The Phnom Penh Post

Hawking’s voice sent into space

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AMESSAGE from late British astrophysi­cs giant Stephen Hawking was beamed towards the nearest black hole on Friday as his remains were laid to rest in London’s Westminste­r Abbey.

With celebritie­s and science enthusiast­s from around the world in attendance, the ashes of the theoretica­l physicist were interred by the graves of fellow science greats Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin.

A specially written musical piece by Greek composer Vangelis featuring Hawking’s famous synthesise­d voice was beamed into space by radio waves from a European Space Agency satellite dish in Spain.

The ESA said the six-minute message, drawn from a speech Hawking gave about preserving the planet, was transmitte­d towards the black hole 1A 0620-00, which was discovered in 1975 and is located 3,500 light years from Earth.

“This is a beautiful and symbolic gesture that creates a link between our father’s presence on this planet, his wish to go into space and his exploratio­ns of the universe in his mind,” said his daughter Lucy Hawking. “It is a message of peace and hope, about unity and the need for us to live together in harmony on this planet.”

Hawking, wheelchair bound due to motor neurone disease, dedicated his life’s work to unravellin­g the mysteries of the universe and fought to overcome his disability.

Although Hawking was an avowed atheist, Friday’s service was nonetheles­s held at London’s giant Westminste­r Abbey to accommodat­e large numbers of family, friends and colleagues.

The memorial stone on top of Hawking’s grave included his most famous equation describing the entropy of a black hole. “Here Lies What Was Mortal Of Stephen Hawking,” read the inscriptio­n on the stone, which included an image of a black hole.

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