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34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gets the adrenaline running,
By
This review is from: The Runaway Universe : The Race to Discover the Future of the Cosmos (Helix Books) (Hardcover)
"The Runaway Universe" is the latest news on the cosmological constant, reincarnated (after Einstein called it his worst blunder) because of evidence recently discovered that the rate the universe is expanding is actually increasing. This is a fascinating book that doesn't back away from informing us about just how tentative these latest findings are. The book also is good at describing the almost frightening consequences of these findings, if they are true: the universe will basically evaporate away much faster than we'd ever dreamed of before (but it will still take billions of years, so don't worry about it at the personal level). This is one of many popular books that appear each year on cosmology. Generally I judge them by how many times I feel satisfied that I am understanding for the first time something I've run across many times before in my readings but it never sunk in. The chapter on the various types of supernova struck me this way: absolutely outstanding and clear, and worth the price of the book alone, in my opinion.
18 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Back in Time and Space,
By Phyllis Yellin (CT) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Runaway Universe : The Race to Discover the Future of the Cosmos (Helix Books) (Hardcover)
Looking at Supernovas which exploded so long ago is a way of looking back into time, analagous to archaelogy. Challenging as it is to grasp these theories and the data which supports them, the effort is rewarded. Thanks to the Hubble telescope, we are the recipients of data which previous astronomers could only dream of...if they could even dream of it. Chapter nine, The race to find the future of the universe', is particularly fascinating. The author Donald Goldsmith has included personal accounts of the astrophysicists who have interpreted the data and made these astonishing discoveries, adding a human element to these cosmic concepts. We are looking back in time in order to learn more about our origins as as well as to predict our future.Other books I recommend in this area of interest are: Galileo's Daughter God and the Big Bang
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The key cosmic parameters - what we see is what we know.,
By
This review is from: The Runaway Universe: The Race to Find the Future of the Cosmos (Paperback)
Supernova stars observations in the end of 1990s suggest a nonzero Constant capable of accelerating universal expansion and validate inflationary model.How true are determinations indicating the fifth significant break through in modern cosmology? This work is a pure scientific report revolving essentially around two equations containing only two unknown parameters. But how accurate are the observations and what obstacles have to be overcome? Certain sections of this book are more difficult and require extra focusing power to get by (for example: dependence of peak luminosity on light curve- for supernova observation or: how the curvature of space determines the angular size on which we now see the largest "surfaces of last scattering"-for cosmic background radiation study). I am, and I have always been impressed by careers of top world-class astronomers, their knowledge, ability to design observational methods and skills for processing obtained spectra. Goldsmith gives many stories of dedication and determination, stories about geniuses contributing to total understanding of what Universe was and what will become.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A lively, enjoyable book!,
By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Runaway Universe : The Race to Discover the Future of the Cosmos (Helix Books) (Hardcover)
The universe isn't just expanding - it's doing so at an accelerated pace. This details the scientific probe of the universe's origins and expansion process, the struggles to date events, and the various theories surrounding the future of the cosmos. Lay readers who enjoy physics and astronomy titles will relish this lively account.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Complete, understandable, but not Goldsmith's best,
By
This review is from: The Runaway Universe : The Race to Discover the Future of the Cosmos (Helix Books) (Hardcover)
Goldsmith did an excellent job in this book, as a popularizer of an exceedingly complex subject, but not as a writer. The subject is, of course, the recent discovery of the non-zero "cosmological constant", that accelerates the expansion of our universe exponentially.In order to guide the reader through the theories, Goldsmith starts with the historical facts, starting with Einstein's view of the Universe, deciphering the results of the "type Ia Supernovae" research groups, and explaining the COBE satellite data and the gravitationnal lensing effect. Each concept is explained, each theory gradually introduced, and, as the reader understands more and more of it, Goldsmith even manages to expand the book with the alternative explanations that might be revealed with the futures set of instruments (MAP and Planck). So, on the science side, Goldsmith did a great job, complete and objective, similar in quality to his other book "The Hunt for Life on Mars". However, several paragraphs (and even one or two chapters), that deal more with the scientists involved, are too long, not very well written, breaking the rythm of the book. Also, he sometimes try to explain some formulas without even writing them once, which makes everything more confusing than necessary. Anyway, this book is worth reading, and is probably the most complete introduction you can get on this topic. And now that MAP is flying, you can expect more results to be published in the next few years, and you will understand what it's all about.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Can we know the future of the cosmos in the near future?,
By
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This review is from: The Runaway Universe : The Race to Discover the Future of the Cosmos (Helix Books) (Hardcover)
From observation of supernovae, i.e., large exploding stars, two rival teams of astronomers recently found that the expansion of the universe was very possibly accelerating. The astronomer and science writer Donald Goldsmith tells laypersons the story centered on this discovery in this book. To explain the accelerating expansion, astronomers have revived Albert Einstein's "cosmological constant," which he called his greatest blunder. It is interesting that the same author published a book entitled "Einstein's Greatest Blunder?" just a little before the announcement of the above discovery.Before going into the main topic of the finding of the accelerating expansion, Goldsmith gives an introductory chapters on the discovery of galaxies, the expansion of the universe, the inflationary theory of the cosmos, and the existence of dark matter in the universe. These chapters might be somewhat tedious for those who already learned about them. When the story comes to the central theme, however, almost all readers would be fascinated by the author's clear explanation of painstaking research into cosmic riddles. Without using equations but effectively using some photographs and diagrams, Goldsmith succeeds in telling what has happened and is going to happen at the forefront of cosmology. The last chapter deals with pleasant prospects of astronomical observations in the nearest future, which will use new satellites and other powerful instruments to resolve many of the mysterious issues of cosmology including the fate of the universe.
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
the future of the universe meets the now,
By Philip Weber "2012approaches" (Seattle, WA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Runaway Universe: The Race to Find the Future of the Cosmos (Paperback)
stardate: now
The cosmos is about to experience a transformation so vast in scope it is nearly beyond the vision of the highly developed 21st century human mind. What is about to happen is akin to an explosion into dimensionality itself, as though the current form of the cosmos was to become suddenly too small for the ever expanding and ever complexifying screen of human understanding. The existential tension is real, so real that a human psychology is going berserk into the fog of denial. Fueled by a psychology of cowardice [simply a scientific definition, no degrading is intended, nor should any be inferred], fear dominates the landscape. From the standpoint of chaotic world media-dense societies, something is seemingly spinning out of control, evidenced in the magnitude of explosions of mediaform, mediacontent, and mediadelivery. It is like the starship enterprise suddenly encountering an energy-mined space field. While civil societies engage in wars of words and men, everything from voodoo on up the scale is being wildly championed as the new thing, and the human anxiety level is about to go into the red zone. Meanwhile, those who live in this time at the heart of the human home -- Africa -- remain for the most part left behind by the advance of money rich societies. Between those two opposites, an entire spectrum sprays its light across a cosmos of human endeavor, and the dance of energy through all of humanity is deep and intense. "It" is all about to change, and it will not be through a war of men, by men or through men. It is a function of the universe itself, physical and nonphysical, a morphing so instantaneous that it will redefine not the reality but what in reality "we" are. And we are about to encounter the birth into exponentially expanded dimensionality. All we have created, and all we would attempt to hold on to, is about to be merged into a new reality. While scientists look backward, and religions look forward from the past, technology pretends to be an answer. It has only one achievement: communication. These are the days of the last wonders of the world. and it has already started. see it now or see it later. |
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The Runaway Universe: The Race to Find the Future of the Cosmos by Donald Goldsmith (Paperback - December 1, 2000)
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