List of things named after Stephen Hawking

Stephen Hawking (1942–2018)

This is a list of things named after British physicist Stephen Hawking (1942–2018).

Physics and mathematics

  • Bekenstein-Hawking formula for Bekenstein–Hawking entropy, a way to calculate the entropy of a black hole, named after Jacob Bekenstein and Hawking, whose ideas on black hole entropy were combined into the equation.[1]
  • Gibbons–Hawking ansatz, named Gary Gibbons and Hawking, a method of constructing gravitational instantons.
  • Gibbons–Hawking–York boundary term, named after Gary Gibbons, James W. York and Hawking. It is a correction to the Einstein–Hilbert action in the presence of a boundary.
  • Gibbons–Hawking effect, named after Gary Gibbons and Hawking, is the statement that a temperature can be associated to each solution of the Einstein field equations under certain conditions.
  • Gibbons–Hawking space, named after Gary Gibbons and Hawking, a concept in algebraic geometry.
  • Hartle–Hawking state and Hartle–Hawking function, a proposal concerning the state of the universe prior to the Planck epoch. It is named after James Hartle and Hawking.
  • Hawking energy or Hawking mass, an approximation of the mass-energy of a region of spacetime, under general relativity, the method of calculation put forward by Hawking.[2]
  • Hawking paradox, the paradox left by Hawking radiation, whereby a black hole may evaporate away emitting random radiation, but the information which is consumed by the black hole during its lifetime is not returned to the universe, destroying information, violating the law for the conservation of information. Named after Hawking radiation, discovered by Hawking.[3]
  • Hawking–Page phase transition, a theoretical predicted phase transition in AdS black holes, named after Hawking and Don Page.
  • Hawking point, a theoretical prediction of conformal cyclic cosmology.
  • Hawking radiation, a theoretical type of radiation emitted by black holes evaporating, first conceived by Hawking, and subsequently named for him.[4]
  • Hawking star, a theoretical type of star with a black hole core, named in honour of Hawking, for his conceptualization of the primordial black hole type, which forms the core of this star type.[5][6][7]
  • Penrose–Hawking singularity theorems for predicting when singularities occur, named after Roger Penrose and Stephen Hawking.[8]

Entertainment

Other

See also

References

  1. ^ Galina Weinstein (3 March 2021), Demons in Black Hole Thermodynamics: Bekenstein and Hawking (PDF), arXiv:2102.11209, Bibcode:2021arXiv210211209W
  2. ^ "Fine-Tuning Stephen Hawking's Theory of Mass". Duke Today. Duke University. 17 March 2014.
  3. ^ Jackie Appel (5 May 2023). "Scientists Say They've Finally Solved Stephen Hawking's Black Hole Paradox". Popular Mechanics. a43519907.
  4. ^ "What Is Hawking Radiation?". Science Alert. 9 June 2020.
  5. ^ Max Planck Society (22 December 2023). "What happens if you put a black hole into the sun?". phys.org.
  6. ^ Adam Mann (13 December 2023). "Are tiny black holes hiding within giant stars?". Science. Vol. 382, no. 6676. doi:10.1126/science.zckalbq.
  7. ^ Dave Malyon (16 December 2023). "Tiny Black Holes Proposed As Dark Matter: Consumes Stars From The Inside Out With 'Observable Consequences'". KNEWZ.
  8. ^ "Penrose-Hawking singularity theorems". Nuclear-Power.com. 9 May 2023.
  9. ^ "Stephen Hawking Medal for Science Communication". STARMUS Festival.
  10. ^ Greg Ross (20 April 2021). "The Hawking Index". Futility Closet.
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