πŸ“ˆ ❸ Top 10 Smartest People: n.3 - Christopher Hirata - IQ 225 ❸ πŸ“ˆ



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πŸ“ˆ The Top 10 People with the highest IQs in History for Android πŸ“ˆ

❸ 3 - Christopher Hirata - IQ 225

Christopher Hirata (born 1982) is another #childprodigy that made waves when he became the youngest #American to win a gold medal at the #InternationalPhysicsOlympiad in #1996 at the age of 13. He enrolled in the #CaliforniaInstituteof Technology at 14, and successfully obtained his PhD from #Princeton at the age of 22. He later returned to the California Institute of Technology to teach astrophysics, which the 31-year-old still does today.

He noted for his circa 2000 human chemical thermodynamics and human physics based “#ThePhysicsofRelationships” article consisting of five parts:
1. #ThermochemicalApproachtoRelationships
2. #ComplexEquilibria of #MenandWomen
3. #ReactionKinetics
4. #NeutronScattering: A Cautionary Tale
5. #TheShellModel
on the topics of a thermochemical approach to relationships, complex equilibria of men and women, reaction kinetics, neutron scattering, and shell model, written at the age of about 18 that harks of genius ranking near to that of the great insights of German polyintellect #JohannGoethe (IQ=230) and his 1796 human chemical theory.

#Anecdote | #Mathematicsproblem
Upon arriving at #Caltech in 1997, Hirata registered one of the highest scores in history on the Institute's mathematics diagnostic tests, thereby foregoing freshman calculus and sophomore differential equations (see: prodigies and calculus) for a more difficult upper-division class. And his early mastery of physics, his chosen field, is even more impressive. On the GRE advanced subject test in physics, he scored a perfect 990. Caltech mathematics instructor #MarkusKeel recalls his favorite anecdote about Hirata concerning a difficult problem on the final exam, in his class of class of 22 physics and mathematics majors included a couple of graduate students. Before putting the problem on the test, he had consulted two colleagues in the department. One colleague said he didn't see right away how to solve the exercise, while the other said—at terrific volume—that he didn't even believe the conclusion of the problem. On the final itself, Hirata not only solved the problem as Keel had framed it, but left a note saying that he knew of an easier way to solve it, and wrote the easier solution on the back of the page.
http://www.eoht.info/page/Christopher+Hirata πŸ“Œ



πŸ“ˆ The Top 10 People with the highest IQs in History for Android πŸ“ˆ
FULL LIST ► https://youtu.be/RBfgl8qc-4E πŸ“Œ




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