Infinity in the Palm of Your Hand: Fifty Wonders That Reveal an Extraordinary Universe
By Marcus Chown
3.5/5
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Currently unavailable
Currently unavailable
About this ebook
"The tone is consistently light and breezy...an addictive, intriguing, and entertaining read...a handy guide for anyone yearning to spice up their conversational skills." — Booklist
Fact: You could fit the whole human race in the volume of a sugar cube.
Fact: The electrical energy in a single mosquito is enough to cause a global mass extinction.
Fact: You age more quickly on the top floor than on the ground floor.
So much of our world seems to make perfect sense, and scientific breakthroughs have helped us understand ourselves, our planet, and our place in the universe in fascinating detail. But our adventures in space, our deepening understanding of the quantum world, and our leaps in technology have also revealed a universe far stranger than we ever imagined.
With brilliant clarity and wit, bestselling author Marcus Chown examines the profound science behind fifty remarkable scientific facts that help explain the vast complexities of our existence.
Marcus Chown
Marcus Chown is an award-winning writer and broadcaster. Formerly a radio astronomer at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, he is a Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Brunel University. His books include Breakthrough, The Ascent of Gravity, which was the Sunday Times 2017 Science Book of the Year; Infinity in the Palm of Your Hand; What A Wonderful World; Quantum Theory Cannot Hurt You; We Need to Talk About Kelvin and Afterglow of Creation, both of which were runners-up for the Royal Society Book Prize. Marcus has also won the Bookseller's Digital Innovation of the Year for Solar System for iPad.
Read more from Marcus Chown
Infinity in the Palm of Your Hand: Fifty Wonders That Reveal an Extraordinary Universe Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Nothing: Surprising Insights Everywhere from Zero to Oblivion Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Ascent of Gravity: The Quest to Understand the Force that Explains Everything Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The One Thing You Need to Know: The Simple Way to Understand the Most Important Ideas in Science Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5The Matchbox That Ate a Forty-Ton Truck: What Everyday Things Tell Us About the Universe Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Infinity in the Palm of Your Hand
7 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5A little light-weight.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I quite enjoyed this fun, enlightening and thought provoking gem from science writer, Marcus Chown. Within these pages are fifty incredibly amazing features of our universe, both near and far, very far away.The book is written in laymen's terms so whether Chown is talking about the ingredients required to make a time machine, the moons of Jupiter or dark matter, it all seems plausible and easy to understand. Interesting nuggets run the gamut and offer conversation starters at your next cocktail party or trivia night.I highly recommend this to anyone curious about our universe. It's a great stepping stone to the next level.Thank you NetGalley, Diversion Books and the author for the opportunity to read and advanced copy of Infinity in the Palm of your Hand. Available in April, 2019.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Having just reviewed Marcus Chown’s The Ascent of Gravity, I was really looking forward to Infinity in the Palm of Your Hand. Maybe too much. The book turns out to be fifty quick stories, each one an anecdote, explained. They are standalone modules he can swap into talks he gives. Audiences love them. What’s not to like, then?There is no real value added to these 50 stories. Chown doesn’t use them for any greater purpose. Unlike The Ascent of Gravity, where he used the backbone of discoveries regarding gravity to lay out the rise of physics and quantum theory, this book doesn’t go anywhere. You don’t have to read the stories in order, and skipping one two or five, won’t result in confusion.The structure is from the microscopic aspects of biology to the bizarreness of quantum theory, to wonders of the universe. Ever outward. The gift of quantum theory is Chown’s vehicle. There are endless unfathomables in the workings of the subatomic for mortal human readers. It provides unusual facts for things as mundane as helium and as uncertain as why black holes feature at the center of galaxies. The stories employ a cute trick. Chown creates a catchy one-line description for each story that he twisted out of the topic he wants to explore. So for example, “Babies are powered by rocket fuel” is just a way of saying we need oxygen, as do rockets. But his way is catchier. On the internet, we call this clickbait. In the book, it’s a check on whether you can guess what’s coming. It does seem Chown was less than assiduous in assembling these 50 stories. Because they don’t connect, he says the same things over and over. This must be because in giving talks, he needs to have a complete story to tell. But the result is repetition unbecoming a science book. He actually repeats the whole story of scientists discovering ancient gravitational waves, thinking the noise was interference. The tried to filter it out, and went so far as to remove the local flock of pigeons and the accompanying guano in order to avoid it. (They got the Nobel Prize anyway). But we don’t need to read it again in the same book.If you are into science, most of the 50 chapters will be simple refreshers. There are lots of takeaways, just nothing new. For very many, if not most, it will be a treat of discovery. It is popularizing science, an age-old amusement that itself never gets old.Just disappointing.David Wineberg