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But the universe it created isn’t the first — and won’t be the last, according to 2020 Nobel Prize recipient Sir Roger Penrose.
Sir Roger Penrose shares the prize with Reinhard Genzel and Andrea Ghez, who discovered that an invisible and extremely heavy object governs the orbits of stars at the centre of our galaxy.
Sir Roger Penrose, who just won a Nobel Prize for discovering black holes, says that our universe was neither the first to exist, nor will it be the last.
Author and mathematician Sir Roger Penrose talks about his latest book, The Road to Reality. The 1,094-page tome examines the mathematical theory that underlies our present understanding of the ...
Three researchers investigating black holes — Sir Roger Penrose, Reinhard Genzel and Andrea Ghez — received the 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics on Oct. 6.
Sir Roger Penrose, prominent lecturer and author, as well as highly distinguished mathematician and theoretical physicist, will give Perimeter Institute's next public lecture on Wednesday, Oct. 1.
They also address the mystery of consciousness. Penrose, in earlier collaborations with Stuart Hameroff, proposed the Orch-OR (Orchestrated Objective Reduction) theory of consciousness. [3] ...
This week, aged 89, Sir Roger won the Nobel prize for physics for his seminal work. It may seem odd awarding science’s most prestigious prize for a discovery 55 years ago.