God's Equation: Einstein, Relativity, and the Expanding Universe

God's Equation: Einstein, Relativity, and the Expanding Universe

by Amir D. Aczel

Narrated by Kent Broadhurst

Unabridged — 7 hours, 24 minutes

God's Equation: Einstein, Relativity, and the Expanding Universe

God's Equation: Einstein, Relativity, and the Expanding Universe

by Amir D. Aczel

Narrated by Kent Broadhurst

Unabridged — 7 hours, 24 minutes

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Overview

Are we on the verge of solving the riddle of creation using Einstein's "greatest blunder"?

In a work that is at once lucid, exhilarating and profound, renowned mathematician Dr. Amir Aczel, critically acclaimed author of Fermat's Last Theorem, takes us into the heart of science's greatest mystery.

In January 1998, astronomers found evidence that the cosmos is expanding at an ever-increasing rate. The way we perceive the universe was changed forever. The most compelling theory cosmologists could find to explain this phenomenon was Einstein's cosmological constant, a theory he conceived--and rejected---over eighty years ago.

Drawing on newly discovered letters of Einstein--many translated here for the first time--years of research, and interviews with prominent mathematicians, cosmologists, physicists, and astronomers, Aczel takes us on a fascinating journey into "the strange geometry of space-time," and into the mind of a genius. Here the unthinkable becomes real: an infinite, ever-expanding, ever-accelerating universe whose only absolute is the speed of light.

Awesome in scope, thrilling in detail, God's Equation is storytelling at its finest.


From the Trade Paperback edition.

Editorial Reviews

FEB/MAR 03 - AudioFile

Professor Aczel’s audiobook comes fully loaded with a rich vocabulary and new ideas. It’s a stunning and humbling study of the cosmos from the Big Bang to whatever. Although there are some awesome mathematical formulas and terminology included, the genre is a history of science for listeners seeking quality. The biographies of the great minds surrounding Einstein are blended into an entertaining, yet intellectual, history with a slant that only a scientist would assume. The velvet-voiced Kent Broadhurst uses the refined voice and rhythm swings of a good storyteller, sliding with ease from the theories presented at meetings to the guests’ memories of what they drank afterward. J.A.H. © AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine

Discover Magazine

At a time when so many popular physics books avoid equations and fudge mathematical explanations, Aczel wants to delve deep into the mathematics. He believes-as Einstein did-it is in fact the underlying mathematics that makes the universe elegant.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

For decades, scientists have debated whether the universe will eventually collapse upon itself, will expand until it reaches an optimal size and remain steady, or will expand forever. To most everyone's surprise, studies of particular huge supernovae are providing evidence that the last possibility may be right and that billions of years from now the universe will be an unimaginably immense void of burned-out stars. The explanation for this may lie in the "cosmological constant," a part of Einstein's field equation for general relativity. Though Einstein described the constant as the greatest blunder of his career, many scientists now think that it could correctly represent some kind of "funny energy" pushing the universe apart. Aczel (Fermat's Last Theorem; Probability 1) contends that Einstein's equation for the cosmological constant is our best approximation of what he calls "God's equation": the ultimate summary of how the universe works. Though Aczel's analysis of Einstein's work requires familiarity with advanced mathematics, that analysis makes up only a minor portion of his book, and most readers will appreciate the author's inclusion of the great physicist's letters to astronomer Erwin Freundlich. Translated here for the first time, they give a glimpse of Einstein's ambition and of his occasional indifference toward collaborators who were no longer useful to him. Aczel's writing is marred by his proclivity to make hyperbolic statements ("Einstein became one of the greatest celebrities--possibly the greatest--the world has ever known"), and some of his historical observations are na ve. Those fascinated by Einstein will find much of interest here, but general readers hungry for information about recent developments in cosmology may want to consult more accessible authors, such as John Gribbin (The Case of the Missing Neutrinos). Figures not seen by PW. (Oct.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

