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Friday, April 01, 2011

12-Year-Old Genius Thinks He Can Prove Einstein's Theory Of Relativity Wrong

Could Einstein's Theory of Relativity be a few mathematical equations away from being disproved?

 Jacob Barnett of Hamilton County, Ind., who is just weeks shy of his 13th birthday, thinks so. And, he's got the solutions to prove it.

Barnett, who has an IQ of 170, explained his expanded theory of relativity — in a YouTube video. His mother Kristine Barnett, who admittedly flunked math, did what every other mother would do if her genius son started talking mathematical gibberish. She told him to explain the whole thing slowly while she taped her son explaining his take on the theory.

While most of his mathematical genius goes over our heads, some professors at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey — you know, the U.S. academic homeroom for the likes of Albert Einstein, J. Robert Oppenheimer, and Kurt Gödel — have confirmed he's on the right track to coming up with something completely new. For now, they're encouraging Barnett to continue doing what he likes to do, which is explaining calculus using a whiteboard marker and his living room windows as seen in the video above.

“I'm impressed by his interest in physics and the amount that he has learned so far,” Institute for Advanced Study Professor Scott Tremaine wrote in an email to the family. “The theory that he's working on involves several of the toughest problems in astrophysics and theoretical physics.”

“Anyone who solves these will be in line for a Nobel Prize,” he added.

Barnett's parents knew that there was something different with their son when he didn't speak until the age of two. He was diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, a mild form of autism, so they thought he might have problems in school.

Instead, they were astounded when he started solving 5,000 piece puzzles by the age of 3. The 12-year-old taught himself calculus, algebra and geometry in two weeks, and can solve up to 200 numbers of Pi. He left high school at the ripe old age of eight and has been attending college-level advanced astrophysics classes ever since.

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2 comments:

lmclain said...

A lot of hype....Einstein's theory has been proven by experiments and observation many times, even recently when it was confirmed (as his theory predicted) that as an object (Earth, in this case) moves through space-time, there is a "drag effect" on space-time, much like a vortex behind a speeding car. There ARE some unsolved issues, such as the "constant" that he first included, then called it a big mistake. It seems now as though that "constant" might be on the right track....I wish the kid well and hope HE is this generation's "Einstein"....like Newton, these guys show up in the gene pool once in a century or so. Think of the posssibilities...

Unknown said...

Lets see, when I was 12, I was throwing a tennis ball against a wall and catching it. This also involved geometry and physics. Does this count?