The passing of the great physicist Stephen Hawking today at
the age of 76 fills me with sadness for many different reasons. On the one
hand, it was inspiring to witness that, seemingly, the power of will and
intellect can hold such a serious illness at bay for so long. On the other hand, I am also sad that I
never got to talk to him, and perhaps explain to him my take on his great body
of work.
Stephen Hawking (1942-2018) Source: Wkimedia |
I ran into Stephen several times when I was at Caltech
(which Hawking visited regularly), but a situation never developed in which we
could “chat”, as it were. One day in 1992 I was walking with Gerry Brown, a
nuclear theorist who also visited Caltech each year in the Spring, together
with Hans Bethe, Brown’s collaborator on the theory of binary neutron stars,
along the lovely paths in Arcadia’s Arboretum.
Hans Bethe and Gerry Brown, at Caltech in 1992 |
From afar, both Gerry and I
spotted Hawking being pushed by his nurse along the path. Realizing that our
paths will cross, Gerry and I both tried to get Hans to stop and engage Hawking,
imagining that Hawking would be delighted to meet the eminent Bethe, winner of
the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1967 for his discovery of how stars generate the
energy to shine. However, Bethe
curiously demurred. Later I asked Gerry why Hans did not take this opportunity,
and he answered: “You’d be surprised how shy Hans can be.”
Hans passed away thirteen years ago, Gerry left us almost eight years later, and now Stephen is gone
too. For me, it is always difficult to imagine that these great minds could
simply cease to be. But after all, Hawking is known to have said “I regard the
brain as a computer which will stop working when its components fail”, and in
that he was surely correct. But of course, these great minds have left a legacy
that is immortal, and we will keep them in our memory as long as we think about
the stars, black holes, and the vastness of the universe.
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