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28+ oeuvres 3,727 utilisateurs 68 critiques

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Comprend aussi: Brian Cox (1)

Œuvres de Brian Edward Cox

Human Universe (2014) 358 exemplaires
Wonders of the Universe (2011) 319 exemplaires
Wonders of the Solar System (2010) 244 exemplaires
Forces of Nature (2016) 235 exemplaires
The Planets: A Sunday Times Bestseller (2019) — Auteur — 144 exemplaires
Human Universe & Forces of Nature (2017) 16 exemplaires
Wonders of the Universe [DVD] (2010) 15 exemplaires
CAMRA's Good Beer Guide 2020 (2019) — Avant-propos — 9 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Vous voulez rire, Monsieur Feynman ! (1985) — Introduction, quelques éditions9,928 exemplaires
The Atheist's Guide to Christmas (2009) — Contributeur — 356 exemplaires
Earthrise: My Adventures as an Apollo 14 Astronaut (2014) — Avant-propos, quelques éditions27 exemplaires
Wonders of the Solar System (2010) 16 exemplaires
Forces of Nature (2016) 13 exemplaires

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Haven't listened to their radio show, but really enjoyed this book.
Nice style, easy humour.
Many of the concepts over my head, but learnt a fair bit.
 
Signalé
stubooks | 1 autre critique | Apr 4, 2024 |
A very enjoyable book that dashes through the structure of our universe while trying all the time to explain how you get there by looking at simple everyday calculations.

I have read many similar books so not much new information but I really enjoyed the grounding of results into everyday measures. I would figure this book is perfect to convert skeptical conspiracists into some form of reason.
 
Signalé
yates9 | 2 autres critiques | Feb 28, 2024 |
A description of the planets, and our increasing understanding of them, through the history of astronomy and then through the succession of exploratory missions that have been undertaken in the last 50 years or so. What has been revealed is truly amazing, with the frozen gas giants at one one of the system, living at -180 deg C yet still showing signs of atmospheric activity, and desiccated Mercury at the other end.
What surprised me was the number of missions which have been launched, and which I was completely unaware of! It is amazing how they are able to control satellites billions of kilometres away from us.… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
oataker | Jan 4, 2024 |
Deeper than I expected and quite to hard to follow the descriptions of Penrose diagrams and what one would see whilst tipping into a Black Hole. Enjoyable never the less, and I am now intrigued to read the authors prior book; why E=Mc2. Last few chapters give a good explanation of the more recent ideas around holographic equivalence and the conservation of information in a black hole. I especially liked the last chapter on quantum information redundancy and the link with quantum computing, even if I didn't understand much of it!… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
jvgravy | 3 autres critiques | Nov 7, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
28
Aussi par
8
Membres
3,727
Popularité
#6,797
Évaluation
4.2
Critiques
68
ISBN
128
Langues
13

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