The Mystery of Stephen Hawking's Blackboard in the Science Museum Hasn't Been Solved

The mystery of Stephen Hawking's scribbles is still unsolved. These scribbles are still preserved to this day. Stephen Hawking is a very famous scientist. When trying to come up with a cosmological "theory of everything", Hawking uses a blackboard as a medium for his scribbles. There are tons of theories and equations that combine the rules of general relativity with quantum mechanics on the board. Currently the board is 42 years old. In fact, the owner himself had died decades ago. However, the mystery in it has not been opened at all.

1. This is the Unsolved Mystery of Stephen Hawking's Scribbles

A mystery in the world of science that has yet to be solved is a collection of scribbles on Stephen Hawking's board. Until 42 years old, the board is still awake today. Stephen Hawking himself is a genius scientist and physicist. He contributed a lot of thinking about science. One of Hawking's famous theories is the black hole theory and the theory of the formation of the universe. Hawking argued that the universe was originally just a small, dense dot called a singularity. In addition to these theories, Hawking also left a scribble board which is still a mystery of its purpose and purpose. No one has been able to unravel the mystery of Hawking's scribbles and the images in them. The scribble on the blackboard Stephen Hawking made when joining other physicists at a conference on superspace and supergravity at the University of Cambridge, England. Hawking makes confusing doodles to come up with his cosmological "theory of everything" along with his fellow physicists. It is said that Hawking liked the whiteboard so much that he sprayed it with varnish and hung it in his office. Some of the mysterious images in question are the figure of an alien head with a beard and a large-nosed squid. There is also the confusing phrase "stupor symmetry". The board is still preserved to this day along with semi-finished scribbles on it. No scientist has yet succeeded in solving the mystery theory of Stephen Hawking's scribbles on the board.

2. Exhibited for the First Time

Stephen Hawking's blackboard is now in the London Science Museum. The museum contains objects belonging to historical scientists. The plan is that the museum will exhibit Hawking's whiteboard in a wider exhibition. The museum will invite various genius friends and other physicists to solve the mystery of Hawking's scribbles. They will reveal what the mysterious pictures and doodles on the board mean. Furthermore, the board will be on display for the first time to the public on February 10. The exhibition center will be in Hawking's own office. That way, scientists hope that there will be a light on the mystery of Stephen Hawking's scribbles since 42 years ago through this inaugural exhibition. 

What, for example, is meant by "faint symmetry"?

Who is the big bearded Martian drawn in the center of the blackboard?

Why is there a snub-nosed squid climbing a brick wall?

What's hidden in the can labeled "Exxon supergravity?"

The world's greatest mathematicians and physicists are expected to rise from their seats with an answer. The whiteboard is on display alongside a dozen other Hawking artifacts, including a copy of the thesis on the expansion of the universe. There was also Hawking's wheelchair and his personal jacket. The exhibition will run until June 12 at the Science Museum of London, before stopping at several other museums in the UK.

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