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    WHEN THE UNIVERSE TOOK A U-TURN

    by B G Sidharth (B M Birla Science Centre, Hyderabad, India)

    Table of Contents (140k)
    Preface (58k)
    Chapter 1: The Lord is subtle, but defies commonsense! (120k)

    This book addresses some of the baffling questions encountered at the final frontier of space and time related to particle physics and cosmology in the context of recent iconoclastic observations and developments. When particle physics stagnated in the early seventies, a new development emerged — String Theory.

    For the past 25 years, String Theory, popularly called the “Theory of Everything”, has mesmerized not just scientists, but also the general public. Yet a closer scrutiny today reveals that it is no more than a mathematical marvel. It has neither predicted anything nor has it been anywhere near verification. We are essentially where we were in the early seventies.

    Another chronic problem that Einstein had abandoned was the unified description of his theory of General Relativity that deals with the Universe at large and Electromagnetism which is to do with particles. Such a description is necessary even if it warrants a radical departure from our time-honoured ideas of space and time. A bright spot has now appeared in Cosmology. Iconoclastic observations in the past years have shown that the Universe is actually accelerating, driven by a mysterious Dark Energy. This book takes the lay reader through these uncharted waters and mind-boggling developments on an unimaginable journey from the ultra small to the farthest stretches conceivable, via such imagination defying concepts as extra dimensions and multiple universes.

     
    Contents:
    • The Lord is Subtle, But Defies Commonsense!
    • You Can Be Younger Than Your Grandson
    • God Does Not Play Dice, or Does He?
    • Time is Running Backwards Isn't It?
    • On a Collision Course
    • Law Without Law
    • When the Universe Took a U Turn
     
    Readership: Students and academics interested in theoretical physics and history of science.
     
    “This book impressively summarizes in simple words, for any curious mind, a history of physics up to its current and widest challenges. Any reader interested in the foundations of physics will particularly enjoy the second part, where the author shakes some of the great theoretical temptations that may have plagued physics lately. Sidharth's plea against the totalitarian trend, even in physics, might be sketched as follows: reductionism must reach its ultimate goal by totally reducing itself, renormalization by renormalizing itself and superstring theory by strangling itself in order to open an era for physics more open and tolerant to new ideas, especially when those bring paths towards possible experimental refutation.”
    Dr Philippe Journeau
    Head of Research
    Discinnet Labs, Paris
     
    “It may as well be included in the suggested reading list of the higher degree students carrying out research in natural philosophy … the author's descriptions of various theses, anti-theses and syntheses, relating to both terrestrial and celestial objects, provide useful perspectives for analyzing the variable relationships in both physics and astronomy.”
    Reviews
     
    200pp    Pub. date: Sep 2009  
    ISBN:   978-981-4277-81-5
    981-4277-81-9
       US$73 / £48

     


    200pp    Pub. date: Sep 2009  
    ISBN:   978-981-4277-82-2(ebook)
    981-4277-82-7(ebook)
       US$95 / £63

     


     

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    Updated on 13 February 2012