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Russell Stannard

Auteur de Relativity: A Very Short Introduction

47+ oeuvres 1,367 utilisateurs 17 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Russell Stannard looks at the biggest questions of science-physics at or beyond the Big Bang; quantum mechanics; consciousness-to weigh up whether they might one day be solved. A celebration of science-but one tempered with humility.

Séries

Œuvres de Russell Stannard

Relativity: A Very Short Introduction (2008) — Auteur — 258 exemplaires
The Time and Space of Uncle Albert (1989) 211 exemplaires
Le Nouveau monde de M. Tompkins (1999) — Auteur — 200 exemplaires
Les Trous noirs et l'oncle Albert (1991) 121 exemplaires
Uncle Albert and the Quantum Quest (1994) 90 exemplaires
God For The 21St Century (2000) 54 exemplaires
Here I am! (1992) 27 exemplaires
Science and the Renewal of Belief (1982) 27 exemplaires
World of 1001 Mysteries (1993) 15 exemplaires
The Curious History of God (1998) 13 exemplaires
Dr Dyer's Academy (2002) 10 exemplaires
Virtutopia (2003) 8 exemplaires
Space Time Rhythm & Rhyme (1999) 6 exemplaires
Science & Belief: The Big Issues (2012) 6 exemplaires
Lab Cats Switch on (Lab Cats) (2001) 4 exemplaires
Ciência e Religião (2000) 3 exemplaires
21 Yüzyil icin Tanri (2022) 2 exemplaires
Het spannende verhaal van God (1999) 2 exemplaires
Www.io.sono (1999) 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

The Oxford Book of Modern Science Writing (2008) — Contributeur — 802 exemplaires

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At first I thought I may had been in over my head, however after rereading the starting chapters, everything seemed much clearer. Therefore, I deem this a very good introductory general relativity book. It does not assume the reader's familiarity with physics, though some general knowledge of at least Newtonian mechanics and kinetics is helpful.

The book begins with an interesting premise - that it will challenge some of the most fundamental ideas regarding space, time and matter the reader likely grew up with. For example: that time passes equally quickly for everyone, that two events occur either simultaneously or one after the other and that the angles of a triangle add up to 180 degrees.

The first part focuses on Einstein's special relativity, particularly on the concepts of time dilation, space contraction and event simultaneity. It often resorts to diagram-supported use case of an astronaut traveling through space in a spacecraft, being observed by a mission controller on ground to illustrate these concepts.

The second part adds gravity and acceleration to the mix, introducing Einstein's theory of general relativity, thus inviting the reader to contemplate time "running" faster in lower gravity (that's right, time runs faster upstairs!), possibility of existence of multiple universes, the curvature of space-time and the formation and effects of black holes.

Due to the book's shortness, some interesting ideas are merely glossed over or tackled very superficially, but at the end there is a suggested further reading list. Contains a little bit of math and equations, but with the exception of one chapter that can safely be skipped, nothing out of the reach of basic college physics.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
matija2019 | Jan 8, 2019 |
This would have been four stars, except that dispite having key vocabulary in bold type ... it dosen't have a goddam glossary ( ! ) Also, no ' further reading ' or bibliography. Should be titled ' edge ' not ' end '
 
Signalé
Baku-X | 2 autres critiques | Jan 10, 2017 |
At the beginning of the book Uncle Albert sent Gedankin into a thought bubble to learn what everything is made of. In the thought bubble Gedankin met The White Rabbit. The White Rabbit's job is to sort all the 92 kinds of atoms into their places. Also Cheshire Cat starts throwing electrons at them. At the end Gedankin showed Uncle Albert a game of what everything is made of. I liked the book. I liked when Gedankin saved The White Rabbit from an electron. I learned that everything is made of molecules.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
LarsS12 | 2 autres critiques | Oct 29, 2015 |
This book builds on a very interesting idea, an academy where children are taught science that may not be quite correct. The first chapters are promising, with some entertaining misconceptions and in parallel the correct explanations. After this, the plot kind of slows down and loses a bit of focus. For me, the ending was not as strong as it could have been. It is still a good book, certainly worth reading, but the balance between explaining science and telling an entertaining story is tricky...
 
Signalé
NilsAndersson | Jan 19, 2014 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
47
Aussi par
1
Membres
1,367
Popularité
#18,809
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
17
ISBN
130
Langues
15

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