- Shopping Bag ( 0 items )
- Spend $25, Get FREE SHIPPING
From BN.com
Used & New From our Trusted Marketplace Sellers
Customer Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
Einstein died trying to decipher the secrets of energy's sequential encoding - just six years before the invention of that "light fantastic" from the continuous-wave laser - that very tool, that would have revealed the secret mechanism of this universal mystery.
Finally now, a half-century later, the methodology of its encryption, the pieces of his universal puzzle are falling into place, yielding...Albert Einstein’s theory of general relativity describes the effect of gravitation on the shape of space and the flow of time. But for more than four decades after its publication, the theory remained largely a curiosity for scientists; however accurate it seemed, Einstein’s mathematical code—represented by six interlocking equations—was one of the most difficult to crack in all of science. That is, until a twenty-nine-year-old Cambridge graduate solved the great riddle in 1963. Roy Kerr’s solution emerged coincidentally with the discovery of black holes that same year and provided fertile testing ground—at long last—for general relativity. Today, scientists routinely cite the Kerr solution, but even among specialists, few know the story of how Kerr cracked Einstein’s code.
Fulvio Melia here offers an eyewitness account of the events leading up to Kerr’s great discovery. Cracking the Einstein Code vividly describes how luminaries such as Karl Schwarzschild, David Hilbert, and Emmy Noether set the stage for the Kerr solution; how Kerr came to make his breakthrough; and how scientists such as Roger Penrose, Kip Thorne, and Stephen Hawking used the accomplishment to refine and expand modern astronomy and physics. Today more than 300 million supermassive black holes are suspected of anchoring their host galaxies across the cosmos, and the Kerr solution is what astronomers and astrophysicists use to describe much of their behavior.
By unmasking the history behind the search for a real world solution to Einstein’s field equations, Melia offers a first-hand account of an important but untold story. Sometimes dramatic, often exhilarating, but always attuned to the human element, Cracking the Einstein Code is ultimately a showcase of how important science gets done.
"A wonderful, touching book about the life and work of one of the great unsung heros of physics, Roy Kerr, the New Zealander who, in 1963, extracted from Einstein's scarily complex equations of gravity an exact description for a real-life, 'spinning' black hole."—Marcus Chow, New Scientist, "The Best Books of 2009"
Marcus Chow
More Reviews and RecommendationsFulvio Melia is professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Arizona and author of numerous books, including, most recently, The Galactic Supermassive Black Hole.