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Mileva Marić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милева Марић, pronounced [milěːva mǎːritɕ]; 19 December 1875 – 4 August 1948), sometimes called Mileva Marić-Einstein (Милева Марић-Ајнштајн, Mileva Marić-Ajnštajn), was a Serbian physicist and mathematician.
Hans Albert Einstein (May 14, 1905 – July 26, 1973) was born in Bern, Switzerland, the second child and first son of Albert Einstein and Mileva Marić. Hans earned his doctorate at ETH Zurich in 1936 and emigrated to the U.S. in 1938.
Albert and Mileva Einstein, 1912. Bogdan Gavrilović (1864–1947), mathematician physicist, philosopher and educator; born in Novi Sad; Mileva Marić (1875–1948), mathematician; Albert Einstein's first wife; sister of Miloš Marić; born in Titel and lived in Novi Sad
Mileva Maric (1875–1948), Serbian physicist, first wife of Albert Einstein [51] Nina Marković, Croatian physicist and professor; Helen Megaw (1907–2002), Irish crystallographer [52] Lise Meitner (1878–1968), Austrian nuclear physicist (pioneering nuclear physics, discovery of nuclear fission, protactinium, and the Auger effect)
Little was known about her or his children with her — and there was little interest in finding out — until the discovery in 1986 of her correspondence with Einstein
Hans Albert Einstein was born on May 14, 1904, in Bern, Switzerland, where his father, Albert Einstein, worked as a clerk in the Swiss Federal Institute of Intellectual Property. His father was of German-Jewish descent and his mother, Mileva Marić, Serbian. His younger brother, Eduard Einstein, was born in 1910 and
Also Einstein's first wife Mileva Marić, although her contribution is not considered to have any foundation according to serious scholars. [1] In his History of the theories of ether and electricity from 1953, E. T. Whittaker claimed that relativity is the creation of Poincaré and Lorentz and attributed to Einstein's papers only little ...
Mileva Einstein-Maric (1875–1948), Serbian/Swiss physicist; Margaret Eliza Maltby (1860–1944), American physicist; Mary Somerville (1780–1872), British physicist, polymath [1]: 280 Eunice Newton Foote (1819–1888), American inventor and physicist who first discovered rising carbon dioxide (CO 2) levels could impact climate [23] [24]