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The Universe Next Door: The Making of Tomorrow's Science


by Marcus Chown

List Price: $14.95
6 New starting at: $11.99
15 Used starting at: $1.54
Sales Rank: 1077686
Studio: Oxford University Press, USA
Binding: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 208
Publication Date: September 18, 2003
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description
The idea that an atom can be in two places at once defies logic. Yet this is now an established scientific fact. In The Universe Next Door, science writer Marcus Chown examines a dozen mind-bending new ideas that also fly in the face of reason--but that, according to eminent scientists, might just be crazy enough to be true.
Could time run backwards? Is there a fifth dimension? Does quantum theory promise immortality? To explore these questions, Chown has interviewed some of the most imaginative and courageous people working at the forefront of science, and he has come away with a smorgasbord of mind-expanding ideas. For instance, Lawrence Schulman at New York's Clarkson University believes there could be regions in our Universe where stars unexplode, eggs unbreak and living things grow younger with every passing second. Max Tegmark, at the University of Pennsylvania, believes there could be an infinity of realities stacked together like the pages of a never-ending book (with an infinite number of versions of you, living out an infinite number of different lives). And David Stevenson of Cal Tech argues that life may exist on worlds drifting in the cold, dark abyss between the stars, worlds without suns to warm them. Indeed, these worlds may be the most common sites for life in the universe.
Was our universe created by super-intelligent beings from another universe? Is there evidence of extraterrestrial life lying right beneath our feet? The Universe Next Door ponders these and many other thought-provoking questions. You may not agree with all the answers but your head will be spinning by the time you reach the last page.


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.5 based on 18 reviews)

Liked it more toward the end.  
I felt like I was reading a drawnout artical in a journal at first. Another problem I had with Mr.Chown's book was his repitious style. However, toward the end (around page 110 ) he starts to present us with some interesting theories and mindblowing ideas. Parallel universes,panspermia(seeded life from space),time-travel, and infinite dimensions make-up for the tedious start. There are no pictures or diagrams, but there is a glossary in back.
February 14, 2005

Bridging the Gap Between Science and Science Fiction  
+++++

This book, by former radio astronomer and cosmology consultant Marcus Chown, presents "twelve mind-blowing ideas from the cutting edge of science" (this book's former subtitle). Chown explains:

"What follows are my dispatches from the frontier of the [scientific] imagination. At first sight, these ideas may seem crazy. But, then, once upon a time, the idea that time slows down for someone traveling fast or in the presence of gravity seemed crazy...Of course, the scientific imagination must work within the limits of known facts...I hope that in reading this book you will get some feeling of what a wonderful, weird, wacky Universe we find ourselves in -- a place far stranger than anything we could possibly have invented. And I hope it gets you thinking..."

This book presents its ideas in three easy-to-read parts. The essence of each chapter will be highlighted in the form of a question:

Part 1 (5 chapters):

(1) Are there regions in the Universe where time runs backwards?
(2) Are there an infinite number of realities where all possible alternative realities are played out?
(3) Can the basic building blocks of nature (like electrons) be split?
(4) Do atoms contain time machines?
(5) Are extra space dimensions a possibility?

Part 2 (4 chapters):

(6) Is most of the mass of the Universe in the form of relatively small black holes?
(7) Does the Universe contain invisible galaxies, stars, planets, and even invisible extraterrestrials?
(8) Is our Universe one among an infinite number of separate and distinct universes?
(9) Is it possible to make a universe in the laboratory?

Part 3 (3 chapters):

(10) Could there be billions and billions of habitable plants that are not orbiting a central star but that are traveling through interstellar space?
(11) Was the life on Earth seeded from the depths of space?
(12) Do extraterrestrial artifacts exist on Earth or throughout the solar system?

Each chapter explains with no technicality each of its ideas and tells us of the extraordinary people (mainly scientists) who postulated these extraordinary ideas. The evidence for these ideas is also presented. As well, the problems with these ideas is also discussed.

