The biggest mystery of scientist Stephen Hawking

British disabled scientist Stephen Hawking is famous for finding the answer to the most difficult problems of modern physics. However, he himself is a large unknown that science cannot decipher.

When the author of 'Brief History of Time' was asked what he thought about the most, the professor at Cambridge University, Stephen Hawking, the world's most famous scientist, was famous for who finds the answer to the most difficult problems of modern physics affirms, to him the greatest mystery is women!

The wheelchair professor, who has just retired after a while holding the position of former Isaac Newton, will celebrate his 70th birthday this weekend with a symposium on 'The State of Dance pillar ' at the cosmological center of Cambridge University (UK).

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* Hawking was born on January 8, 1942, in Oxford, England, exactly 300 years after Galileo's death. His parents were Frank and Isobel Hawking, before World War II they lived in northern London, but then moved to Oxford for safety. In the last two years at St Albans High School, Oxford, Hawking was very interested in math because of the inspiration from a teacher at this school. But his father, a pharmacist, opposed his son's opinion and wanted him to study chemistry. Partly persuaded by her father, after graduation, Hawking attended University College in Oxford, which was the school his father had attended before. But this school does not have a math major, so he studied physics and graduated with excellent degrees. He then moved to Cambridge University to continue his doctoral thesis in cosmology.

University College at Oxford during his thesis, it was discovered that Hawking had a neurological condition called Lou Gehrig's disease : he almost lost his ability to move. Doctors said that he did not live long enough to complete his doctoral thesis. Later, he had to undergo tracheotomy and could no longer speak normally. He was fastened to a wheelchair, only able to speak through a synthesized device attached to a computer that he typed in. However, the thesis was still completed in 1966. At that time, no one had studied this science at Cambridge University. His mentor is Denis Sciama, not the one he expects to be Fred Hoyle. After defending his doctoral thesis, he worked as a researcher for the Institute of Astronomy and moved to Cambridge's Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics (1977) and has worked ever since.

In 1990, he received a Vietnamese girl born in 1980, Nguyen Thi Thu Nhan, who was living in SOS Children's Village in Hanoi, and he went to Vietnam in 1997 to visit her.

In April 2010, he delivered a speech about aliens. He thinks aliens are real and if they come to Earth we should avoid contacting them, because they will be like the Europeans who discovered America (the Earth). They will invade and colonize the Earth for the purpose of depleting resources on their planet.