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Special Valentine鈥檚 Day event about Albert Einstein slated for CU-Boulder

Up for a romantic Valentine鈥檚 Day evening? Then head to the University of Colorado Boulder鈥檚 Fiske Planetarium to Relativity for Lovers 鈥 A Valentine鈥檚 Day Among the Stars, for music, film and a talk on the genius of Albert Einstein.

The 7 p.m. event Feb. 14 will feature selected clips from a new documentary film, Einstein鈥檚 Light: Illuminating Minds by award-winning filmmaker Nickolas Barris -- who will be there in person -- and a lecture on the relevance of Einstein鈥檚 theories today by CU-Boulder astrophysics Professor Michael Shull. The first clips of the new Einstein鈥檚 Light documentary by Barris debuted in Paris Jan. 19 as part of the U.N.鈥檚 2015 Year of Light Celebration honoring the 100th anniversary of Einstein鈥檚 theory of relativity.

The event will include participation by Bruce Adolphe, who composed the original film score for Einstein鈥檚 Light that was recorded by world-renowned violinist Joshua Bell. Adolphe, who will discuss the music behind the film, also will be on the piano to accompany Chicago-based violinist Clara Lyon, a rising star who has performed around the world. Adolphe and Lyon will be playing with the Project Youth Chamber Music Orchestra based in Fort Collins at the Fiske event.

鈥淓instein had a love affair with music and with the violin, and we think this Valentine鈥檚 Day event is a great way to celebrate his accomplishments,鈥 said Shull of the astrophysical and planetary sciences department. Einstein once noted that Mozart鈥檚 music 鈥渨as so pure that it seemed to have been ever present in the universe, waiting to be discovered by the master.鈥

Shull said Einstein鈥檚 genius is the cornerstone for today鈥檚 physics. 鈥淓very area of modern physics bears his fingerprints, from understanding gravity and quantum mechanics to how atoms work,鈥 said Shull. But as far-reaching as the laws of physics are, Einstein himself famously said: 鈥淕ravitation is not responsible for people falling in love,鈥 noted Shull, also a fellow at the Center for Astrophysics and Space Astronomy.

There also will be a number of hands-on science activities for kids beginning at 6 p.m. in the lobby of Fiske prior to the Valentine鈥檚 Day show. They include a program called听 鈥淪eeing the Invisible鈥 that CU-Boulder students will use to interact with children to help them learn more about light that is normally invisible to the human eye, such as ultraviolet and infrared, said Fiske Operations Manager Francisco 鈥淭ito鈥 Salas.

The planetarium also is host to 鈥淪cience on a Sphere,鈥 a room-sized, global display system that uses computers and video projectors to display planetary data onto a 6-foot diameter sphere, analogous to a giant animated globe.

Tickets are $20 for general seating and $10 for students under 12 and for CU students with IDs. To purchase tickets visit .

For more information on Fiske visit .

Contact:
Francisco 鈥淭ito鈥 Salas, Fiske operations manager, 303-492-3749
francisco.salas@colorado.edu
Jim Scott, CU-Boulder media relations, 303-492-3114
jim.scott@colorado.edu