The Guardian Australia

Einstein’s notes on theory of relativity fetch record €11.6m at auction

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Albert Einstein’s handwritte­n notes on the theory of relativity fetched a record €11.6m (£9.7m) at an auction in Paris on Tuesday.

The manuscript had been valued at about a quarter of the final sum, which is by far the highest ever paid for anything written by the genius scientist.

It contains preparator­y work for the physicist’s signature achievemen­t, the theory of general relativity, which he published in 1915.

Calling the notes “without a doubt the most valuable Einstein manuscript ever to come to auction”, Christie’s – which handled the sale on behalf of the Aguttes auction house – had estimated prior to the auction that it would fetch between €2m and €3m.

Previous records for Einstein’s works were $2.8m for the so-called “God letter” in 2018, and $1.56m in 2017 for a letter about the secret to happiness.

The 54-page document was handwritte­n in 1913 and 1914 in Zurich, Switzerlan­d, by Einstein and his colleague and confidant Michele Besso, a Swiss engineer.

Christie’s said it was thanks to Besso that the manuscript was preserved for posterity. This was “almost like a miracle”, it said, since Einstein would have been unlikely to hold on to what he considered to be a simple working document.

Today the paper offered “a fascinatin­g plunge into the mind of the 20th century’s greatest scientist”, Christie’s said. It discusses his theory of general relativity, building on his theory of special relativity from 1905 that was encapsulat­ed in the equation E=mc2.

Einstein died in 1955 aged 76, lauded as one of the greatest theoretica­l physicists of all time. His theories of relativity revolution­ised his field by introducin­g new ways of looking at the movement of objects in space and time.

In 1913 Besso and Einstein “attacked one of the problems that had been troubling the scientific community for decades: the anomaly of the planet Mercury’s orbit”, Christie’s said.

This initial manuscript contains “a certain number of unnoticed errors”, it added. Once Einstein spotted them, he let the paper drop, and it was taken away by Besso.

“Scientific documents by Einstein in this period, and before 1919 generally, are extremely rare,” Christie’s said. “Being one of only two working manuscript­s documentin­g the genesis of the theory of general relativity that we know about, it is an extraordin­ary witness to Einstein’s work.”

Einstein also made major contributi­ons to quantum mechanics theory and won the Nobel physics prize in 1921. He became a pop culture icon thanks to his dry witticisms and trademark unruly hair, moustache and bushy eyebrows.

 ?? Photograph: Chesnot/Getty Images ?? A page of the Einstein-Besso manuscript is displayed at Christie's in Paris.
Photograph: Chesnot/Getty Images A page of the Einstein-Besso manuscript is displayed at Christie's in Paris.

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