In this well-written book, Aczel (Fermat's Last Theorem: Unlocking the Secret of an Ancient Mathematical Problem) attempts to explain in lay terms the meaning and significance of Einstein's theory of relativity; to a large extent, he succeeds. He shows us how Einstein developed and modified the theory and how he interacted with others working in mathematics, physics, and astronomy. Aczel explains that Einstein proposed a mathematically elegant equation, based on physical, philosophical, and aesthetic considerations, whose solutions (if found) would describe the large-scale behavior of the universe. He then modified the equation by adding a cosmological constant, since his first solutions indicated that the universe must be expanding, and no physical evidence to that effect existed at the time. When it was later shown that the universe was indeed expanding, he removed the constant, calling it a mistake. Yet new evidence seems to show that even when he thought he was wrong, Einstein may have been right--the cosmological constant may be essential to our understanding of the universe. For public libraries.--Harold D. Shane, Baruch Coll., CUNY Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Booknews

Aczel () explains for lay readers the latest theory and findings that the universe is not only expanding, but expanding constantly faster. Then in order to account for the phenomenon, he resurrects a theory Einstein used, with the help of a cosmological constant, to show that the universe was static in size. Einstein discarded it as a huge blunder in the 1930s when Hubble showed that the universe does in fact expand. Aczel also offers new insight on Einstein's ambition, professional relationships, and thought processes based on newly discovered letters. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Kirkus Reviews

In 1912, Albert Einstein wrote down an equation that describes the structure of the universe. But even he didn't recognize its full meaning. Aczel (Probability 1, 1998, etc.) has made a career of explaining the frontiers of mathematics. Here he tackles Einstein's field equation of general relativity not only in the context of modern physics, but in the history of mathematics. When Einstein began to incorporate gravity into his theories, he realized that it must have certain effects on light. In particular, light leaving a massive object would be red-shifted; its frequency would become longer, as if the object were moving away. Space was curved, and that curvature could be described in terms of non-Euclidean geometry—built on alterations of Euclid's fifth postulate, which after trying unsuccessfully to prove for two millennia, mathematicians decided to treat as an arbitrary and unprovable assumption. The curvature of space and its effect on light made possible experimental verifications of relativity: for example, the positions of stars seen near the sun in an eclipse should differ from their positions when the sun was in another part of the sky. In 1919, a British expedition led by Arthur Eddington measured those star positions and proved Einstein's theories correct. Meanwhile, Einstein had been exploring the cosmological implications of his theory, in particular the question of whether the universe expands, contracts, or remains the same size. Here, for the first time, he did not believe his own calculations and felt it necessary to add a "cosmological constant" to his field equation—a fudge factor he later described as his greatest blunder when astronomers demonstratedthat the universe was in fact expanding. More recent theorists suspect that the cosmological constant was needed, after all—but until another Einstein comes along, the field equation remains the closest thing we have to a divine blueprint for the universe. While the actual math is heavy going, Aczel gives a very readable account of the science and the scientists involved.

From the Publisher

"[Einstein's] field equation remains the closest thing we have to a divine blueprint for the universe....Aczel gives a very readable account of the science and the scientists involved."
Kirkus Reviews

"There is something startling on just about every page."
San Francisco Chronicle

"It is a wonderful time to glance back over Einstein's path in developing the field equation...fortunately, we have a fabulous guide in Amir D. Aczel."
Discover

FEB/MAR 03 - AudioFile

Professor Aczel’s audiobook comes fully loaded with a rich vocabulary and new ideas. It’s a stunning and humbling study of the cosmos from the Big Bang to whatever. Although there are some awesome mathematical formulas and terminology included, the genre is a history of science for listeners seeking quality. The biographies of the great minds surrounding Einstein are blended into an entertaining, yet intellectual, history with a slant that only a scientist would assume. The velvet-voiced Kent Broadhurst uses the refined voice and rhythm swings of a good storyteller, sliding with ease from the theories presented at meetings to the guests’ memories of what they drank afterward. J.A.H. © AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171816070
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 11/28/2000
Edition description: Unabridged
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