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Biografía del universo (2006)

por John Gribbin

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1855146,818 (3.68)2
How did the universe begin? Where do galaxies come from? How do stars and planets form? Where do the material particles we are made of come from? How did life begin? Today we have only provisional answers to such questions. But scientific progress will improve these answers dramatically over the next ten years, predicts John Gribbin in this riveting book. He focuses on what we know--or think we know--about ten controversial, unanswered issues in the physical sciences and explains how current cutting-edge research may yield solutions in the very near future. With his trademark facility for engaging readers with or without a scientific background, the author explores ideas concerning the creation of the universe, the possibility of other forms of life, and the fate of the expanding cosmos. He examines "theories of everything,” including grand unified theories and string theory, and he discusses the Big Bang theory, the origin of structure and patterns of matter in the galaxies, and dark mass and dark energy. In the final chapter of the book, Gribbin ponders the future of Earth and the Sun and the possibility that the universe might expand forever.… (más)
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Come si è sviluppato l'universo fino alle sue dimensioni attuali? Come si formano i pianeti? Da dove viene la vita? Partendo dal Big Bang, si ripercorre la storia dell'universo e si esaminano le varie teorie elaborate per spiegarne l'evoluzione: dalla teoria del tutto a quella del Big Crunch.
  delfini | Aug 17, 2009 |
An interesting and mostly understandable account of the the universe's physical phenomena over the course of its life from birth to present, covering the very small to the very large. The writing is not particularly vivid or inspiring, and the writer does not sufficiently bring to life what is largely a lifeless topic. The most interesting parts were those at the end dealing with the origins of the life and the evidence for organic molecules in space. Nevertheless, it is a worthwhile read to gain a grasp of current knowledge in particle and astrophysics, without being mind blowing. ( )
  stuster | Mar 31, 2009 |
Another cracking book by Gribbin. He really does churn out quality time after time.

This book is a whistle-stop tour, a quick biography of our universe. I really enjoyed the "how do we know the things we think we know?" chapter and also his careful distinction between what we think we KNOW and what we THINK we know.

Accessible, informative and entertaining. Helpful glossary.

Recommended. ( )
  psiloiordinary | Jun 10, 2008 |
This is the best overview of the current thinking on cosmology that I've read in some time. It covers more ground than Steven Weinberg's The First Three Minutes and brings it up to date. I've started reading it a second time and will use it as a reference for a long time to come.

It has plenty of big numbers and it is desperately in need of some illustrations, a graph even, to put these into context. Unlike Weinberg's book, you don't get the maths at the end (or at all) so you'll have to go elsewhere for that kind of detail. This despite the fact that anyone capable of making sense of the numbers will also be at ease with the equations that use them. Still, that's popular science for you. ( )
  Kemloch | Apr 26, 2008 |
Be sure not to croak in the next decade, or you will miss out on knowing such things as why the universe is the way it is and where life originated. Frontiers of (mostly) fundamental physics and cosmology, very well described.
  fpagan | Apr 16, 2007 |
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How did the universe begin? Where do galaxies come from? How do stars and planets form? Where do the material particles we are made of come from? How did life begin? Today we have only provisional answers to such questions. But scientific progress will improve these answers dramatically over the next ten years, predicts John Gribbin in this riveting book. He focuses on what we know--or think we know--about ten controversial, unanswered issues in the physical sciences and explains how current cutting-edge research may yield solutions in the very near future. With his trademark facility for engaging readers with or without a scientific background, the author explores ideas concerning the creation of the universe, the possibility of other forms of life, and the fate of the expanding cosmos. He examines "theories of everything,” including grand unified theories and string theory, and he discusses the Big Bang theory, the origin of structure and patterns of matter in the galaxies, and dark mass and dark energy. In the final chapter of the book, Gribbin ponders the future of Earth and the Sun and the possibility that the universe might expand forever.

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