Total Number of Books in Collection Library : 127

 

Page number: 20
 

Quantum Physics

Author: John Gribbon
ISBN: 0613557565
Publisher: Rebound by Sagebrush         Place:
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Format: School & Library Binding         # Pages:
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Release: 2003
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Quintessence : The Mystery of the Missing Mass in the Universe

Author: Lawrence Krauss
ISBN: 0465037402
Publisher: Basic Books         Place:
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Format: Hardcover         # Pages: 356
Reader Rating: 4.0 (10 votes)
Release: 2000
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Summary: Winner of the AAAS 2000 Award for the Public Understanding of Science.
The classic book on the Dark Matter problem, updated after ten years to include the significant new theories of the 1990s.
Will the universe continue to expand forever, reverse its expansion and begin to contract, or reach a delicately poised state where it simply persists forever? The answer depends on the amount and properties of matter in the universe, and that has given rise to one of the great paradoxes of modern cosmology: there is too little visible matter to account for the behavior we can see. Over 90 percent of the universe consists of "missing mass" or "dark matter"-what Lawrence Krauss, in his classic book, termed "the fifth essence."
In this new edition of The Fifth Essence, retitled "Quintessence" after the now widely accepted term for dark matter, Krauss shows how the dark matter problem is now connected with two of the hottest areas in recent cosmology: the fate of the universe and the "cosmological constant." With a new introduction, epilogue, and chapter updates, Krauss updates his classic for 1999 and shares one of the most stunning discoveries of recent years: an anti-gravity force that explains recent observations of a permanently expanding universe.


 

Schrödinger : Life and Thought

Author: Walter J. Moore
ISBN: 052135434X
Publisher: Cambridge University Press         Place:
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Format: Hardcover         # Pages: 528
Reader Rating: 5.0 (4 votes)
Release: 1989
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Summary: In the first comprehensive biography of Erwin Schrödinger--a brilliant and charming Austrian, a great scientist, and a man with a passionate interest in people and ideas--the author draws upon recollections of Schrödinger's friends, family and colleagues, and on contemporary records, letters and diaries. Schrödinger led a very intense life, both in his research and in the personal realm. This book portrays his life against the backdrop of Europe at a time of change and unrest. His best known scientific work was the discovery of wave mechanics, for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1933. In Dublin, he wrote his most famous and influential book What is Life?, which attracted some of the brightest minds of his generation into molecular biology. This highly readable biography of a fascinating and complex man will appeal to anyone interested in the history of our times, and in the life and thought of one of the great men of twentieth-century science.


 

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