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Philip Emeagwali's video: The Nine Emeagwali Equations Are My Contributions to Physics Black African American Physicists

@The Nine Emeagwali Equations Are My Contributions to Physics | Black African American Physicists
I'm @Philip Emeagwali. The invention of the paradigm-shifting massively parallel processing supercomputer is rarer than the writing of the complete works of William Shakespeare. In the history of computing, the parallel processing supercomputer is the only paradigm shift that was of tectonic scale. The number of major scientific discoveries and technological inventions that can be made are limited. However, the number of minor scientific papers that can be published are unlimited. Our distant descendants can write a billion novels or a billion plays or a billion movie scripts. But our distant descendants cannot make an unlimited number of groundbreaking scientific discoveries and technological inventions. In a lecture delivered on February 25, 1969 in Portland, Oregon, Alex Haley, the author of “The Autobiography of Malcolm X” spoke about his as-yet-to-be-published bestselling book that was later titled “Roots” and subtitled “The Saga of an American Family.” Alex Haley said that he wrote a million words before he could sell his first piece of writing. The teenage soccer prodigy had kicked the soccer ball a million times before he played at the World Cup. Back in 1972, a seventeen-year-old named “Philip Emeagwali” was mentioned in the science column of the Daily Times. The Daily Times was then the only national newspaper of my country of birth, Nigeria. Back in the 1970s and ‘80s, I wrote one million mathematical expressions and wrote them from the storyboard to the blackboard to the motherboard and across a new internet. I invented that new internet as a new global network of 64 binary thousand already-available motherboards. Yet, I didn’t call myself a supercomputer scientist back on June 20, 1974, when I began programming supercomputers. I experimentally programmed 65,536 processors before I called myself a massively parallel processing supercomputer scientist. I called myself a supercomputer scientist because the supercomputing community acknowledged that I contributed to the development of the modern supercomputer that computes in parallel. Origin of Philip Emeagwali’s Equations My mathematical maturity grew over the twenty years onward of June 1970. In those two decades, I studied physics and calculus and computing. It was in June 1970 that I first wrote the iconic equation of physics F=ma, or Force equals mass times acceleration. I first wrote F=ma as an eighth grader at Christ the King College, Onitsha, Nigeria. I wrote a hundred equations for most days for twenty years before I became cover stories in the world of mathematics. Contrary to the myths about my overnight success, I scribbled a million equations on yellow pads before I became cover stories for the nine new partial differential equations that I invented. As an aside, the nine partial differential equations that I invented were my symbolic restatements of nine algebraic equations. Each equation was F=ma for the three phases of crude oil, injected water, and natural gas and for the three spatial directions, named the x-, y-, and z-directions. I encoded the Second Law of Motion of physics into my system of partial differential equations of modern calculus. I computed my algebraic restatements of that calculus and I computed them across my new internet. I invented my new internet as a new global network of 64 binary thousand tightly-coupled processors that were already available in the market anyway. The system of coupled, non-linear, time-dependent, and state-of-the-art partial differential equations of modern calculus that is also known as the nine Philip Emeagwali’s Equations did not pop into being during one moment of Eureka. The nine Philip Emeagwali’s Equations had their algebraic roots in the Second Law of Motion of physics. That Second Law was discovered back in the year sixteen sixty-six [1666]. Topics black physicists, famous black physicists, famous black mathematicians, famous black computer scientist, African American physicists, African American Inventors, black history month, famous black inventors, Black Inventors,Philip Emeagwali Biography, greatest mathematicians of all time, greatest mathematicians in history, greatest mathematicians alive, greatest mathematicians of the 20th century, greatest mathematicians ever, greatest mathematicians of the 21st century, African Mathematicians, Black Mathematicians, African contributions to mathematics, famous mathematicians and their contributions to mathematics, biography of famous mathematicians of the world For information about Philip Emeagwali, http://emeagwali.com https://facebook.com/emeagwali https://twitter.com/emeagwali https://instagram.com/philipemeagwali https://flickr.com/philipemeagwali https://linkedin.com/in/emeagwali https://soundcloud.com/emeagwali https://youtube.com/emeagwali Philip Emeagwali 180612 Part 2 of 2 postprocessed

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This video was published on 2020-03-01 00:04:13 GMT by @Philip-Emeagwali on Youtube. Philip Emeagwali has total 5.4K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 609 video.This video has received 21 Likes which are higher than the average likes that Philip Emeagwali gets . @Philip-Emeagwali receives an average views of 379.6 per video on Youtube.This video has received 7 comments which are higher than the average comments that Philip Emeagwali gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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