Reader Question: Help me choose my next science title!
March 4, 2010
My personal library’s science section is looking downright pathetic. Unlike other subjects—like modern fiction and history—for which new releases find their way to me effortlessly, my science books just keep staling and aging over there, sadly. And there are far too few of them in general.
Please vote on which recent science release I should read next! You’ll notice a cosmology-physics bent to these titles—that’s because the fields intrigue me, a lot.
In The Drunkard’s Walk Leonard Mlodinow provides readers with a wonderfully readable guide to how the mathematical laws of randomness affect our lives. With insight he shows how the hallmarks of chance are apparent in the course of events all around us. The understanding of randomness has brought about profound changes in the way we view our surroundings, and our universe. I am pleased that Leonard has skillfully explained this important branch of mathematics. –Stephen Hawking
A lucid but not oversimplified popular account of 21st-century cosmology. In the late 20th century, work by Einstein and quantum physicists seemed on the verge of explaining everything when confusion descended. Astronomers discovered that galaxies were moving too fast. Their stars and dust produced far too little gravity to accomplish this, so most matter in the universe is not only “dark,” but it can’t be the particles, atoms and molecules familiar to us because even invisible normal matter is fairly easy to detect. No one knows the makeup of dark matter. If this weren’t frustrating enough, in 1998 scientists discovered that the expansion of the universe was accelerating. This requires immense energy; in fact “dark energy” makes up nearly three-quarters of matter-energy in the universe. New Scientist consulting editor Ananthaswamy traveled the world interviewing theorists attempting to understand this avalanche of distressing new information; all yearn for more details about the largest objects in the universes-galaxies and galaxy clusters. Turning to efforts at gathering these details, the author describes dazzling high-tech telescopes now operating or under construction from Chile to Hawaii to outer space. Because theorists also need to know about the universe’s smallest objects, ghostlike neutrinos and muons, Ananthaswamy devotes chapters to machines that produce them-the titanic new particle accelerator in Switzerland-or detect them from deep under Siberian lakes or Antarctic icecaps. A meticulous, accessible update of the latest ideas and instruments that contribute to the clarification of an increasingly puzzling universe. –(Agent: Peter Tallack/The Science Factory) (Kirkus Reviews )
“Unifying cosmology, thermodynamics, and information science into a refreshingly accessible whole, From Eternity to Here will make you wish time’s arrow could fly in reverse, if only so you could once again read the book for the first time.”
-Seed Magazine
“Carroll…takes his readers on a fascinating and refreshing trek through every known back alley and cul de sac of quantum mechanics, relativity, cosmology and theoretical physics. The best way to grasp the rich mysteries of our universe is by constantly rereading the best and clearest explanations. Mr. Carroll’s From Eternity to Here is certainly one of them.”
-Wall Street Journal
Answers to science’s most enduring questions from “Can I build a transporter, like on Star Trek?” and “Is there life on other planets?” to “What is empty space made of?”
In A User’s Guide to the Universe, physicists Dave Goldberg and Jeff Blomquist make good on two promises: you’ll get answers and you won’t have to decipher any equations to understand them. (Well, maybe just one very short and very familiar equation.)
This plain-English, plain-hilarious handbook ushers you through all of the major discoveries of modern physics, from relativity to the Large Hadron Collider, without furrowing your brow even once. Put your mind at ease and jump into modern physics in a way you never imagined possible—comfortably. Now is your chance to impress people at cocktail parties with your insights into the world of quantum weirdness, time and space, the expanding universe, and much, much more.
Which books on this topic have you already read? Without it, it’s hard to know whether to recommend older books (such as “Cosmos” or “A Brief History of Time”)!
Cork Catherine says:
I really enjoyed Lee Smolin’s The Life of the Cosmos – couldn’t put it down. But then it was written in 1999 so may be overtaken by more recent works.
Which books on this topic have you already read? Without it, it’s hard to know whether to recommend older books (such as “Cosmos” or “A Brief History of Time”)!
I really enjoyed Lee Smolin’s The Life of the Cosmos – couldn’t put it down. But then it was written in 1999 so may be overtaken by more recent works.