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Stephen Hawking’s Blackboard: Is there more universe? Why random beard aliens? The key mystery is in Hawking's blackboard scribble

An exhibition of the contents of his office room at Cambridge University has begun at the Science Museum of London in England.

Inset, Stephen Hawking. Beside, the scribble of that black board of Hawking. Photo courtesy of Cambridge University.

Is there more universe? Is there more life in this universe? Does that soul exist in all the forms that are unknown to us?

Why did Stephen Hawking draw Mars with random beards? What did you mean?
Why did he put the adjective ‘stupid’ or ‘weird’ before the word symmetry or equilibrium?
Why did you draw a strange snail-like creature floating on a brick wall, whose nose can be tilted in any direction?

What questions were hidden in Stephen Hawking's mind about the eternal universe and the diversity of countless lives? What did he want to find? Which was not found. That question, the answer to the curiosity he did not know.

What mysteries of the universe did he want to unravel with endless mathematical equations? Which was not possible for him. In the maze of mysteries that haunt the next generation of scientists, can Hawking's unending equations unravel this moment?

Hawking, who painted fictional pictures on a huge blackboard in his house 42 years ago, wrote complex many equations, wrote with chalk many mysterious phrases, this time maybe he could unravel them all.

This wheelchair will also be on display, which was Hawking's death companion since his youth. Photo courtesy of Cambridge University.

An exhibition of the contents of his office room at Cambridge University has begun at the Science Museum of London in England. From 10 February. Where there will be the huge black board of Hawking's personal, wrapped in a complex mystery for 40 years, which the world's leading scientists and researchers have not had the good fortune to see from so close. Even Hawking's close students. Hawking's PhD dissertation on how the universe is expanding at an ever-increasing rate will also be on display. He will have that famous wheelchair. Hawking was a dying companion from a young age with a complex neurological condition. The exhibition will run until June. Hawking's items will then be taken to other museums in Britain.

This has been informed on behalf of Cambridge University. Hawking died four years ago in 2016. One of his best predictions was that light could come out of a black hole or a giant swallow in a black hole.

Hawking has written so many unfinished mathematical equations on that blackboard that if it could be unraveled, perhaps many unknown things in the universe would be known to present or future generations of scientists.

 

Hawking has been obsessed with combining the two rival disciplines of physics, general relativity (theory of general relativity) and quantum mechanics (quantum mechanics) since his student days. He was convinced that Einstein's general relativity and the quantum dynamics that Einstein called ghosts could only be unraveled if all the mysteries of the universe were unraveled. It is possible to know exactly how this universe was created about 1.4 billion years ago, what happened one after the other, what is the outcome of the universe, whether there will be a new universe after that, whether there was another universe before or still more. Whether there is more universe.

Hawking later elaborated on the theory in a book he wrote. Whose name is ‘Theory of Everything’. So that even the seemingly contradictory, contradictory laws of this universe come together at some point and become their meeting place.

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