That’s where Meemaw came in. Sheldon found her in the kitchen, drinking coffee and reading a romance novel.
“I’m coming over,” Sturgis said. “And Sheldon? You might want to tell your mother you just became the youngest person in history to propose a viable new framework for gravitational wave detection.” The Cooper household was chaos. Mary was crying happy tears. George Sr. kept asking, “So does this make money?” Missy told everyone she “always knew Sheldon was weird.” And Meemaw? She calculated that Sheldon’s discovery might be worth a small bet on the Astros.
“Does that mean we’re gonna get a tornado?” young sheldon s01 amr
“Missy, I swear on Fermat’s Last Theorem—”
He ran inside, nearly colliding with Missy. That’s where Meemaw came in
AMR Theory – S. Cooper, age 9 – Pending peer review (and possibly a Nobel Prize).
“Boy, what’s all this?”
That evening, Sheldon had filled his first whiteboard. By the end of week two, the second whiteboard was covered in differential equations that even his mentor, Dr. John Sturgis, would call “ambitious.” By week three, Sheldon believed he’d found a mathematical shortcut to detect gravitational anomalies without a laser interferometer—just pure math.