Stephen Hawking: A 70th birthday celebration

 

We are celebrating Professor Stephen Hawking’s 70th birthday with a new display about his life and achievements.

The display features objects and papers primarily sourced from his own archives including handwritten notes on work with Roger Penrose, his drawing of the Hawking Radiation mechanism, the annotated script for a 1999 guest appearance on The Simpsons, and the blue suit he wore for a zero-gravity flight in 2007. The display also includes a specially recorded message and a selection of personal photographs from Hawking’s life and career that haven’t been seen before. A rarely-seen 1978 portrait by David Hockney is also featured.

This first ever display of items from the Hawking archive encourages visitors to reflect on the relationship between Hawking’s scientific achievements, particularly the work that established his reputation in the 1960s and ‘70s, and his immense success in popularising astrophysics. Hawking and his daughter Lucy have been involved in the selection of objects for display.

The Science Museum, which Professor Hawking describes as ‘one of my favourite places’, has also commissioned a series of photographic portraits of Professor Hawking, in his office at the University of Cambridge, which will feature in the display. 

 

Stephen Hawking

 

Science Museum’s photograph of Professor Stephen Hawking in his office at University of Cambridge, where he is Director of Research at the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics and where he also founded  the Centre for Theoretical Cosmology.

When using the picture, please credit: Science Museum/Sarah Lee. Exclusive right to publish only valid until September 2012.

 

On display

Prince of Asturias Award, given by HRH the Prince of Asturias in 1989

Hawking received this award in recognition of his ‘transcendental research work into the foundations of space and time’.

 
Map of the cosmic microwave background radiation, c. 2006

This beach ball shows a full-sky map of the microwave radiation left over from the Big Bang.

 
Model of a black hole, 1970s

This model illustrates the gravitational pull of a black hole—a singularity from which not even light can escape.

 
Hawking radiation diagram, c. 1974

This diagrams shows how black holes can emit energy in the form of "Hawking radiation".

 
Letter to the Editor of Nature, 1974

In this letter to the editor of Nature, Hawking explains that his latest hypothesis might cause quite a stir.

 
Draft for a paper by Hawking and Penrose, 1969

Working with Roger Penrose, Hawking showed that singularities must really exist in the Universe.

 
Research notes, 1960s

Hawking’s first major breakthroughs came in the 1960s, with his work on singularities—points in space of infinite density.