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The State of the Universe: A Primer in Modern Cosmology Paperback – 8 Aug 2007

3.3 out of 5 stars 4 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: W&N; New Ed edition (8 Aug. 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0753822563
  • ISBN-13: 978-0753822562
  • Product Dimensions: 12.7 x 2.2 x 19.7 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 407,518 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

Deeply interesting (THE GUARDIAN)

Authoritative, accurate, clear and up to date (THE INDEPENDENT)

Ferreira does a good job of balancing the likely with the improbable. (FINANCIAL TIMES)

a short, clear and logical introduction which assumes no background knowledge and uses simple analogies to explain unfamiliar ideas. (OXFORD TODAY)

Book Description

A masterly overview of the development of cosmological thinking from the Greeks, via Newton and Einstein, to the present day.

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Customer Reviews

3.3 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
This book is a fair an nice review of the history and state-of-the-art of cosmology. It is very readable, not technical at all.

The drawback of the book, if you are interested in the last findings in cosmology (and this is what the title suggests), is that most of it is dedicated to the history and even ancient history of the topic. Issues such as the non zero cosmological constant and the multiverse hypotesis are treated very fast in the last chapters, just telling the raw facts, not commiting to any interpretation. The final moral is "we still don't know", which may be true, but the reader of popular science books expects something different.
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Format: Paperback
This is one of the most comprehensive books I have ever read on Cosmology. It is a book which is easily accessible to the lay reader, but does cover thoroughly; the history of ideas on our Universe, the geometry of the Universe, the Big Bang, both dark matter and dark energy and the nature of the four fundamental forces. It is extremely well written and tackles difficult ideas with ease.

I was very impressed with the amount of information packed into its 320 pages and the excellent coverage of: special and general relativity, space-time and the standard model of particle physics, and the building of elements through nucleosynthesis. He has researched all the topics extremely well and has many interesting anecdotes as well as the biographies of some 38 astronomers/physicists important in the development of cosmology.

It gives a very erudite coverage on quantum mechanics and the true nature of the vacuum of space as well a fascinating discussion on what dark matter might be. I have never read about the intriguing Casmir effect before and the book covers many topics like sound waves in the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB) and the polarization of the CMB.

My only reservations are in the lack of clear diagrams and the occasional mistake e.g. page 173 heat up a piece of metal `going from bluish, to red, to almost white' is the wrong colour sequence and on page 175 Mars, Jupiter and Venus are further from the Sun (obviously Saturn not Venus!) and measuring temperature in degrees Kelvin which should be just kelvin.

This marvelous book was written by an astrophysics lecturer and a Fellow of Oriel College, Oxford and it is as the title describes a Primer in Modern Cosmology and I fully recommend it.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)

Amazon.com: 3.5 out of 5 stars 11 reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent and accessible introduction to modern cosmology 21 Dec. 2009
By Jeroen Versteeg - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
With this book, Ferreira has given me just what I was looking for: a detailed but accessible description of the current theory about the beginning of the universe (The Big Bang, nucleosynthesis, inflation), its makeup (normal matter, dark matter, dark energy), the nature of space and time (special and general relativity), and the open questions that remain in the field.

The book employs the story of the string of discoveries that lead to our current understanding as a narrative (starting with Aristotle), which makes the discussion not only interesting but also fairly accessible. Even without a solid background in either physics, math or astronomy (I have a university degree in computer science), the book was easy enough to understand for the most part. For example, Ferreira made me understand relativity better than any of the TV documentaries I have seen on the subject.

It is only in the last parts that I lost it, as the discussion about dark energy and some other advanced subjects were too hard for me to understand. That's not a problem for me though. First of all, it shows that while the author went to great lengths to make the (sometimes tough) science easy to understand without "dumbing it down" too much. Secondly, it makes a reread worthwhile (in fact, I have already read the first half of the book twice already).

