Hawking's poem I Want to Tell You

Hawking, I want to tell you.

Bad luck makes you lose your health,

Lose your voice, Hawking, I want to say to you-

Voice, lost its vitality.

Scientific gravity gives you more,

Made your great achievements.

Hawking, I want to tell you-

With your indomitable strength,

Created an amazing miracle of Luger's disease for 40 years,

Physically disabled and determined, just like steel,

With a lot of practice, lava will never disappear.

Your brave and tenacious personality strength,

Composed an immortal chapter in the history of medicine.

Hawking, I want to tell you-

Persistent pursuit, the ideal is higher than the sky.

The body is like a chain, and the mind has wings.

Outside the earth, the solar system,

Detect the strangeness of black holes and open the big screen of science.

Hawking, I want to tell you-

Living in misery, living in creation,

Lying like a beard, spreading its wings like a flying eagle.

Live forever and be loyal.

Stephen william hawking (Stephen William

Hawking), 19421October 8 was born in Oxford, England, a famous physicist at Cambridge University, one of the greatest physicists in modern times and one of the great men who enjoyed international reputation in the 20th century.

Hawking suffered from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Luger's disease) when he was 2 1 year old. He is completely paralyzed, unable to speak, and only three fingers can move in his hand. 1979 served as Lucas professor of mathematics from 2009 to 2009. His main research fields are cosmology and black holes. He proved the singularity theorem and black hole area theorem of general relativity, and put forward the black hole evaporation theory and the borderless Hawking universe model.

An important step has been taken in unifying the two basic theories of physics in the 20th century-the theory of relativity founded by Einstein and quantum mechanics founded by Planck. [ 1]? He was awarded the honors of CH (Lord Honorary of England), CBE (Commander of the British Empire), FRS (Member of the Royal Society) and FRSA (Member of the Royal Art Association).