Now This Is Truly Amazing

Steve williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
For 12-year old astrophysics prodigy, the sky’s the limit


In some ways, Jacob Barnett is just like any other 12-year-old kid. He plays Guitar Hero, shoots hoops with his friends, and has a platonic girlfriend.
But in other ways, he's a little different. Jake, who has an IQ of 170, began solving 5,000-piece jigsaw puzzles at the age of 3, not long after he'd been diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, a mild form of autism. A few years later, he taught himself calculus, algebra, and geometry in two weeks. By 8, he had left high school, and is currently taking college-level advanced astrophysics classes—while tutoring his older classmates. And he's being recruited for a paid researcher job by Indiana University.
Now, he's at work on a theory that challenges the Big Bang—the prevailing explanation among scientists for how the universe came about. It's not clear how developed it is, but experts say he's asking the right questions.
"The theory that he's working on involves several of the toughest problems in astrophysics and theoretical physics," Scott Tremaine of Princeton University's Institute for Advanced Studies—where Einstein (pictured) himself worked—wrote in an email to Jake's family. "Anyone who solves these will be in line for a Nobel Prize."
Here you can watch Jake question some of the key elements of Albert Einstein's theories on quantum physics:

It's not clear where Jake got his gifts from. "Whenever I try talking about math with anyone in my family," he told the Indianapolis Star, "they just stare blankly."
But his parents encouraged his interests from the start. Once, they took him to the planetarium at Butler University. "We were in the crowd, just sitting, listening to this guy ask the crowd if anyone knew why the moons going around Mars were potato-shaped and not round," Jake's mother, Kristine Barnett, told the Star. "Jacob raised his hand and said, 'Excuse me, but what are the sizes of the moons around Mars?' "
After the lecturer answered, said Kristine, "Jacob looked at him and said the gravity of the planet ... is so large that (the moon's) gravity would not be able to pull it into a round shape."
"That entire building ... everyone was just looking at him, like, 'Who is this 3-year-old?'"



 
We used to call these people idiot savants, or geniuses, depending on whether or not we were talking about Einstein, or the kid I grew up with who had the social skills of a toddler, who could feed back to you every box car number on the train that had just sped by. Now we know that their brains are wired differently. Sometimes it results in horrible handicaps, other times in remarkable facility, sometimes both. But I don't envy this boy because the odds are so high that behind this remarkable story is a kid who has serious problems functioning normally in critical areas of his life, not Matt Damon in Good Will Hunting.

Tim
 
Pretty amazing stuff!

Of course, E=mc^2 is not the whole equation, and Einstein (along with many others) spent years trying to reconcile some of the devils in the details... As far as I know, we still don't have a unified field theory. But, I am a hairy-knuckled engineer, not a pure science type, though at one time my IQ was up there. Proves to not put too much faith in an IQ test. ;)
 
Speak for yourself guys. He brings back terrible memories of advanced math from college :). He is remarkable in that regard.

It is amazing how the brain works. When managing the school computer lab in 1970s, there was a group of gifted high-IQ kids same age as him came to visit us. They were also 5-10 years ahead of their age as far as level of education. Needless to say, I was pretty worried. I thought they would show up and blow me away with how fast they could learn computers.

So they came and prior to me meeting with me, one of the instructors taught them a programming language and gave them an assignment to do in the lab. You would not believe how relieved I was when I saw them struggling to do their assignment nearly as much as typical students. Mind you, they learned the topic much, much faster (one lesson vs a dozen). But when it came to putting it to practice, solving a logic problem, they were not highly advantaged. It seemed then, they had incredible learning ability. But in matters unrelated to that, they lost the some of the advantage. Another way of saying my manhood was saved. :D
 

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