2. Wall of fame
Hawking has received numerous awards and
honors. Already early in the list, in 1974 he was
elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS).
Hawking received the 2015 BBVA Foundation
Frontiers of knowledge award in Basic
Sciences for discovering that the galaxies were
formed from quantum fluctuations in the early
Universe.
3. At the 2016 Pride of
Britain Awards,
Hawking received
the lifetime
achievement award
“for his contribution
to science and
British culture”.
4. Disability outreach
Since the 1990s, Hawking has accepted the
mantle of role model for disabled people, lecturing
and participating in fundraising activities.
At the turn of the century, he and eleven other
luminaries signed the Charter for theThird
Millennium on Disability which called on
governments to prevent disability and
protect disability rights.
In 1999, Hawking was awarded the Julius Edgar
Lilienfeld Prize of the American Physical Society.
5. Motivated by the desire to increase public interest in
spaceflight and to show the potential of people with
disabilities, in 2007 he participated in zero-gravity flight in a
"Vomit Comet", courtesy of Zero Gravity Corporation, during
which he experienced weightlessness eight times.
6. Science vs. philosophy
At Google's Zeitgeist Conference in 2011,
Hawking said that "philosophy is dead". He
believes that philosophers "have not kept up
with modern developments in science" and that
scientists "have become the bearers of the torch
of discovery in our quest for knowledge". He
said that philosophical problems can be
answered by science, particularly new scientific
theories which "lead us to a new and very
different picture of the universe and our place
in it".
7. awards 1975 - Erdington medal
1979 - Albert Einstein medal
1982 - order of the British empire
1985 - gold medal of the royal astronomical society
1986 - member of the pontifical academy sciences.
1988 - wolf price in physics
1989 - prince of Asturias awards in concord
1989 - companion of honour.
1999 - Julius Edgar lilienfeld prize of the American physical
society
2003 - Michelson Morley award of case western reserve
university
2006 - Copley medal of the royal society
8. Stephen Hawking is a
world-renowned
British theoretical
physicist, known
for his contributions to
the fields of cosmology,
general relativity and
quantum gravity,
especially in the context
of black holes.
9. Stephen Hawking is
most famous for his
theory about black
holes.The theory
hypothesizes that
black holes release
matter in the form of
radiation. He is also
renowned for his
book "A Brief History
ofTime.
10. The power of the mind
For the brilliant english
astrophysicist stephen hawking
“thought is the most power full
tool, in addition to many things: his
work, his fun, rest, his passion, his
life... His wheelchair is a very
special advantage in the task of his
greatest concern: the universe we
live in, its origin, its operations and
its end..., hawking has
demonstrated the ability if the
human mind to probe the universe
in this task when one character
works tirelessely driven by an
absolute freedom “.
11. CAREER- THEORETICAL PHYSICS
Almost as soon as he arrived at
Cambridge, he started developing
symptoms of amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis a type of motor neurone
disease which would cost him
almost all neuromuscular control
12. STEPHEN HAWKING WHO CAME FROM
NOWHERE REACHED THE UNIVERSE WITH
HARD WORK AND PATIENCE . EVEN
THOUGH HE HAD DISABILITIES HE
TRIED HARD TO PROVE THINGS WHICH
COULD NOT BE DONE BY NORMAL
HUMANS. HE IS A PERFECT ROLE MODEL
FOR THE STUDENTS OF 21ST CENTUARY.
Conclusion...
13. As the students of this
great institution, we should
be able to prove or find
facts and information which
has not been proved yet.
Let Stephen hawking be our
role model and let us try to
be someone great in future.