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A journey into gravity and spacetime

Part of the "Scientific American" Library series
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Gravity is not a force acting at a distance. It is mass gripping spacetime, telling it how to curve, and spacetime gripping mass, telling it how to move.

According to preeminent physicist John Archibald Wheeler, gravity makes the closest connection between the world we see around us and the inner-most workings of the universe. In this imaginative volume, Wheeler explores gravity and spacetime by applying Einstein's battle-tested theory to both familiar and exotic phomomena--everything from flying tennis balls, to hurling gravity waves from crashing stars, the motion of the planets, and the collapse of a star into a black hole.

It's a provocative, revealing, fully engaging scientific journey led by a frontline participant in the most important work in physics in the last 50 years.

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Product Details
Scientific American Library
0716760347 / 9780716760344
Paperback
531.14
27/08/1999
United States
English
257p. : ill. (chiefly col.)
24 cm
advanced secondary /general /undergraduate Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 1990.
John Archibald Wheeler is the recipient of the Enrico Fermi Award (1968), the National Medal of Science (1971), the Niels Bohr Gold Medal (1982), and the Wolf Prize (1997).
John Archibald Wheeler is the recipient of the Enrico Fermi Award (1968), the National Medal of Science (1971), the Niels Bohr Gold Medal (1982), and the Wolf Prize (1997). PHD Classical mechanics, PHR Relativity physics, PHVB Astrophysics