MTU Cork Library Catalogue

Syndetics cover image
Image from Syndetics

The edge of infinity : beyond the black hole / Paul Davies.

By: Davies, P. C. W.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: London : Penguin, 1994Description: xx, 194 p. : ill. ; 20 cm. + pbk.ISBN: 0140231943.Subject(s): Black holes (Astronomy) | Naked singularities (Cosmology)DDC classification: 523.1
Contents:
The cosmic connection -- Measuring the infinite -- Space and time in crisis -- Towards the edge of infinity -- Black holes and the cosmic censor -- The naked singularity exposed -- Facing the unknowable -- The creation of the universe -- Beyond the infinite.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Lending MTU Bishopstown Library Lending 523.1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00014945
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

First published in 1981, this is an updated edition with further evidence of black holes. The questions that astronomy now raises concern cosmic issues of the infinite, the unknowable, space, time, creation and beyond the infinite. Also discusses the problem that singularities cannot be handled by statistics. With notes on technical terms, diagrams and an index. The author is a well-known physicist and science writer.

Includes index.

The cosmic connection -- Measuring the infinite -- Space and time in crisis -- Towards the edge of infinity -- Black holes and the cosmic censor -- The naked singularity exposed -- Facing the unknowable -- The creation of the universe -- Beyond the infinite.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Kirkus Book Review

Physicist Davies, who has exercised his special gifts in popularizations of cosmology (The Runaway Universe) and quantum mechanics (Other Worlds), here confronts the reader with the conundrums and crises that affect astrophysics when theorems are carried to their logical conclusions. The names Hawking, Penrose, and Wheeler are significant in this context, and Davies brings them on stage as principal actors to explain how logic can lead to chaos, an end to causality, an ""anything goes"" condition where even God can be invoked without offending reductionists. The crux of Davies' book: where other physicists see black holes--as the conjectured ends of massive stars suffering gravitational collapse--Davies sees a ""naked singularity."" And while black holes involve the force of gravity becoming so great as to trap light within an ""event horizon,"" Davies' ""naked singularity"" has no such event horizon at all. His dramatization goes something like this: Suppose an exactly spherical star collapses. Then gravity's force becomes infinite as does the curvature of spacetime. Matter gets squeezed into an ever-diminishing volume of spacetime which, in the limit, is nothing. No structure. No dense lump. No ""beyond."" Just the end of spacetime; the edge of infinity. But since there is no event horizon, light was not trapped, hence a ""naked singularity."" In less able hands, Davies' account might be considered a bit melodramatic. ""The evaporating black holes and the absence of a definite proof of cosmic censorship suggest that a naked singularity is a serious proposition. If that is so. . . then nature is threatened with anarchy. When a singularity bursts upon the universe, the rational organization of the cosmos is faced with disintegration."" Or maybe integration--for Davies then adroitly proposes that the Big Bang was a singularity that began spacetime. The reader may well feel Alice-like in Davies' wonderland, but it is an exhilarating experience. For one thing, he takes pains to explain the mathematical notions of limits and orders of infinity--of ""countably"" infinite sets, and the higher order of infinity represented by points on a line. He also makes interesting analogies to earlier crises in physics when logic suggested that an electron should fall into a nucleus with a burst of infinite radiation. (Wave radiation took care of that crisis.) So there is much here to reward the reader in ingenious ideas and mathematical principles. Other recent books have dealt commendably with the beginning and end of the universe; Davies touches on those matters, but hooks all to the naked singularity--and makes it a remarkable foil. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Paul Davies is an internationally acclaimed physicist, writer and broadcaster. He received degrees in physics from University College, London.

He was Professor of Natural Philosophy in the Australian Centre for Astrobiology at Macquarie University, Sydney and has held previous academic appointments at the Universities of Cambridge, London, Newcastle upon Tyne and Adelaide. Most of his research has been in the area of quantum field theory in curved spacetime.

Davies has also has written many books for the general reader in the fascinating fields of cosmology and physics. He is the author of over twenty-five books, including The Mind of God, Other Worlds, God and the New Physics, The Edge of Infinity, The Cosmic Blueprint, Are We Alone?, The Fifth Miracle, The Last Three Minutes, About Time, and How to Build a Time Machine.

His awards include an Advance Australia Award for outstanding contributions to science, two Eureka Prizes, the 2001 Kelvin Medal and Prize by the Institute of Physics, and the 2002 Faraday Prize by The Royal Society for Progress in religion. He also received the Templeton Prize for his contributions to the deeper implications of science. In April 1999 the asteroid 1992 OG was officially named (6870) Pauldavies in his honour.

(Bowker Author Biography)

Powered by Koha