Until 1931, the 20th century genius, Einstein, believed that the universe was static rather than expanding.
An urban legend attributes this change of perspective to when American astronomer Edwin Hubble showed Einstein his observations of redshift in the light emitted by far away nebulae - today known as galaxies. But the reality is more complex, researchers said.
The change in Einstein's viewpoint, in fact, resulted from a tortuous thought process, said researchers in a new article published in The European Physical Journal H.
In 1917 Einstein applied his theory of general relativity in the universe, and suggested a model of a homogenous, static, spatially curved universe.
However, this interpretation has one major problem: If gravitation was the only active force, his universe would collapse - an issue Einstein addressed by introducing the cosmological constant.
He then fiercely resisted the view that the universe was expanding, despite his contemporaries' suggestions that this was the case.
Also, in 1927, Georges Lemaitre, a Belgian astrophysicist from the Catholic University of Louvain, concluded that the universe was expanding by combining general relativity with astronomical observations.
Yet, Einstein still refused to abandon his static universe.
However, in an April 1931 report to the Prussian Academy of Sciences, Einstein finally adopted a model of an expanding universe.
In 1932, he teamed up with the Dutch theoretical physicist and astronomer, Willem de Sitter, to propose an eternally expanding universe which became the cosmological model generally accepted until the middle of the 1990s.
