the Crown-Goodman foundation in
Chicago, was bought from Gary Berger, a North Carolina doctor who had a private
collection of Einstein writings.
Gutfreund
refused to divulge the sum paid for the 110 papers.
Einstein
was one of a founding father of the Hebrew University and served as a
non-resident governor of the Jerusalem institution.
When the
German-born physicist died in 1955, he bequeathed the university his archives,
with curator Roni Grosz saying its 82,000 items make it the world's most
extensive collection of Einstein documents.
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