desde 1987

The Nature of Space and Time

R$32,50

LIVRO
  • Autor: Stephen Hawking / Roger Penrose
  • Editora: Princeton University Press
  • Qtd. Páginas: 141
  • Isbn: 9780691050843
  • Código Estoque: 204381A
  • Estado de Conservação: Condição geral: bom, conserva-se em boas condições para o manuseio da leitura em relação ao ano de publicação. Capa/Contracapa: com leves desgastes; com leves desgastes nas extremidades. Folha de rosto: com manchas de oxidacao. Dorso: pequeno desgastes. Páginas: levemente amareladas pela ação do tempo; amareladas na lateral do miolo. Nada que atrapalhe a leitura.
  • 1 em estoque

    Peso 352 g
    Dimensões 1 × 15 × 23 cm
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    From two of the world’s great physicists―Stephen Hawking and Nobel laureate Roger Penrose―a lively debate about the nature of space and timeEinstein said that the most incomprehensible thing about the universe is that it is comprehensible. But was he right? Can the quantum theory of fields and Einstein’s general theory of relativity, the two most accurate and successful theories in all of physics, be united in a single quantum theory of gravity? Can quantum and cosmos ever be combined? On this issue, two of the world’s most famous physicists―Stephen Hawking (A Brief History of Time) and Roger Penrose (The Emperor’s New Mind and Shadows of the Mind)―disagree. Here they explain their positions in a work based on six lectures with a final debate, all originally presented at the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences at the University of Cambridge.How could quantum gravity, a theory that could explain the earlier moments of the big bang and the physics of the enigmatic objects known as black holes, be constructed? Why does our patch of the universe look just as Einstein predicted, with no hint of quantum effects in sight? What strange quantum processes can cause black holes to evaporate, and what happens to all the information that they swallow? Why does time go forward, not backward?In this book, the two opponents touch on all these questions. Penrose, like Einstein, refuses to believe that quantum mechanics is a final theory. Hawking thinks otherwise, and argues that general relativity simply cannot account for how the universe began. Only a quantum theory of gravity, coupled with the no-boundary hypothesis, can ever hope to explain adequately what little we can observe about our universe. Penrose, playing the realist to Hawking’s positivist, thinks that the universe is unbounded and will expand forever. The universe can be understood, he argues, in terms of the geometry of light cones, the compression and distortion of spacetime, and by the use of twistor t

    SKU: 524720Categorias: Livros, Outros AssuntosLoja: Loja Centro
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