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43 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gee, Dad, It's Really Dark Out There.
In 1970 many physicists and cosmologists thought that we would soon know all the basic physical principles governing the universe. The Big Bang was largely confirmed by cosmic background radiation and we knew about expansion. Quantum mechanics ruled the small while the large was the domain of relativity. The two theories weren't linked yet, but it was merely a matter of a...
Published on March 19, 2009 by J. Moran

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28 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Einstein's telescope
This is a great book but Amazon omitted all of the illustrations in the Kindle version. This makes the digital version almost worthless. There appear to be almost 70 illustrations missing.
Published on April 24, 2009 by A. M. Potter


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43 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Gee, Dad, It's Really Dark Out There., March 19, 2009
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In 1970 many physicists and cosmologists thought that we would soon know all the basic physical principles governing the universe. The Big Bang was largely confirmed by cosmic background radiation and we knew about expansion. Quantum mechanics ruled the small while the large was the domain of relativity. The two theories weren't linked yet, but it was merely a matter of a little more time and work. Success would bring an explanation unifying the four fundamental physical forces of the universe: Electromagnetism, the strong force (binding protons and neutrons together in atomic nuclei), the weak force (governing certain kinds of particle decay) and gravity. Surely the "theory of everything" was not far off.

Wrong. Observations in 1970 revealed that gravitational motions of gas clouds in the Andromeda galaxy were occurring at speeds far greater than the entire observed mass of that galaxy could account for. Similar problems detected in the 1930's involving motions of entire galaxies had long been disregarded. Soon other observations confirmed that so-called "ordinary matter" is insufficient to account for observed gravitational effects in the cosmos. Thus the universe must contain huge amounts of "dark matter," that we cannot observe and the composition of which we do not know (it is not made of the particles that constitute ordinary matter).

Then in 1998 reports of observations of distant supernovae revealed that the expansion of the universe was not slowing, as would be expected from long-term effects of gravity, but was instead accelerating. Something was overcoming the gravitational power of all of the matter in the universe. The acceleration, moreover, has not been present from the Big Bang on. For billions of years the speed of expansion slowed. Then, about 5 billion years ago, acceleration began. Obviously energy--a lot of it--- was required to explain these phenomena. This is "dark energy." We cannot detect it and currently know almost nothing about it.

Today scientists believe that 5% of the universe consists of "ordinary" [observable] matter, 23% of "dark" matter and 72% of "dark energy." So in about 40 years we have gone from thinking that we knew almost everything about the essentials of cosmology to actually knowing something about only 5% of the universe, very little about an additional 23% and almost nothing about 72% of it.

But author Gates (herself a theoretical physicist by training) is energized rather than discouraged. In this book she discusses fully the problems noted above (and more), explains their significance and outlines in detail the methods that are being used or planned to attack them. The book's title comes from one of the major investigational tools: Use of relativistic spacetime itself as an observational device. General relativity teaches that the presence of mass warps spacetime. As light travels through the universe it follows a curved path through these "dimples" in spacetime. Because these warps bend light, it is as if a giant lens has been dropped into space, magnifying and displacing light from more distant sources behind it. When Earth is aligned with such a "lens," it allows us to detect and analyse vastly more distant light sources otherwise not observable. This is useful in searching for dark matter because it allows "maps" to be made showing where dark matter exists in distant sources. Gates does an outstanding job of describing this and other significant techniques for making these inquiries, noting the strengths and weaknesses of each method in investigating certain types of phenomena. The use of different techniques should permit the capture of disparate forms of data and lead, we hope, to detection and analysis of dark matter and dark energy.

This is an exciting time for cosmology and physics. The results of these inquiries will, at the least, radically change our view of the cosmos. Depending on results, it may be necessary to modify Einstein's theory of general relativity to account for the observed actions of gravity in the universe. Gates is also quite good at conveying the excitement now animating these scientific fields. Her writing is clear and readable, if seldom compelling. Overall this book is recommended for anyone interested in today's leading cosmological puzzles.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating Space Science, June 4, 2009
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Astrophysicist Evalyn Gates brings the world of gravitational lensing and the search for the unknown constituents of the Universe to the reader in her book Einstein's Telescope. Gates has spent many years in this search, and this book is an excellent introduction and advanced discussion, laying the foundation for the work she (and others) will do over the next decade to unmask some of the great mysteries in cosmology and astrophysics.

