John D. Barrow is professor of mathematical sciences and director of the Millennium Mathematics Project at Cambridge University, as well as a Fellow of the Royal Society. He is the best-selling author of many books on science and mathematics, including Mathletics: 100 Amazing Things You Didn’t Know about the World of Sports and 100 Essential Things You Didn’t Know You Didn’t Know: Math Explains Your World.
This is a book about universes, a story that revolves around a single unusual and unappreciated fact: that Einstein's famous theory of relativity describes universes -- entire universes. Not many solutions of Einstein's tantalizing universe equations have ever been found, but those that have are all very remarkable. Some of them describe universes that expand in size, while others contract, some rotate like a top and others are chaotic. Some are perfectly smooth, while others are lumpy, or shaken in different directions by tides of energy; some oscillate forever, some become lifeless and cold, while others head towards a runaway future of ever-increasing expansion. Some permit time travel into the past, and others allow infinitely many things to happen in a finite amount of time. Only a few allow life to evolve within them; the rest remain unknowable to conscious minds. Some end with a bang, some with a whimper. Some don't end at all.
Our story will encounter universes where the laws of physics can change from time to time and from one region to another, universes that have extra hidden dimensions of space and time, universes that are eternal, universes that live inside black holes, universes that end without warning, colliding universes, inflationary universes, and universes that come into being from something else -- or from nothing at all.
Gradually, we will find ourselves introducing the latest and the best descriptions of the Universe we see around us today, together with the concept of the 'Multiverse' -- the universe of all possible universes -- that modern theories of physics lead us to contemplate. These are the most fantastic and far-reaching speculations in the whole of science.
Other cosmology and astronomy books focus on particular topics -- dark matter, dark energy, the beginning of the universe, inflation, life-supporting coincidences, or the end of the universe -- but this book introduces the reader to whole universes in a coherent and unified way.
一朵花儿不可能永远盛开,一颗小草不可能永远翠绿,人的一生不可能永远一帆风顺。但是,我知道,花儿凋谢了花蕾还会开放;小草枯黄了新的萌芽春来还会发芽;人生的不顺不久还会撑起继续前进的风帆。朋友们,不要让泪痕永驻面庞,不要让悲伤占据心灵,不要让绝望阻挡我们前进的...
评分拖了很久终于把这本,宇宙之书看完了。 以前一直声称是做引力和宇宙学的。其实对宇宙学一直处于一知半解的状态。也没有在这方面写论文发表过自己的观点。你今跟几个同学一起学习过温伯格的新著宇宙学,可惜在一半的时候放弃了。现在,工作以后脱离了原来的科研环境。剩下的一半...
评分这本书真心让我想起初中的物理老师,因为作为艺术类考生的自己,在初中的时候就知道这些是不需要我学习的,并且我对那些公式以及周围同学反复的计算让我觉得实在乏味,我大多数的时间都是在画室以及音乐里度过,那个时候,这些是我的宇宙。 年轻,谁不曾虚度?我已经很久没有...
评分宇宙总是很神秘,神秘得吸引无数人花费精力时间探索。 当你慢慢了解宇宙,你就会发现人类的渺小,宇宙太大了,经过那么多代人的研究观察,我们也只是了解到皮毛而已。尽管皮毛也存在着有差距的皮毛。 我们现在了解的很多理论都是前人的智慧成果,对于宇宙人们有了很多的猜测和...
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