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Hawking, Stephen William,
1942, British theoretical physicist, b. Oxford, England,
grad. University College, Oxford, 1962, Ph.D. Trinity
Hall, Cambridge, 1966. In 1962 Hawking was diagnosed
as having an incurable muscular disease, Amyotrophic
Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). Although the disease eventually
confined him to a wheelchair and forced him to use
a computer-generated voice synthesizer to communicate,
he continued to teach and to lecture and began his
research in cosmology. In 1971 Hawking provided mathematical
support for the big-bang theory of the origin of
the universe; he showed that if the general theory
of relativity was correct the universe must have
a singularity, or starting point, in space-time.
This cosmological thread led him to the study of black
holes and his suggestion that following the big bang
primordial, or mini, black holes-objects of immense mass
occupying only the space of an elementary particle-were
formed. He also showed that the surface area of a black
hole can increase but never decrease, that there is a
limit on the radiation emitted when black holes collide,
and that a single black hole cannot cleave into two black
holes. In 1974 Hawking calculated that black holes thermally
create and emit subatomic particles until they exhaust
their energy and explode. This so-called Hawking radiation
linked gravity, quantum mechanics, and thermodynamics
mathematically for the first time. Hawking proposed in
1981 that although the universe has no boundary, it is
finite in space-time; he collaborated with James Hartle
to formulate this mathematically in 1983.
Hawking wrote an explanation of his work that became
a popular bestseller, A Brief History of Time: From the
Big Bang to Black Holes (1988). He has also published
Superspace and Supergravity (1981), The Very Early Universe
(1983), Black Holes and Baby Universes and Other Essays
(1993), and The Nature of Space and Time (1995).
Source: Encyclopedia.com.
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