All in all, cosmology is is one of my favorite fields in all of science, and this book does a great job telling the story of its development, and compellingly makes the case for the current state of our understanding.
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars 15 Feb. 2015
By Connie Starnes - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
All good
1 of 8 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Warmed over cosmology 14 May 2008
By Fredrick H. Dennis - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
I was pleased with the efficiency you showed in getting me the book in such a timely manner. Thanks.
The book itself was fine, but in one sense it was "same old, same old."
I did appreciate the chapters on 'dark stuff,' which I know little or nothing about. The author has a style which is readable and almost breezy.
35 of 36 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Cosmology Primer 7 Aug. 2006
By Mark K McKinney - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Hardcover
This book is a fantastic cosmology primer. I have a penchant for reading physics books and this one describes all the missing pieces I have about cosmology. Many of you have probably heard of dark matter, he explains why scientists think this exists, rather than just going on about trying to prove it. He lays down some necessary basics like how we measure the distances to stars and galaxies and how me measure the speeds that they are traveling. It uses the vast amounts of new data we now have thanks to Hubble, Chandra, Spitzer, COBE and the WMAP satellites and tells the reader with clear explanations what it all means as relating to our current standard model. Or lacking complete understanding of an area, he expounds on the latest theories that physicists are grappling with in trying to unify physics. Overall, this is a great book with a lot of information succinctly delivered to give the reader an excellent primer on modern cosmology.
37 of 40 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Knowable and Unknown Universe 3 July 2006
By Rob Hardy - Published on Amazon.com
Format: Hardcover
It wasn't long ago that there was no science of cosmology. Now it is a career path: "I am a practicing cosmologist," begins Pedro G. Ferreira in _The State of the Universe: A Primer in Modern Cosmology_ (Weidenfeld & Nicolson). "My job is to try to unravel the history and workings of the Universe, using a combination of mathematical tools, observations made with powerful telescopes, and above all, educated guesses." He admits that megalomania infects everyone who takes up such a project, but he has to sum up his book eventually with so many "Don't Knows" that it is hard not to admire the humble attacks against huge questions. There will be for readers, even under Ferreira's sure and informed guidance, plenty of "Don't Knows" even as he discusses the well-established ideas of relativity, quantum mechanics, and unimaginably huge stretches of space and time. It is only fair that cosmologists understand this counterintuitive stuff which leaves laymen baffled. It is also a good idea for laymen to try to get some understanding of it, however limited; after all, cosmologists are merely trying to make sense of the planet, the solar system, the galaxy, and the Universe that we call home.

The increase of knowledge about where we live has made people uncomfortable over the centuries because it has involved the realization that we are not as supremely important as we might like. Not only is the Earth not the center of everything, the everyday matter that we think of as the building blocks of everything around us is not the main stuff of the Universe at all, despite our telescopic views of planets, moons, and galaxies. Counting up all the atoms in our Universe shows that 99% of them are helium or hydrogen, not at all what we expect in our idiosyncratic and self-centered view. And that's not all. Galaxies, including our own, are bigger and heavier than they appear; the way they spin around shows that there is much more mass circulating within them than we can see. There is a big problem, though: we don't know what the dark matter is. The weakly interacting particle called the neutrino has been proposed, or perhaps the neutralino, or the axion, or other strange matter described here. Don't worry if you can't understand what this dark matter is; your cosmologist guide says, "We have no real idea of what it is or how to see it."

Ferreira's book is an appealing and up-to-date primer. Part of its attraction is that it has an orderly progression of facts and understanding, without the "Gee, Whiz" exclamations of awe that are prominent in other books covering the same topics. He is content to let the explanations, many of them startling and strange, suffice in provoking the awe. His explanations are clear, although the material progresses in increasing bizarreness and difficulty. He eventually mentions such concepts as string theory or an even stranger "loop quantum gravity", and the idea that our universe may be just one of millions out there (just as we discovered that our star or our galaxy was just one of millions of similar objects). And finally, he is careful to show that although there is much we have discovered that is completely reliable, with some properties and constants having been measured to great precision, there are still huge areas of questions that we have barely begun to understand.
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