APEC Schools
Normal view MARC view ISBD view

Where the universe came from : how Einstein's relativity unlocks the past, present and future of the cosmos /

Material type: materialTypeLabelBookLondon, UK ; Boston, MA : Nb Nicholas Brealey Publishing, ©2017Description: xiv, 194 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781473663008.DDC Call Number: C 523.1 | M961w 2017 Summary: "A little over a century ago, a young Albert Einstein presented his general theory of relativity to the world and utterly transformed our understanding of the universe. He overturned centuries of thinking about gravity by revealing how it arises from the curvature of space and time. Yet general relativity has had far greater consequences. It has revealed that our universe has been expanding from a hot dense state called the big bang. It has changed our understanding of space and time. And it predicts that the universe is an extreme place, containing black holes and possibly wormholes. Using Einstein's insights, today's cosmologists have come to realise that most of the universe is missing in the form of mysterious dark matter and dark energy. In Where the Universe Came From leading cosmologists and New Scientist explain that while we have made great progress, we still have plenty of unfinished business with the cosmos. How does the dark universe shape our cosmic destiny? What is really happening near black holes? Are we any closer to discovering the ripples in space-time predicted by Einstein? Why is relativity not the final answer?"-- Provided by publisher.
Item type Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode
Non Fiction Non Fiction APEC Chain of Schools Library
Circulation
C 523.1 M961w 2017 (Browse shelf) Available
Non Fiction Non Fiction APEC JRU Lipa Library
Circulation
C 523.1 M961w 2017 (Browse shelf) Available B12-0000416
Browsing APEC JRU Lipa Library Shelves , Shelving location: Circulation Close shelf browser
C 519.5 T737e 2006 Elementary statistics / C 520 C249a 2008 Astronomy today / C 523 G712s 2011 Sizing up the universe : C 523.1 M961w 2017 Where the universe came from : C 523.1 S3112z 2017 The Zoomable universe / C 530 R777h 2017 How the world works : physics / C 530.09 J124p 2013 Physics /

includes index

"A little over a century ago, a young Albert Einstein presented his general theory of relativity to the world and utterly transformed our understanding of the universe. He overturned centuries of thinking about gravity by revealing how it arises from the curvature of space and time. Yet general relativity has had far greater consequences. It has revealed that our universe has been expanding from a hot dense state called the big bang. It has changed our understanding of space and time. And it predicts that the universe is an extreme place, containing black holes and possibly wormholes. Using Einstein's insights, today's cosmologists have come to realise that most of the universe is missing in the form of mysterious dark matter and dark energy. In Where the Universe Came From leading cosmologists and New Scientist explain that while we have made great progress, we still have plenty of unfinished business with the cosmos. How does the dark universe shape our cosmic destiny? What is really happening near black holes? Are we any closer to discovering the ripples in space-time predicted by Einstein? Why is relativity not the final answer?"-- Provided by publisher.

There are no comments for this item.

Log in to your account to post a comment.

Powered by Koha