That equation is associated with Albert Einstein.
Here's an actual quote from him. I love this story, and I hope nobody will feel that
it should be deleted from this answer:
When he published his first paper on Relativity, Einstein wrote to a colleague:
"If I am right, the Germans will say I am a German, the Swiss will say I am Swiss, and
the French will say I am French. If I am wrong, the Swiss will say I am French, the French
will say I am German, and the Germans will say I am a Jew."
Among other things, the theory of Brownian motion and both the general and special theories of relativity
V2 X W divided by 2G or 64. Or, Velocity squared times Weight of the object (in motion) divided by 2 Gravity or 64 equals the force of impact of the object in motion.
X equals 10 XI equals 11 X11 equals 12 X111 equals 13 XIV equals 14 XV equals 15 XVI equals 16 XVII equals 17 XVIII equals 18 I = 1 V= 5 10 = X largest number first / lower numbers second 10 = x 11 = xi 12 = xii 13 = xiii 14 = xiiii 15 = xv 16 = xvi 17 = xvii 18 = xviii
Force times Distance equals Work
The Equalizer was created on 1985-09-18.
Albert Einstein.
Born in Germany, Albert Einstein was a theoretical physicist. Most known for his discovered formula equation E equals Mc squared.
Einstein developed the E = mc squared formula.
The SI unit of resistance is Ohm. Ohm was named after German physicist George Simon Ohm. The base units for resistance are Ohm equals kg m squared.
The 2 stands for squared . So in all the formula is : Energy equals the mass times the constant (Speed of light) squared. The 2 squares the formula.
base squared times height squared equals the hypotenuse squared. then you know the hypotenuse.
E=MC squared was Einstein's formula for splitting the atom. Energy = mass X speed of light squared
A = S squared is the formula for area of a square A = area S = lenght of side
Formula for the volume of a cylinder.
The formula for finding the angles is called " Pythagorean Thyrum " It states that a squred plus b squared equals c squared so therefore c squared minus a squared will equal b squared. i hope that helps
The correct formula is E = mc2 (E equals m c squared) and it was coined by Albert Einstein.
No. E=mc2 is a formula. Energy equals mass times the speed of light squared.