In physics, the idea of extra spatial dimensions originates from Nordstöm's 5-dimensional vector theory in 1914, followed by Kaluza–Klein theory in 1921,
in an effort to unify general relativity and electromagnetism in a 5-dimensional space–time (4 dimensions for space and 1 for time). The Kaluza–Klein theory didn't generate enough interest with physicist for the next five decades, due to its problems with inconsistencies. With the advent of supergravity theory (the theory that unifies general relativity and supersymmetry theories) in late 1970s and eventually, string theories (1980s), and M-theory (1990s), the dimensions of space–time increased to 11 (10-space and 1-time dimension).
There are two main features in this book that differentiates it from other books written about extra dimensions:
The first feature is the coverage of extra dimensions in time (two-time physics), which has not been covered in earlier books about extra dimensions. All other books mainly cover extra spatial dimensions.
The second feature deals with the level of presentation. The material is presented in a non-technical language followed by additional sections (in the form of appendices or footnotes) that explain the basic equations and principles. This feature is very attractive to readers who want to find out more about the theories involved beyond the basic description for a layperson. The text is designed for scientifically literate non-specialists who want to know the latest discoveries in theoretical physics in a non-technical language. Readers with basic undergraduate background in modern physics and quantum mechanics can easily understand the technical sections.
The two parts of the book can be read independently. One can skip Part I and go directly to Part II which covers extra dimensions in space.
Itzhak Bars is a professor of physics at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. He received his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1971 and after postdoctoral
research at the University of California at Berkeley he was appointed to the Faculty of Stanford University in 1973. He returned to Yale University in 1975 as a faculty member in the Physics Department, and after a decade he moved to the University of Southern California in 1984 to build a research group in high-energy physics. He served as the director of the Caltech-USC Center for Theoretical Physics during 1999–2003. His visiting appointments include Harvard University, the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, and CERN in Geneva, Switzerland. Professor Bars is a leading expert in symmetries in physics, which he applies in much of his research on particle physics, field theory, string theory, and mathematical physics in over 200 papers. He is the author of a book on “Quantum Mechanics” and co-editor of the books “Symmetry in Particle Physics” and “Strings’95, Future Perspectives in String Theory.” Some of his experimentally successful physics predictions include supersymmetry in large nuclei with even/odd numbers of nucleons, and the weak interaction contribution to the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon, in the context of the quantized standard model, that was confirmed after 30 years. His contributions to the mathematics of supersymmetry are extensively used in several branches of physics and mathematics. His current interests include string field theory and two-time physics which he originated in 1998. In 2006 he established that all the physics we know today, as embodied in principle in the standard model of particles and forces, is better described by a 2-time field theory in 4-space and 2-time dimensions projected as a shadow on an emergent 3-space and 1-time dimensions. His honors include Fellow of the American Physical Society, the First Award in the Gravity Research Foundation essay contest (shared with Chris Pope), Outstanding Junior Investigator Award by the Department of Energy, and the A. P. Sloan Foundation Fellowship.
John Terning is professor of physics at the University of California, Davis. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Toronto and was a postdoctoral fellow at Yale University. He was also a researcher at Boston University, the University of California, Berkeley, and Harvard University, and a staff member at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Professor Terning’s research interests include theoretical particle physics, electroweak symmetry breaking, supersymmetry, cosmology, extra dimensions, and the AdS/CFT correspondence.
