Book Read Free

Death By Black Hole & Other Cosmic Quandaries

Page 35

by Neil DeGrasse Tyson


  Schwippell, J. 1992. Christian Doppler and the Royal Bohemian Society of Sciences. In The Phenomenon of Doppler. Prague.

  Sciama, Dennis. 1971. Modern Cosmology. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

  Shamos, Morris H., ed. 1959. Great Experiments in Physics. New York: Dover.

  Shapley, Harlow, and Heber D. Curtis. 1921. The Scale of the Universe. Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences.

  Sullivan, W. T. III, and B. J. Cohen, eds. 1999. Preserving the Astronomical Sky. San Francisco: Astronomical Society of the Pacific.

  Taylor, Jane. 1925. Prose and Poetry. London: H. Milford.

  Tipler, Frank J. 1997. The Physics of Immortality. New York: Anchor.

  Tucson City Council. 1994. Tucson/Pima County Outdoor Lighting Code, Ordinance No. 8210. Tucson, AZ: International Dark Sky Association.

  [Twain, Mark] Kipling, Rudyard. 1899. An Interview with Mark Twain. From Sea to Sea. New York: Doubleday & McClure Company.

  Twain, Mark. 1935. Mark Twain’s Notebook.

  van Helden, Albert, trans. 1989. Sidereus Nuncius. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

  Venturi, C. G., ed. 1818. Memoire e Lettere, vol. 1. Modena: G. Vincenzi.

  von Braun, Werner. 1971. Space Frontier [1963]. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.

  Wells, David A., ed. 1852. Annual of Scientific Discovery. Boston: Gould and Lincoln.

  White, Andrew Dickerson. 1993. A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom [1896]. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books.

  Wilford, J. N. 1999. Rarely Bested Astronomers Are Stumped by a Tiny Light. The New York Times, August 17.

  Wright, Thomas. 1750. An Original Theory of the Universe. London: H. Chapelle.

  *For our exhibits at the Rose Center for Earth and Space in New York City, we think of icy Pluto as one of the “kings of comets,” an informative title that Pluto surely appreciates more than “puniest planet.”

  †One astronomical unit, abbreviated AU, is the average distance between Earth and the Sun.

  *What the Chinese call their astronauts.

  Table of Contents

  Preface

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue: The Beginning of Science

  SECTION 1 THE NATURE OF KNOWLEDGE The challenges of knowing what is knowable in the universe

  1. Coming to Our Senses

  2. On Earth as in the Heavens

  3. Seeing Isn’t Believing

  4. The Information Trap

  5. Stick-in-the-Mud Science

  SECTION 2 THE KNOWLEDGE OF NATURE The challenges of discovering the contents of the cosmos

  6. Journey from the Center of the Sun

  7. Planet Parade

  8. Vagabonds of the Solar System

  9. The Five Points of Lagrange

  10. Antimatter Matters

  SECTION 3 WAYS AND MEANS OF NATURE How Nature presents herself to the inquiring mind

  11. The Importance of Being Constant

  12. Speed Limits

  13. Going Ballistic

  14. On Being Dense

  15. Over the Rainbow

  16. Cosmic Windows

  17. Colors of the Cosmos

  18. Cosmic Plasma

  19. Fire and Ice

  SECTION 4 THE MEANING OF LIFE The challenges and triumphs of knowing how we got here

  20. Dust to Dust

  21. Forged in the Stars

  22. Send in the Clouds

  23. Goldilocks and the Three Planets

  24. Water, Water

  25. Living Space

  26. Life in the Universe

  27. Our Radio Bubble

  SECTION 5 WHEN THE UNIVERSE TURNS BAD All the ways the cosmos wants to kill us

  28. Chaos in the Solar System

  29. Coming Attractions

  30. Ends of the World

  31. Galactic Engines

  32. Knock ’Em Dead

  33. Death by Black Hole

  SECTION 6 SCIENCE AND CULTURE The ruffled interface between cosmic discovery and the public’s reaction to it

  34. Things People Say

  35. Fear of Numbers

  36. On Being Baffled

  37. Footprints in the Sands of Science

  38. Let There Be Dark

  39. Hollywood Nights

  SECTION 7 SCIENCE AND GOD When ways of knowing collide

  40. In the Beginning

  41. Holy Wars

  42. The Perimeter of Ignorance

  References

 

 

 


‹ Prev