NOVA E = mc2 | PBS

PODCAST · science

NOVA E = mc2 | PBS

To celebrate the centennial of Einstein's E = mc2, NOVA asked 10 top physicists--two Nobel Prize winners among them--how they would describe the equation to curious non-physicists. Subscribe to our podcast to hear a different physics luminary each week. NOVA is produced by WGBH in Boston. This podcast was produced by Lexi Krock and David Levin.

  1. 10

    NOVA E = mc2 | Frank Wilczek

    Frank Wilczek, Theoretical Physicist and Nobel Laureate, MIT: "Ninety-five percent of the mass of matter as we know it comes from energy."

  2. 9

    NOVA E = mc2 | Lene Hau

    Lene Hau, Experimental Physicist, Harvard University: "You can get access to parts of nature you have never been able to get access to before."

  3. 8

    NOVA E = mc2 | Michio Kaku

    Michio Kaku, Theoretical Physicist, City University of New York: "E = mc2 is the secret of the stars."

  4. 7

    NOVA E = mc2 | Neil deGrasse Tyson

    Neil deGrasse Tyson, Astrophysicist, American Museum of Natural History: "It's something that doesn't happen in your kitchen or in everyday life."

  5. 6

    NOVA E = mc2 | Tim Halpin-Healy

    Tim Halpin-Healy, Theoretical Physicist, Barnard College, Columbia University: "Moving clocks run slow, moving meter sticks are shortened -- how does that happen?"

  6. 5

    NOVA E = mc2 | Alan Guth

    Alan Guth, Theoretical Physicist, MIT: "It's easiest to explain by how things looked from the point of view of Newton."

  7. 4

    NOVA E = mc2 | Nima Arkani-Hamed

    Nima Arkani-Hamed, Theoretical Physicist, Harvard University: "Things that seem incredibly different can really be manifestations of the same underlying phenomena."

  8. 3

    NOVA E = mc2 | Sheldon Glashow

    Sheldon Glashow, Theoretical Physicist and Nobel Laureate, Boston University: "When an object emits light, say, a flashlight, it gets lighter."

  9. 2

    NOVA E = mc2 | Janet Conrad

    Janet Conrad, Experimental Physicist, Columbia University: "For me there's a lot more to the equation than E = mc2."

  10. 1

    NOVA E = mc2 | Brian Greene

    Brian Greene, Theoretical Physicist, Columbia University: "It certainly is not an equation that reveals all its subtlety in the few symbols that it takes to write down."

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

To celebrate the centennial of Einstein's E = mc2, NOVA asked 10 top physicists--two Nobel Prize winners among them--how they would describe the equation to curious non-physicists. Subscribe to our podcast to hear a different physics luminary each week. NOVA is produced by WGBH in Boston. This podcast was produced by Lexi Krock and David Levin.

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WGBH Science Unit

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