Mrs Edidiong Fidelis @ new CHAPTER








Very touching chapters 

Seeing the goodness of God 


Today, I Bow in Gratitude.


Another 11th of May. Another year crowned with mercy. Today, I stand in awe of God's faithfulness, overwhelmed by His love, and held together by His unending grace.


Through every season, He has proven that He is trustworthy. In moments of joy, He smiled with me. In times of silence, He whispered peace to my soul. In valleys and on mountaintops He was there. And today, I am surrounded by the love of my beautiful family, alive, well, and full of thanks.


Words fail, but my heart overflows. I echo the Psalmist in Psalm 71: “Thou hast increased my greatness and comforted me on every side.” Truly, He has lifted me, comforted me, and shown me again and again that He is God.


So today, I will praise Him with my whole heart. I will sing, dance, and rejoice—because God has been good to me. All I am is grateful.


Happy Birthday to me. All glory belongs to God.

Happy birthday ma 

We will always celebrate you now and always.

Let the celebration continue 

From all of us at Oboloheritage 

Reference to today’s history making it wonderful 

Richard Feynman (born May 11, 1918,New York, New York, U.S.—died February 15, 1988, Los Angeles  California) was an American theoretical physicist who was widely regarded as the most brilliant, influential, and iconoclastic figure in his field  in the post-World War 11 era.

Feynman remade quantum electrodynamics —the theory of the interaction between light  and matter —and thus altered the way science understands the nature of waves and particles. He was co-awarded the Nobel Prize   for Physics in 1965 for this work, which tied together in an experimentally perfect package all the varied phenomena at work in light, radio, electricity  and magnetism.The other cowinners of the Nobel Prize, Julian S. Schwinger of the United States   and Tomonaga Shinichiro   of Japan, had independently created equivalent theories, but it was Feynman’s that proved the most original and far-reaching. The problem-solving tools that he invented—including pictorial representations of particle interactions known as Feynman diagrams—permeated many areas of theoretical physics in the second half of the 20th century.

Quick Facts

In full: 

 

Richard Phillips Feynman

Born: 

 

May 11, 1918, New York, USA

Died: 

 

February 15, 1988,Los Angeles, California  (aged 69)

 

Born in the Far Rockaway section of New York City, Feynman was the descendant of Russian and Polish Jews who had immigrated to the United States late in the 19th century. He studied physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where his undergraduate thesis (1939) proposed an original and enduring approach to calculating forces in molecules. Feynman received his doctorate at Princeton University   in 1942. At Princeton, with his adviser, John Archibald Wheeler John , he developed an approach to quantum mechanics governed by the principle of least action.This approach replaced the wave-oriented electromagnetic picture developed by James Clerk Maxwell  with one based entirely on particle interactions mapped in space and time. In effect, Feynman’s method calculated the probabilities of all the possible paths a particle could take in going from one point to another.

Physics and Natural LAW

During World War II Feynman was recruited to serve as a staff member of the U.S. atomic bomb project at Princeton University (1941–42) and then at the new secret laboratory at Los Alamos, New Mexico (1943–45). At Los Alamos he became the youngest group leader in the theoretical division of the Manhattan Project. With the head of that division, Hans BETHE, he devised the formula for predicting the energy yield of a nuclear explosive. Feynman also took charge of the project’s primitive computing effort, using a hybrid of new calculating machines and human workers to try to process the vast amounts of numerical computation required by the project. He observed the first detonation of an atomic bomb on July 16, 1945, near Alamogordo, New Mexico, and, though his initial reaction was euphoric, he later felt anxiety about the force he and his colleagues had helped unleash on the world.

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