
Gravity's Century
From Einstein's Eclipse to Images of Black Holes
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- نقد و بررسی
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Starred review from March 11, 2019
This gracefully written history of 20th-century gravity research from science writer Cowen shines a light on a key aspect of modern physics. As he explains, the current view of gravity began with a young Albert Einstein’s curiosity about what a beam of light might look like. Cowen describes how Einstein eventually published the theory of general relativity in 1916, predicting how gravity would bend light. Proving this required photographing a solar eclipse in 1919 and seeing whether, as the theory predicted, the stars whose rays pass close to the sun would seem to shift position. When astronomer Arthur Eddington announced the photos showed that the sun’s gravity did indeed bend light, Einstein became the world’s first “science superstar.” Cowen shows how successive generations of physicists have worked to understand gravity, exploring research that showed the universe was expanding (a conclusion Einstein initially resisted); observing this, and the rotation of galaxies, gave physicists their first clues about dark energy and dark matter. Other phenomena touched on include black holes, gravity waves, and even wormholes. Filled with vivid descriptions of cutting-edge work and the scientists behind it, Cowen’s book is fascinating, both a learning experience and a pleasure to read.

John Patrick Walsh's clear and upbeat narration leads listeners through a concise overview of Einstein's theories of special and general relativity. These are a challenge in audio since concepts like acceleration, gravity, and space-time are more easily understood visually. The audiobook compensates by including a pdf of informative graphics, some illustrating how space-time is warped by heavy planets. Walsh's performance enlivens the chapter on astronomer Arthur Stanley Eddington's thrilling, and nearly thwarted, race to prove general relativity using photographs of a solar eclipse. Walsh's overall tone of animated excitement is appropriate for depicting the greatest scientific discoveries of the last century. Ending with a fascinating exploration of the most recent research on black holes, the audiobook leaves listeners giddily contemplating a universe cracked open by the brilliant mind of Albert Einstein. J.T. � AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine
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