How the universe got its spots

diary of a finite time in a finite space

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Janna Levin: How the universe got its spots (2002, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, Orion Publishing Group, Limited)

208 pages

English language

Published Dec. 2, 2002 by Weidenfeld & Nicolson, Orion Publishing Group, Limited.

ISBN:
978-0-297-64651-8
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OCLC Number:
46810806

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"In prose, Janna Levin's diary of unsent letters to her mother describes what we know about the shape and extent of the universe, about its beginning and its end. She grants the uninitiated access to the astounding findings of contemporary theoretical physics and makes tangible the contours of space and time - those very real curves along which apples fall and planets orbit." "Levin guides the reader through the observations and thought-experiments that have enabled physicists to begin charting the universe. She introduces the cosmic archaeology that makes sense of the pattern of hot spots left over from the big bang, a pursuit on the verge of discovering the shape of space itself. And she explains the topology and the geometry of the universe now coming into focus - a strange map of space full of black holes, chaotic flows, time warps, and invisible strings. Levin advances the controversial idea …

7 editions

Subjects

  • Levin, Janna -- Correspondence
  • Cosmology
  • Mathematicians -- United States -- Correspondence