Gates introduces a brief history of how scientists came to understand that dark matter and dark energy had to be part of our Universe in order to explain a few basic observations. Once she has offered the reader a framework for why we need to look more deeply at the way our Universe appears, Gates explains just what causes the "Einstein's Telescope" effect. This fascinating technique involves gravitational lensing of distant objects by massive objects sitting closer to the Earth. Often, the lenses are clusters of galaxies, and through the process of lensing more distant galaxies, we can learn how much mass is acting on the light of the distant sources, giving us insight into where dark matter may reside and exactly how it interacts with ordinary mass.

The book explains various theories of dark matter, primarily MACHOs and WIMPs, offers glimpses at the even more mysterious dark energy, for which there are no shortage of wild theories, and eventually goes deep into the cosmic web that may hold clues to the earliest formation of galaxies.

Later parts of the book, which may well be the strongest in what is a very solid presentation, describe the multiple experiments ongoing and various theories currently being formulated. Gates explains how these new techniques and new opportunities may shed light on our understanding of the Universe, its beginnings, and its evolution. Anyone who wants to understand the amazing findings that have begun to trickle out of this astrophysical work (and which will continue to become available over the next decade or two) will find strong explanations by Gates herein. This section alone makes the entire book worth reading for me.

Gates is an excellent writer who refuses to waste the reader's time. She has a solid grasp of her subject, and better, is highly successful at making the complex scientific concepts approachable by most any reader. Tons of great cutting-edge science is in store for a reader of this book, and those with a strong knowledge of cosmology and astronomy can still find much to learn and enjoy in Telescope. A handful of excellent images and illustrations are included in the hardback edition which offer the reader tantilizing, beautiful references to Gates' material, including real photographs of some fantastic shots of gravitation lensing.

For any science reader, and most especially those who enjoy space sciences, this book is highly recommended as a solid effort to update the reader's understanding of current astrophysical efforts and approaches to this fascinating field. While much of the science is complex, the style makes it easy to digest, without watering down the concepts. Four stars.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Don't be a WIMP!! Discover how astronomers find things they can't see!, August 3, 2009
XXXXX

"What we have learned [about our Universe] is amazing. The Universe is 13.7 billion years old, it has a temperature of just under 3 degrees above absolute zero, and its spatial geometry is flat. The enormous expanse of space that we can see today, filled with hundreds of billions of galaxies, began as an intensely hot, almost infinitely dense soup of energy that has expanded and cooled since the beginning of time and space. Space itself is expanding in a great cosmic stretch that has recently begun to kick up a notch--the Universe is accelerating. And it is dark. The cosmic inventory is dominated by dark energy (72%) and dark matter (23%) [both of which we can't see]; normal matter, which comprises everything we [can see and] have ever been able to hold in our hands or examine with our instruments, comes in a distant third, contributing only about 5% of everything that is."

The above comes from the epilogue of this well-written, very informative book by Dr. Evalyn Gates, Assistant Director of the Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics and a Senior Research Associate at the University of Chicago.

So what is this book about? As might be deduced from the above quotation, it's about the dark side of the Universe--dark matter, dark energy, even black holes.

Dark matter is the hypothetical matter that holds the galaxies together. WIMPs (Weakly Interacting Massive Particle), mentioned in this review's title, are one of the leading candidates for a type of dark matter. Dark energy is the hypothetical form of energy that permeates all of space and tends to increase the rate of expansion of the Universe. (A black hole in general relativity is a region of space in which the gravitational pull is so powerful that nothing, including light, can escape its pull. Black holes can't be seen directly.)

As mentioned, dark matter and dark energy can't be seen. How are astronomers to look for these things they can't see? That's where "Einstein's telescope" comes in.

Technically, Einstein's telescope is called "gravitational lensing." This book explains how it works. (Note that gravitational lensing is one of the predictions of physicist Albert Einstein's Theory of General Relativity.)

Einstein's telescope or gravitational lensing can be used to solve the biggest mysteries of the Universe by using ordinary luminous matter to discover dark matter and its distribution (as well as other dark objects such as black holes and objects too far away to be seen by our best telescopes such as other Earths). This discovered dark matter itself can be used to probe for the imprint of dark energy (and the very structure of space and time).