评分
评分
评分
评分
这本《Extra Dimensions in Space and Time》真是让人耳目一新,它以一种近乎诗意的笔触,带领读者进入了一个超越我们日常经验的物理世界。作者在行文中展现了对量子力学和宇宙学核心概念的深刻理解,但更令人赞叹的是他如何将这些复杂的理论包裹在引人入胜的叙事之中。我特别喜欢它处理“高维空间”部分的方式,没有陷入纯粹的数学推导泥潭,而是通过一系列巧妙的比喻和思想实验,让一个外行人也能大致捕捉到弦理论或卡鲁扎-克莱因理论中那些反直觉的美妙之处。书中的插图虽然不多,但每一张都像是精心设计的视觉提示,有效地将抽象概念具象化。当然,对于那些期望获得严谨的、教科书式的证明的读者来说,这本书可能显得有些“轻盈”,但对于那些渴望探索物理学前沿哲学思辨,并希望在星空下沉思时间本质的探寻者而言,这无疑是一次精神上的盛宴。它没有给出所有答案,但它提出了比我以往读过的任何书籍都更加深刻和激发灵感的问题。
评分我拿到这本书的时候,其实是带着一丝怀疑的,毕竟“时空中的额外维度”这个主题已经被无数次地炒作和泛化了。然而,《Extra Dimensions in Space and Time》成功地避开了那些陈词滥调的科幻式臆想,转而采用了一种更加扎根于严肃物理学基础的探讨路径。它的论述结构非常严谨,从黎曼几何的早期思想开始,逐步过渡到爱因斯坦的广义相对论,然后自然而然地引出了维度增加的必要性。我必须承认,其中关于“紧凑化维度”的章节对我来说挑战性最大,需要反复阅读和对照相关的物理图景才能勉强跟上作者的思路。但正是这种挑战性,让我感到了阅读的价值——它迫使我的思维跳出三维的舒适区。这本书的价值不在于提供轻松的阅读体验,而在于它作为一座桥梁,连接了经典物理学家的直觉与现代理论物理学家必须接受的抽象现实。读完后,我对“我们为什么感觉不到额外的维度”这个问题有了更深层次的敬畏。
评分说实话,这本书的文字风格非常古典,仿佛是十九世纪末期一位博学的哲学家在与你探讨最新的科学发现。它的节奏缓慢而沉稳,每一段话都经过了精心的雕琢,很少有那种为了吸引眼球而使用的夸张语气。这种风格无疑使得阅读过程需要极大的专注力,你不能指望快速地“扫过”内容。我欣赏作者对历史脉络的梳理,他细致地追踪了每一项重大理论的诞生背景和社会思潮,这使得时空理论的发展不再是孤立的公式堆砌,而更像是一部人类心智的进化史。例如,书中对早期对超光速运动和时间旅行的伦理讨论,提供了比纯粹物理分析更丰富的视角。这本书更像是给那些对宇宙论有浓厚兴趣,但又对冷硬的数学感到畏惧的读者准备的入门级读物,它用优美的散文保证了知识的深度,同时又极大地提升了可读性。
评分这本书散发着一种老派的、求真务实的学术气息,但其核心议题却极具未来感。它不像那些流行的科学读物那样,试图用耸人听闻的标题来抓住读者,而是用扎实的逻辑链条,一步步地引导你走向那些令人心悸的结论。我特别喜欢作者在处理平行宇宙和多重时空结构时所保持的审慎态度。他没有将这些理论当作既定事实来宣讲,而是将其定位为我们目前理论框架下最合理的推测,并清楚地指出了每种推测所面临的实验证据的缺失。这种诚实的态度在科普读物中是极其宝贵的。它教会了我们,在探索宇宙的终极奥秘时,谦逊远比武断更为重要。这本书读完后,我感觉自己对“现实”的定义都被轻轻地推开了一角,虽然没有看到那些“额外维度”,但我切实感受到了它们存在的可能性,这才是其最大的成就。
评分我花了两个周末才大致啃完这本书,主要原因是它在某些章节中引入了对“信息和熵在额外维度中如何重构”的探讨,这部分内容直接触及了我个人研究的边缘领域,使得我不得不频繁地停下来进行思考和笔记整理。这本书的真正力量在于它敢于跨越传统学科的界限。它不仅仅是物理学著作,它也深深地渗透着数学的严密性、哲学的思辨性,甚至是某种程度上的形而上学的美感。作者在讨论膜世界理论(Brane World)时,没有止步于探讨引力如何“泄漏”到高维空间,而是深入分析了这可能对我们宇宙常数稳定性带来的影响,这种广度是许多专注于单一领域的书籍所不具备的。唯一的遗憾是,我认为关于M理论的介绍略显仓促,或许是受篇幅所限,但这是一个非常值得深入挖掘的领域,希望未来能有续作来弥补这一点。
评分 评分 评分 评分 评分本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.wenda123.org All Rights Reserved. 图书目录大全 版权所有