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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What Sir Patrick Moore said about,
By Reader (England) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Universe at Midnight: Observations Illuminating the Cosmos (Hardcover)
Popular books about cosmology tend to become out of date very quickly, simply because this is such a fast-moving science. Every month seems to bring a fresh batch of discoveries and surprises. "The Universe at Midnight" by Ken Croswell is fully up to date, and clearly the author has carried out a tremendous amount of research.The book covers the whole field of modern cosmology. The first chapter sets the scene with some fascinating historical anecdotes. Then come sections on the big bang and its rival theories, dark matter, stellar evolution, the expansion of the universe, its "weight," background radiation and much else. The text abounds in quotes from experts thus avoiding the danger of distortion or misinterpretation--most cosmologists, both past and present, have very definite views. Many of the quotes from key figures given here will not be found anywhere else. Croswell makes no attempt to disguise the fact that our present knowledge is very limited, and that we are still uncertain about fundamentals such as the Hubble constant, which defines the rate at which the universe is expanding. There is a long and particularly interesting chapter about this. Neither can we be really confident about the age of the universe. The best current estimate is of the order of 15 billion years, but it is conceivable that this figure may be drastically modified in the foreseeable future. The final chapter, which deals with the eventual fate of the Earth, is rather different in approach, and is highly speculative. Our planet cannot last forever, but when the situation becomes intolerable is there anything our descendants could do? As yet we cannot say, but breaking the Earth free from the dying Sun and transferring it to another star is likely to be a rather difficult matter. Fortunately, there is no need for immediate alarm. The text is accurate, with only a few tiny and wholly unimportant slips (for example, the Large Magellanic Cloud is no longer classed as a completely irregular galaxy). The main disadvantage of Croswell's approach, however, is that the emphasis upon personalities sometimes masks the science. This is probably not the book for a reader who wants a no-nonsense, straightforward and concise account of modern cosmology. It is also a pity that Croswell has emphasised personal conflicts between researchers--accusations of [...], attempts to claim credit for other people's work and so on. Of course this does happen, but from this book the newcomer might well think that cosmologists are a jealous and arrogant breed. This was certainly not the author's intention. In places, too, the writing tends to be of what may be called the tabloid variety. "Perhaps the universe is expanding into nothing, or into God's living room, or into some physicist's laboratory. Take your pick." But these are quibbles. "The Universe at Midnight" is vastly entertaining and enjoyable, as well as informative. It will be a welcome addition to any library, particularly if it is read in conjunction with a book that deals with the same subject in a more conventional way.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Ken Croswell Lights the Universe for Astronomers!,
By Jeremy Mathews (Ogden, Ut) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Universe at Midnight: Observations Illuminating the Cosmos (Hardcover)
The Universe at Midnight is a truly remarkable book! I was absolutely blown away by it. Ken Croswell has a talent for science writing. I had never read a book by him before, and I can say that I was so impressed with this book that I will definitely look for more of his works. He does not try to force a specific belief on any of his readers, rather he simply presents the facts of astronomy and let's the reader draw his own conclusion. Ken Croswell gives new understanding to the nature of astronomers in history. Though I understood areas such as Redshift, Omega, and Hubble's Constant before, I gained impressive new understanding to them. Never before has a science book been able to capture my interest so completely. I was on the edge of my seat the whole time! This book is a must have for any astronomer's professional library!
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Mind blowing revelations about the Universe,
By
This review is from: The Universe at Midnight: Observations Illuminating the Cosmos (Hardcover)
This is just the right mix of detail yet not so technical as to push the reader over the edge of excess complexity. The book is a detective mystery and spirals around various topics regarding the structure and evolution of the universe returning again and again to the same issues but from ever more recent vantage points. We gain a sense of what it must be like to be scientists pushing back the frontiers of knowledge yet not above the personal issues and passions that intrude upon the process of discovery. The writing style is clear, clever, and fun while at the same time revealing deep levels of reality. Some long standing puzzles about the expansion of the universe were explained clearer here than I have seen anywhere else. I did not want the book to end and rather wished for a magical way to keep tacking on new chapters as discoveries continue to be made. It helps to have a general knowledge of physics and astronomy although the author does take pains to offer background information in as painless a manner as possible. In fact the seamless incorporation of the basics is unusually effective.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Reads like a good mystery!,
By Larry (Indianapolis, IN) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Universe at Midnight: Observations Illuminating the Cosmos (Hardcover)
I have read previous works from Dr. Croswell, and found this to be the best yet. There is enough background info on the characters, their lives, and the chronological order of the research, to keep you riveted, but not so much that the lay reader becomes scared of the subject. I think the greatest aspect of this book is that my thirteen year old daughter read it, and it has given her the impetus to explore many of these aspects of the science in greater detail. What more could you ask for?
