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(Paperback)
In a revolutionary new theory, Dr. Robert Foot of the University of Melbourne argues that meteorites composed of mirror matter could impact with the Earth without leaving any ordinary fragments. Indeed, the theory seems to provide a simple explanation for the puzzling Tunguska event - the blast which destroyed a huge area of Siberian forest in 1908. While scientists have attributed this explosion to an ordinary meteorite, no traces of such an object have ever been found. Moreover, there are frequent smaller such events, occurring on a yearly basis, which are even more puzzling. Foot's new book, "Shadowlands:Quest for Mirror Matter in the Universe", lays clear the scientific case for mirror matter. It describes the fascinating evidence for its existence including, astronomical observations suggesting that most of our galaxy is made from a new form of matter - dark matter, puzzling Jupiter sized planets only a few million miles from their host star, the mysterious slowing down of spacecraft in our solar system. Remarkably, it is also possible that Pluto the most distant planet might even be a mirror world, which can explain various anomalous features of its orbit. Perhaps, the most important consequence of all this if true is the possibility of actually extracting the mirror matter from the Tunguska impact site and other such sites around the world. Invisible asteroids and other cosmic bodies made of a new form of matter may pose a threat to Earth, agrees a noted Australian physicist. But the mirror matter idea has not attracted a huge following among physicists. In a recent article, Howard Georgi of Harvard University says: "Foot's ideas have notattracted a huge following in the community that cares about these things, perhaps because the problems they solve, while interesting, are not the most critical puzzles that we are wrestling with." Nevertheless, mirror matter, if it exists, would be a completely new type of material with a potentially huge commercial value. Its scientific value would be of no less importance.
From The Backcover
Nearly 50 years ago it was discovered that the fundamental particles, such as the electron and proton, have `left-handed' interactions - they do not respect mirror symmetry. This experimental fact motivates the idea that a set of `mirror particles' exist. The left-handedness of the ordinary particles can then be balanced by the right-handedness of the mirror particles. In this way mirror reflection symmetry can exist but requires something profoundly new. It requires the existence of a completely new form of matter called `mirror matter'. Remarkably the mirror matter theory is capable of simply explaining a large number of contemporary puzzles in astrophysics and particle physics. The evidence ranges from observations suggesting that most of the matter in the Universe is invisible, to unexpected properties of ghostly particles called `neutrinos'. This book explains this fascinating theory and its evidence at a level accessible to the non-specialist.
About the Author
Robert Foot received his Ph.D. from the University of Melbourne in 1989 and has worked at universities in the USA, UK, Canada and Australia. He has published about 100 research papers in leading (and non-leading!) scientific journals, many of them on the mirror matter theory. He is currently an Australian Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne.
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November 24, 2002: Nothing to do with La Paz theory of anti-matter meteorites or Van Flandern's ideas about asteroid origin. Mirror matter is not anti-matter but something completely new. An easy to read book which explains the theory and lots of other things. Dr. Foot seems to have the rare ability of being an outstandingly creative scientist and a superb communicator.
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September 21, 2002: Foot's book finally returns to Lincoln La Paz's intriguing theory of antimatter meteorites--it also supports, at least in my own 20-year-long research of the subject, former U.S. Naval Observatory astronomer Thomas Van Flandern's ideas about asteroid origin. While many dogmatic meteorite experts have either ignored or avoided the idea of "contraterrene" matter in our own solar system, Foot's idea bears serious consideration by any deep-thinking researcher, especially in light of some unexplained impact phenomena on Earth that simply does not fit current impact models--i.e., geologically "recent" impact ejecta without accompanying craters; phenomena too often easily explained away as being cometary in origin. The problem of tektite origin may be related although I personally favor a lunar origin for at least some of the tektite strewn fields.