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  1. Gweneth Margaret Howarth Feynman, free-lance landscape artist, world traveler and widow of Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman, died of cancer just days before her 56th birthday. Her final illness began while she was on a trip to Egypt. Mrs. Feynman was born in Ripponden, England, Jan. 4, 1934, and came to...

  2. He married Gweneth Howarth in 1960. Their son Carl was born in 1962, and their daughter Michelle was born in 1968. Many consider him to be the father of nanotechnology for two prizes he offered in a 1959 talk entitled, “There’s Plenty of Room at the Bottom,” where he prompted thinking on a very small scale.

  3. Más tarde se casó con Gweneth Howarth (1934-1989), que era de Ripponden, Yorkshire, y compartió su entusiasmo por la vida y la aventura. [39] Además de su casa en Altadena , California , tenían una casa de playa en Baja California , comprada con el dinero del Premio Nobel de Feynman, la tercera parte de los 55 000 dólares.

  4. On the beach at Lake Geneva, he met Gweneth Howarth, who was from Ripponden, West Yorkshire, and working in Switzerland as an au pair. Feynman's love life had been turbulent since his divorce; his previous girlfriend had walked off with his Albert Einstein Award medal and, on the advice of an earlier girlfriend, had feigned pregnancy ...

  5. However, in the early 1960s he happened to be at a professional conference in Europe and became acquainted with a charming lady by the name of Gweneth Howarth, a native of Great Britain. He’d long been in need of someone to fill the loneliness after Arline’s death, and after having surveyed the field extensively, he became certain that ...

  6. The famous American physicist Richard Feynman used to take holidays in England. His third wife, Gweneth Howarth, was a native of West Yorkshire, so every year the Feynman family would visit her hometown of Ripponden or the nearby hamlet of Mill Bank. Open Culture, openculture.com

  7. 21 de may. de 2019 · He married my mother, Gweneth Howarth, in 1960. My brother, Carl, was born in 1962, and I was adopted in 1968. Though he remained forever ambivalent about it, his most public achievement came in 1965, when he won the Nobel Prize in Physics, sharing it with Julian Schwinger and Shin’ichiro Tomonaga for their work in quantum ...