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John Gribbin : In Search of the Edge of Time
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Author: John Gribbin
Title: In Search of the Edge of Time
Moochable copies: No copies available
Topics:
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Published in: English
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 272
Date: 1992-04-23
ISBN: 0593024095
Publisher: Bantam Books (Transworld Publishers a division of the Random House Group)
Weight: 1.19 pounds
Size: 6.14 x 9.29 x 1.1 inches
Edition: Reprint
Amazon prices:
$2.08used
$61.68new
Previous givers: 1 The Colourful Parrot Company (United Kingdom)
Previous moochers: 1 Lauren (USA: SC)
Description: Amazon Review
John Gribbin specialises in writing about the big questions of the cosmos. This guided tour through the mysteries of neutron and X-ray stars, white dwarfs, quasars and pulsars is a reprint of a book first published in 1992. As such it is inevitably not as up-to-date as it could be but nevertheless provides a very well written introduction to the subject.

Gribbin sets out to explain how time travel is theoretically possible and looks at the various different ways which might allow it. He pays particular attention to the most likely time-machine: that provided by the concept of the "wormhole". Like a tunnel through space and time, a wormhole could connect different regions of the Universe which occupy both different spaces and different times.

The story is given a historical context and the necessary background from Newton onwards for the reader to understand the concept of warping space and time, dense neutron stars and black holes. From here the science theory becomes as strange as science fiction and the two are intertwined. Carl Sagan kick-started the whole idea with his 1968 book Contact and making hyperspace connections though spacetime. As Gribbin writes, the science fiction version was on the right lines: "Hyperspace connections do, at least in theory, provide a means to travel to the far distant regions of the Universe" without spending vast amounts of time "pottering along through ordinary flat space at less than the speed of light". The story continues through white holes, worm holes and spacetime tunnels.

A useful glossary, bibliography and index help the intrepid reader negotiate these fringes of reality. --Douglas Palmer

URL: http://bookmooch.com/0593024095

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