The final chapter is a fantastic discussion of "gravity waves" (or gravitational waves). A gravity wave is a fluctuation in the curvature of space-time which propagates as a wave, traveling outward from the source. Predicted again from Einstein's Theory of General Relativity.

This book is quite accessible. No prior knowledge of science of any kind is assumed. Those with a science background will find that the first three chapters cover familiar ground.

Throughout the book are helpful black and white illustrations (pictures, graphs, etc.). As a bonus, there is a section of ten beautiful full-color photographs.

Finally, my only minor problem with this book is that I would have appreciated in having all new terms introduced in the main narrative listed (with definitions) in a glossary.

In conclusion, this is an extraordinary and captivating book!! And don't worry! You don't have to be MACHO to read it. (MACHO stands for Massive Astrophysical Compact Halo Object.)

(first published 2009; preface; acknowledgements; glossary of acronyms; 12 chapters; epilogue; main narrative 270 pages; notes; illustration acknowledgments; index; about the author)

<<Stephen Pletko, London, Ontario, Canada>>

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A quick read that shows clearly why we have to overturn what we thought the Universe was made of, December 13, 2009
Coming in at a reasonable 270 pages of main text, this very readable and thoroughly engaging book takes the reader from when cosmologists and astrophysicists "thought they were so close" to having it all figured out and yet showing us that as early as the 1930's theorists were postulating dark matter (as early as 1933 Zwicke called it "dunkle Materie"). But it wasn't until 1970 that a second observation of the speeds at which gas clouds were orbiting around the Andromeda Galaxy that put dark matter on the map for good.

It turns out the Universe is filled with the stuff. And by "stuff" they aren't even sure what it is made of, but WIMPs are the most likely candidate. To make matters worse, Dark Energy appears to exist as a negative pressure within the entire Universe acting as a sort of renewed "Inflation" that is speeding up the expansion against normal gravity's will.

How do we know all of this? Well, in the book, the author Evalyn Gates lays out the territory upon which these discoveries came to light. The territory is General Relativity and the famous first prediction it made, that light will be bent by the curvature of spacetime around a very massive gravitating body like the Sun - a method now affectionately known as "Einstein's Telescope". Today this confirmation of Einstein's grand vision of the cosmos is being utilized in ways that Einstein himself considered only hypothetical-gravitational lensing of distant objects by galactic glusters, single galaxies and even dark matter itself.

In a very simple and readable way, Dr. Gates takes the reader very carefully, but very swiftly, through 100 years of cosmology to the present making it understandable and interesting. The book never gets weighed down much in jargon and she keeps the examples light and refreshing using mundane and ordinary relationships to make simpler these complex concepts.

The book has an opening Glossary of Acronyms and extensive and helpful notes from each Chapter at the end of the book that the reader can refer to when he or she feels the need. I bought this book because it was published very recently, in February of 2009, and it has helped me round out my research on the subject of modern cosmology in my attempt to understand the challenges of the big-bang model.

I highly recommend this wonderful little book to all science enthusiasts and anyone else that might want to take a peek into our present understanding of just what the Universe is made of and how we are presently going about taking down the data needed to make the claims found in this book.

Buy it today.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book, April 14, 2009
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I thoroughly enjoyed this book and have found it to be one of the more readable books in the category of popular astrophysics. Evalyn Gates has succeeded in creating a fascinating literary exploration of the subject of the book - mainly a description of the phenomenon known as gravitational lensing and a detailed account of what how it can be used to gain insight into dark matter and subsequently the construction of the universe. I was peripherally aware of the concept of gravitational lensing, but now I have a much more vivid mental image of how the universe looks from a spacetime distortion stand point. Having read quite a few astrophysics and cosmology books, I especially appreciated the omission of a rehashing of the entire history of physics. The author includes only what is necessary for the understanding of the subjects. Additionally, there is no math, but there is an explanation of Einstein's equation of how the spacetime curvature relates to the distribution of matter and energy which will actually make you feel smarter. If you are considering buying this book, don't worry, you'll like it!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not a good fit for the Kindle, October 10, 2010
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Love this book, love my Kindle, but the illustrations don't translate well in electronic ink.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I'm almost convinced, April 4, 2010
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I started reading Einstein's Telescope with the idea of refuting many of its conclusions. After all, Dark Matter and Dark Enegy were invented to explain why the universe is the way it is - are they real, or just convenient patches on a flawed model?

