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The Universe

A Biography

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
The story of our Universe, from its beginning in the first milliseconds of the Big Bang up to our present moment and beyond, told in a gripping narrative by one of the world's leading astronomers.
Our knowledge of the Universe is greater than ever thanks to cutting-edge scientific research, as well as a new age of space exploration and discovery, and Paul Murdin has been at the forefront of this inquiry—he was the first person to identify a black hole. In The Universe, Murdin draws on his expertise in the field to explain difficult concepts such as black holes, nebulae, and dark matter and relates them to the most important characters and events in the history of our Universe: powerful explosions, the largest planets, galaxies, and celestial bodies. Structured in a clear, accessible fashion as a "biography" of our Universe, this history begins at the Big Bang and proceeds stage by stage through the story of our cosmos.
Full of fascinating details about our own existence, for instance that two-thirds of the atoms in our body are hydrogen atoms formed in the first few minutes of the Big Bang, and that we are a by-product of the manufacture of galaxies and stars, this volume offers a glimpse into the future of our Universe and what it means to us all.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 28, 2022
      Astronomer Murdin (The Secret Life of Planets) traces the history of the universe in this beautiful tour through the cosmos. The author begins with “the birth of it all” when an atom exploded 13 billion years ago, and works through the formation of early galaxies, the inner workings of the earth’s sun, the death of stars, and the birth of planet Earth. Using a timeline that “mostly looks backward,” he lays out a cause-and-effect sequence that shows dark matter creating galaxies, which in turn led to stars and planetary systems. Murdin offers easy-to-grasp explanations of knotty physics concepts (quantum mechanics, quarks, black holes) and fortifies the narrative with anecdotes about key figures—physicist George Gamow, for example, did early research on the big bang in the 1940s after defecting from the Soviet Union—and also shows how the invention of radio astronomy, satellites, and ever-more complex telescopes has led to a deeper understanding of space. The volume is beautifully illustrated, and Murdin leaves plenty of room for wonder in his admission that “we are disappointingly ignorant about the content of 95 percent of our Universe.” For readers interested in space but new to the game, this is a fine place to start.

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  • English

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