Get TOI+ Free Trail & Go Ad Free
Open
OPEN APP

Why Stephen Hawking never won the Nobel Prize

British theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking never won a Nobel P... Read More
NEW DELHI: British theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking never won a Nobel Prize for his remarkable work, no, not even for his discovery that '

Black Holes

can die'.


Why was this?

Because even though his 'Black Holes are mortal' theory is now firmly accepted in theoretical physics, there was no way to verify it, wrote Timothy Ferris, author of 'The Science of Liberty', in National Geographic magazine.

"The problem was that there was no way to verify the idea. Black holes are too long-lived to be observed today in their death throes," said Ferris.

Read this story in Marathi

The author added that Hawking may have won the prize if the phenomenon of Black Holes 'dying' could be observed.

"But that won't happen for billions of years, not until the first star-size black holes start exploding," explained Ferris.



Read Also:





    A similar reason was why Peter Higgs, who postulated

    Higgs Boson

    in 1964, didn't get the vaunted Nobel for the longest time. He eventually won it in 2013 - jointly with François Englert - a year after a European research organisation

    CERN

    said they had each observed a new particle consistent with Higgs Boson.
    Continue Reading
    Follow Us On Social Media
    end of article
    More Trending Stories
    Visual Stories
    More Visual Stories
    UP NEXT
    Do Not Sell Or Share My Personal Information