After reading the book, I find it hard to deny the existence of the Dark Universe. (It isn't actually Dark. In fact, if real, Dark Matter is completely transparent.) The case for Dark Matter in Evalyn Gate's book is pretty conclusive. [Now, I can bring in MOG (or MOND) and explain things another way, but MOG stands on "unusual" ground.] Einstein's Telescope is using the observable universe for its proof, and I am fairly convinced that Dark Matter is real. She, Evalyn, can be very persuasive. Dark Energy is a greater mystery not yet explained or explainable by current science(or Evalyn). I can still hang on to one of my prejudices.

Einstein's Telescope is a good read, but I found myself annoyed by ocassional statements like, "Dark Matter is undetectable by even our most powerful telescopes". If Dark Matter is real, there should be some just about anywhere/everywhere. Why not look locally, instead of billions of lightyears away? It may be concentrated in certain places, but should be detectable (somehow)in almost any portion of the Universe - like in a particle accelerator on Earth, maybe. I guess it would help to know what to look for, but is that going to come from a telescope?

Don't mind my criticisms. I would recommend Einstein's Telescope to anyone as the best available description of the current understanding of the universe we live in. We live in a time when more and more questions are being asked in cosmology and quantum mechanics whose possible answers are so varied that they can't all be right. We can't be sure of the accuracy of our knowledge without more information. The one area which seems to be producing new and verifiable knowledge is cosmology based on the gravitational lensing techniques described in Einstein's Telescope: The Hunt for Dark Matter and Dark Energy in the Universe by Evalyn Gates.

Get it, and read it.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Savy and Scientific, January 7, 2010
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Jim (Toronto, Canada) - See all my reviews
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I read this book alongside Dan Hooper's new book on Supersymmetry (see related review of this book). While Mr. Hooper comes at dark matter from the perspective of a particle physicist and supersymmetry, Ms. Gates provided a very nice juxtaposition (for me at least) by coming at dark matter from the cosmic perspective as an astrophysicist, and from the distinct perspective of gravitational lensing - the essence of the title of the book. As a current graduate student in Astronomy, I really enjoyed the obvious knowledge and background that Ms. Gates brought to this subject. I also enjoyed Ms. Gates' humorous presentation. Handled wrongly, sometimes humour can detract from the flow and presentation, but Ms. Gates (in my opinion) nicely used her dry wit to add to the presentation and to provide moments of levity throughout the text. The book will be very enjoyable to any reader interested in science and provides a very nice summary of dark matter and the techniques employed to quantify it. It doesn't deal too much with dark energy, other than to confirm that observations show that the Universe's expansion is accelerating and giving possible explanations for it in a summary way. But I don't fault the author for this; dark energy is very much more mysterious than dark matter at this point, and it seemed the author's intent here was to concentrate on dark matter. I very much recommend this book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars real deal, September 10, 2011
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The book, the pictures, the ideas are all first rate and cutting edge. Gates has a superb ability to make the unfathomable "graspable" to curious but ordinary people like myself. Selected reading as part of our cosmology group. A big and ever expanding yes.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thoroughly Enjoyable!, April 10, 2010
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This is a book about humanity's recent efforts in unravelling the composition of the universe. In very clear and eloquent prose, the author gently and painlessly guides the reader through problems in cosmology - focussing primarily on dark matter and dark energy. The main tool that is prominent throughout the book is gravitational lensing - hence the book's title. The author has taken the time to carefully explain the various theories and mechanisms involved; for illustration purposes, she has made extensive use of very helpful analogies from everyday experience. In my opinion, the author has succeeded admirably in writing a book that can be fully enjoyed by a general readership. She has remained well-grounded throughout, illustrating the practical aspects of scientific problems in light of well-established (and well-explained) theories. The writing style is friendly, clear, authoritative, widely accessible, lively and quite captivating. Complete with several useful figures and colour plates, this book can be enjoyed by anyone interested in humanity's quest to understand the composition and machinery of our universe.
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