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  1. Michele Angelo Besso (Riesbach, 25 maggio 1873 – Ginevra, 15 marzo 1955) è stato un ingegnere svizzero di origine italiana. Ebreo sefardita [1] [2] , lavorò nello stesso ufficio brevetti di Albert Einstein e ne divenne amico intimo, confidente, e sostenitore, tanto che il grande fisico lo ebbe a definire come « la migliore cassa ...

  2. Michele Angelo Besso (Riesbach, 25 May 1873 – Geneva, 15 March 1955) was a Swiss-Italian engineer best known for working closely with Albert Einstein.

    • Michele Besso, 25 May 1873
    • 15 March 1955 (aged 81)
  3. Michele Angelo Besso ( Riesbach, 25 maggio 1873 – Ginevra, 15 marzo 1955) è stato un ingegnere svizzero di origine italiana. Ebreo sefardita, lavorò nello stesso ufficio brevetti di Albert Einstein e ne divenne amico intimo, confidente, e sostenitore, tanto che il grande fisico lo ebbe a definire come « la migliore cassa di risonanza in ...

  4. Cataloguing the letters from Albert Einstein to his closest friend, Michele Besso, was a roller-coaster ride: intellectually exhilarating, funny, endearing — and with an unexpected conclusion. Michele Besso and Einstein first met as students in Zurich in the late 1890s, and their friendship was cemented during their time working together in ...

  5. 16 nov 2015 · Lesser-known and junior colleagues helped the great physicist to piece together his general theory of relativity, explain Michel Janssen and Jürgen Renn. Marcel Grossmann (left) and Michele Besso ...

    • Michel Janssen, Jürgen Renn
    • 2015
  6. Michele Besso with his bride Anna, 1898. Einstein tried out his radical new ideas in arguments with his unassuming friend, an "extraordinarily fine mind." You can EXIT to hear a talk ("Jottings of a Genius") on Besso's help to Einstein. Return to Great Works II. Image © Besso family, courtesy AIP Emilio Segrè Visual Archives.

  7. 1 lug 2005 · Translated and annotated by Bertram Schwarzschild Einstein writes to Besso, his close friend since 1897, six months after completing the general theory of relativity and a few days after the death, at age 42, of Karl Schwarzschild, who found the first exact solutions of the theory’s field equations. Berlin, 14 May 1916.