The Edge of Physics: A Journey to Earth's Extremes to Unlock the Secrets of the Universe
Anil Ananthaswamy
eBook
(Mariner Books, Feb. 14, 2010)
A tour of the exotic and remote outposts where scientists seek answers to the great mysteries: âA thrilling ride around the globe and around the cosmos.â âSean Carroll, author of From Eternity to Here In The Edge of Physics, a science writer journeys to the ends of the Earthâvisiting remote and sometimes dangerous placesâin search of the telescopes and detectors that promise to answer the biggest questions in modern cosmology. Anil Ananthaswamy treks to the Atacama Desert in the Chilean Andes, one of the coldest, driest places on the planet, where not even a blade of grass can survive, and the spectacularly clear skies and dry atmosphere allow astronomers to gather brilliant images of galaxies billions of light-years away. He takes us inside the European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphereâs Very Large Telescope on Mount Paranal, where four massive domes open to the sky each night âlike a dragon waking up.â Ananthaswamy also heads deep inside an abandoned iron mine in Minnesotaâwhere half-mile-thick rock shields physicists as they hunt for elusive dark matter particles. And to the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, where engineers are drilling 1.5 miles into the clearest ice on the planet. They are building the worldâs largest neutrino detector, which could finally help reconcile quantum physics with Einsteinâs theory of general relativity. The stories of the people who work at these and other research sites make for a compelling new portrait of the universeâand our quest to understand it. âFrom the top of Hawaiiâs Mauna Kea to Switzerlandâs Large Hadron Collider and more, Ananthaswamy paints a vivid picture of scientific investigations in harsh working conditions. . . . Even for readers who donât know a neutrino from Adam, these interesting tales of human endeavor make The Edge of Physics a trip worth taking.â âBookpage âAnanthaswamy journeys to several geographically and scientifically extreme outposts, and returns not only with engaging portraits of the men and women who work there, but also a vibrant glimpse of how cutting-edge research is actually performed. Part history lesson, part travelogue, part adventure story, âThe Edge of Physicsâ is a wonder-steeped page-turner.â âSeed Magazine âAnanthaswamy displays a writerâs touch for the fascinating detail.â âThe Washington Post