Readers of space and physical science should be acquainted with most of these ideas. But they will probably not be acquainted with the large detail that Chown presents that go along with these ideas.

I was surprised to find a large, informative glossary. Concepts like "causality violation," "discoherence," and the "ultimate ensemble theory" are well defined.

The bibliography or "further reading" section of this book is interesting. It presents for each chapter non-fiction as well as fiction books!

Finally, this book has no illustrations. I felt simple diagrams would have reduced the book's wordiness. I also found some slang in this book. For example, the word "gonna" is not even a word.

In conclusion, this book definitely sparks the reader's imagination. It reminds me of what Albert Einstein once said: "Imagination is more important than knowledge."

(first published 2002; acknowledgements; forward; 12 chapters; main narrative of 155 pages; glossary; further reading, index)

+++++

January 25, 2005

Bizarre though Credible  
In this highly readable text, Marcus Chown, Cosmology Consultant for "New Scientist", illustrates sciences imaginative speculations on the possibilities of time travel, the existence of endless realities, multiuniverses, mirror worlds, a universe created by scientists in laboratories, and extra space dimensions, the fifth dimension, that could well be revealed to us in the not so distant future.

What is so astonishing about these speculations is that they're grounded in scientific theory and known facts, making them highly credible and probable. Even more astounding, is the great scientific minds from around the world are putting these seemingly bizarre postulates to the test, and their findings are nothing less than amazing.

One of the more interesting chapters "Was the Universe Created by Angels?" suggests an outlandish idea (outlandish from a secular scientific perspective): that our universe is the outcome of an experiment carried out by a superior intelligence in another universe. What makes this theory plausible is the fact that our universe is based on clear and simple principles that can be observed. Our observable cosmos is orchestrated on basic laws of physics in perfect balance, "a fined-tuned universe" enabling life to exist and reproduce. This is the anthropic principle:

"There would appear to be only two possible explanations: One is that the universe was designed specifically by God. The other is that the Universe is the way it is because if it wasn't, we would not be here to remark on the fact. According to this topsy-turvy reasoning...it is hardly surprising that we find ourselves in a universe which is fine-tuned to allow the existence of galaxies, stars and life. We could hardly have evolved in a universe that was not!" (P.106)

It is here that philosophy and science merge to attempt to explain the great mysteries of our existence.

As a reader not too acquainted with quantum theory, astronomy and physics in general, this text is written simply and straightforward, explaining at times complex physics in easy to comprehend prose. Chown's obvious enthusiasm about his subject is also highly infectious, prompting this reader to investigate further.

Entertaining and informative.


January 20, 2005

hang on, what door?  
Great book, easy to read, simple to understand. Should be taken alongside Green and Hawking and then used to build a wormhole.
I'd really like to scoot forward 50yrs and see if any of these ideas proved to be correct....
May 16, 2004

About tomorrow - yes.  
Marcus Chown deserves an award. He jumps forward without wasting time for rewriting Newton's or Einstein's history, and expands on what is new and controversial: Schulman's reversed time, Maris' electron bubbles, Tegmark quantum interpretation, Harrison's natural selection of self-reproducing universes, Mark Hadley's unification of QT and GR, Gnienko's and Foot's "mirror" matter, plus very interesting probability calculation by Arhipov - whether we can find ET junk on Earth; just a few subjects that you will not find even in currently published new Brian Greene's book "The Fabric of the Cosmos".
Excellent writing, so well, that lack of any pictures or drawings is not detrimental at all.
February 24, 2004


SIMILAR PRODUCTS

The Quantum Zoo: A Tourist's Guide to the Never-Ending Universe
by Marcus Chown

Afterglow of Creation: From the Fireball to the Discovery of Cosmic Ripples
by Marcus Chown

The Magic Furnace: The Search for the Origins of Atoms
by Marcus Chown

Many Worlds in One: The Search for Other Universes
by Alex Vilenkin

Endless Universe: Beyond the Big Bang
by Paul J. Steinhardt, Neil Turok

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