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"Will you sleep at night?",
By
This review is from: The Universe at Midnight: Observations Illuminating the Cosmos (Hardcover)
Midnight. The time when most of the Earth's population is resting it's head. But if you were to take a step outside on a clear night, and turn your eyes up toward the heavens, you would be graced with a beautiful sight. A grand sweep of planets, stars, and galaxies that can hold your gaze long after your neck has begun to cramp. The seemingly unchanging night sky that has mystified, frightened, inspired, and guided people for countless generations.
But ever have we sought to understand it. And while this book doesn't attempt to answer the question of why we seek the knowledge, it does do an excellent job of showing where our seeking has taken us. From learning how the sun and other stars burn their fuel and how they continue to exist, to probing the very furthest reaches of the observable universe, Croswell gives us the facts, the controversies, the theories, and the people behind them all, giving us a well written book that is just as much of a page turner (if not more so) as a best-selling novel. In the first chapter we are taken on a quick romp through the cosmos as we see our solar system being flung around a super giant black hole at the center of our Milky Way galaxy that is hidden from our view by that ever so dusty Centaur (a.k.a. Sagittarius). We see that there are other galaxies close by in our local cluster that are just part of many clusters held together in a large supercluster. Looking even further we see many more of these giant superclusters, and even further the quasars, displaying massive amounts of energy. From there we move on into the main bulk of the book, our gradual realization of the universe, what it is, what is it's past, and short but very informative biographies of the people behind the ideas. From the beginning of this we are thrown headlong into the first problem that we watch unravel, why is the night sky dark, instead of being bright with the light of an almost infinite amount of stars? And as we are being led down this path of understanding we see Edgar Allen Poe of all people coming up with the answer that there hasn't been enough time for the light of all the stars that exist to reach us. Something that we easily understand today, but this was a major issue for astronomers in the 1800's. It was incredibly hard to believe at fist that as we look at the world around us we are actually seeing things as they were, not as they are, because light takes time to reach our eyes, whether it is a super tiny sliver of a second while watching a live football game or seeing a galaxy 500 million light years away. After reading about the final debate that this book covers (a debate which is about nothing less than the age of the universe, which is still being heavily debated with the middle ground being around sixteen billion years,) we are given a glimpse of our future in the cosmos. Croswell begins this with a vivid description of our aging Earth and how to survive with our planet intact over the next quintillion years or so. We learn what to do when our sun eventually goes nova, blowing away most of its burning atmosphere which besides the fact of losing our source of heat and light would easily consume us and even reach as far as Mars in the massive burn out of our nurturing star. When this happens we should be advanced enough to move our chunk of starless rock to any star in the vicinity that happens to catch our fancy. If we are lucky enough to still be around when we run out of stars in our galaxy to hop around to we are given a loose plan for herding brown dwarves (superdense shells of stars that have long since stopped burning, as will happen to our Sun after the above mentioned nova,) up, smashing them together to create a new star, giving us billions more years to consume all the brown dwarves in the galaxy. But Croswell says that long before we revert to chasing star shells we will lose the rest of the universe, at least observationally, because the universe is expanding faster than light can reach us, and every day something slips past that horizon of the observable, until 150 billion years from now, ours, and the few thousand or so other galaxies in our local supercluster are all that we will ever see again. To quote Croswell, "With sufficient ingenuity, the Earth can survive and even thrive, but it will do so in a universe that grows ever colder, ever darker, ever emptier." In closing I will say this. Ken Croswell has shown us the exciting times that we live in, with major discoveries happening and soon to happen, giving me an urge to buy a telescope and to wonder why I didn't pursue that long dormant dream of being an astronomer. Oh well, I am happy where I am right now anyhow and I hear that in amateur astronomy you get to set your own hours to use the telescope. This is truly a wonderful book that I would recommend to anyone curious about astronomy.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Universe at Midnight,
By Chet Twarog (Hudson, MA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Universe at Midnight: Observations Illuminating the Cosmos (Hardcover)
Dr. Ken Croswell has written another fascinating, page turning, and a stay up all night: "In astronomy, there's still too much to explore" [my mislabelled quotation].Although other reviewers wanted more pictures, drawings, or diagrams, it's really the rewarding descriptive writing and your mind's imaginations of his descriptions: "hordes of foreground stars speckled the photographs, raindrops on a celestial windshield, further obstructing the view." I really was quite awestruck by the knowledge of the current observable lookback distance of 14.5 billion light years in any direction to the estimated non-observable, current galactic distance is somewhere out to 47 billion light years in any direction. We are, in a sense, at the center of the observable Universe! The master moral dilemma, naturally, poised by Dr. Croswell: as the most intelligent species on Earth, what are we going to do with our intelligences? We have a moral and ethical obligation to use our creative, imaginative, and awesome capacity towards all other species and to ourselves now and into the, maybe, distant future. We are also capable of much nastiness and extinction. As the only known Galactic planetary civilzation (ex: Asimov's Foundation series), we must education ourselves and everyone else about our Cosmic potentials! And, then, act on them. Don't rely on me or this review--read the book!
