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TIME, SPACE, STARS AND MAN
The Story of the Big Bang

by Michael M Woolfson (University of York, UK)

Table of Contents (33k)
Introduction (73k)
Chapter 1: Musing (1,834k)

Most well-read, but non-scientific, people will have heard of the term “Big Bang” as a description of the origin of the Universe. They will recognize that DNA identifies individuals and will know that the origin of life is one of the great unsolved scientific mysteries. This book brings together all of that material. Starting with the creation of space and time — known as the Big Bang — the book traces causally related steps through the formation of matter, of stars and planets, the Earth itself, the evolution of the Earth's surface and atmosphere, and then through to the beginnings of life and the evolution of man. The material is presented in such a way that a non-scientist can comprehend it, without using formulae or equations but still preserving the integrity of the involved science. This book does not solve the mysteries of what initiated the Big Bang or how life evolved from inanimate matter, but it does make clear the nature of those problems. The reader will be left with a sense of wonderment that he or she actually exists!

 
Contents:
  • The Universe
  • Matter and the Universe
  • Stars, Stellar Clusters and Galaxies
  • The Solar System
  • Forming the Solar System
  • Life on Earth
 
Readership: Primary readership for those interested in popular science. May be used as a textbook for undergraduates or even high school students at the sixth-form level, or for non-science students taking science as a subsidiary level.
 
“To write such a wide-ranging book is an ambitious task indeed, and the result is a valuable source for readers wishing to gain knowledge and insights into key areas of fundamental science … Woolfson's desire to share his passion for science is very evident. The content is presented in a non-technical way, but the discussion and reasoning undoubtedly reflect a scientist's way of thinking.”
Times Higher Education
 
“It is written for a general audience, also scientists might be interested looking at it because it contains a lot of details not contained in standard textbooks on that topic.”
Zentralblatt MATH
 
“Technically, this book is very nicely produced. There are many colour figures as well. The book I found to be of very good value. I recommend this book to specialist scientists and members of the public alike interested in the breadth of topics covered, but also appreciating, as I do in detail, the incredible range of the abilities of Woolfson as an accomplished crystallographer, theoretical physicist and astrophysicist.”
Crystallography Reviews
 
436pp    Pub. date: Jan 2009  
ISBN:   978-1-84816-272-3
1-84816-272-3
   US$140 / £92

 


436pp    Pub. date: Jan 2009  
ISBN:   978-1-84816-273-0(pbk)
1-84816-273-1(pbk)
   US$80 / £53

 


436pp    Pub. date: Jan 2009  
ISBN:   978-1-84816-274-7(ebook)
1-84816-274-X(ebook)
   US$182

 


 
 

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