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A must read!,
By Dr Robert McCann (Mountain View CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Universe at Midnight: Observations Illuminating the Cosmos (Hardcover)
I agree strongly with David Hudgin's review. In the end, it was the poetry that got to me. As we ponder the events of Sept 11, a simple question comes to mind. How do we convince human beings that other human beings are worth preserving, rather than murdering and killing? One answer, broad enough to appeal to atheist and theist alike, is contained in the following passage from Croswell's good book:" Ironically, although the human race has driven numerous species into extinction, it may oltimately be terrestrial life's savior. Indeed, without the human race, or some other form of intelligent life, the Earth will inevitably die, a victim of the harsh rules of stellar evolution... Fortunately, the human race has plenty of time to develop the necessary technology. The immediate task is much simpler: to survive. If through nuclear war... or some other catastrophe the human race wipes itself out, the Earth may never again give birth to another intelligent species capable of saving the planet. Furthermore, if Earth is the only life-bearing world in the cosmos, then our self-destruction would be the most supreme tragedy imaginable, for it would ultimately snuff out all life in the universe".
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Facinating, story, and well told,
By David W. Hudgins (Overland Park, Kansas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Universe at Midnight: Observations Illuminating the Cosmos (Hardcover)
As an avid amateur astronomer and college astronomy teacher, I found Croswell's new book a delightful read! He spins a facinating and well researched human story of our quest to understand the origin and evolution of our universe. Croswell continues the style I enjoyed so much in an earlier book, Alchemy of the Heavens, to personally interview a huge number of key people actually involved in these discoveries. Their words and feelings make this story very personal and appealing to me. Croswell then provides a delightfully poetic but clear scientific description of the key ideas of modern cosmology ...and the human process of their discovery. A rich story, well told - I totally enjoyed and highly recommend this book.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Ken Croswell Lights the Universe for Astronomers!,
By Jeremy Mathews (Ogden, Ut) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Universe at Midnight: Observations Illuminating the Cosmos (Hardcover)
The Universe at Midnight is a truly remarkable book! I was absolutely blown away by it. Ken Croswell has a talent for science writing. I had never read a book by him before, and I can say that I was so impressed with this book that I will definitely look for more of his works. He does not try to force a specific belief on any of his readers, rather he simply presents the facts of astronomy and let's the reader draw his own conclusion. Ken Croswell gives new understanding to the nature of astronomers in history. Though I understood areas such as Redshift, Omega, and Hubble's Constant before, I gained impressive new understanding to them. Never before has a science book been able to capture my interest so completely. I was on the edge of my seat the whole time! This book is a must have for any astronomer's professional library!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Timely Discussion on the Expansion of the Universe,
By
This review is from: The Universe at Midnight: Observations Illuminating the Cosmos (Hardcover)
Dr. Ken Croswell does an excellent job of describing the conditions and factors that make the universe appear to us as we now know it. His work is both thorough and timely with discussions of work up to the date of publication (2001). Croswell's descriptions and explanations of his subject matter are outstanding. He offers excellent analogies to clarify the concepts he presents. The organization of the book is well done. He begins with elementary concepts and builds on them to paint the picture of the universe that is current with the views of today's astrophysics and cosmologists. He has provided the reader with extensive documentation of exchanges between various astronomers - exchanges that often involved heated debates and sometimes even derogatory remarks (name calling). His purpose is to give the reader insight into the thought processes of those who pioneered modern astronomy and cosmology. I enjoyed the book very much. I wish only is that he had added a few illustrations and some equations that would provide additional depth of understanding. The "Universe at Midnight" is a book well worth reading for anyone interested in knowing about the universe and how it behaves. |
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The Universe at Midnight: Observations Illuminating the Cosmos by Ken Croswell (Hardcover - August 28, 2001)
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