Publishers Weekly
02/25/2019
Science journalist Dunkley offers a fascinating, accessible introduction to the universe, covering topics ranging from the Big Bang and the “cosmic dawn” of the first stars to the ongoing search for exoplanets and for dark matter and energy. Dunkley begins close to home, with the Earth and Moon, before moving outward from the solar system to the Milky Way, to the edge of the known universe. Along the way, she explains how stars fuse atoms to create energy, and how white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes form. The topic of black holes introduces a discussion of how scientists can search for—and find—things humans cannot see, by observing how their gravity affects the light around them. Similarly, a précis on Einstein’s theory of general relativity leads into how the universe began and evolved into an ever-expanding, varied space, and not simply a “monotonously regular sea of atoms and dark matter.” In a cosmos-spanning work that also offers a tantalizing glimpse of the possibility of realities beyond this one, Dunkley gives readers a commanding view onto the universe and the wonders to be found in it. (Apr.)
Jocelyn Bell Burnell
This book is simply superb—beautifully written and very clear. It incorporates all the major recent results, and indicates what might come from telescopes now being built.
Nature
This luminous guide to the cosmos encapsulates myriad discoveries. Astrophysicist Jo Dunkley swoops from Earth to the observable limits, then explores stellar life cycles, dark matter, cosmic evolution, and the soup-to-nuts history of the Universe. No less a thrill are her accounts of tenth-century Persian astronomer Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi, twentieth- and twenty-first-century researchers Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, Jocelyn Bell Burnell and Vera Rubin, and many more.
Ethan Siegel
Combining observational cosmology with a solid theoretical framework, Dunkley’s Our Universe takes us on a cosmic tour…This is a book any future observational or theoretical astrophysicist would love to have.
Andrea Wulf
Jo Dunkley takes us on a fantastic journey through our universe—elegantly weaving together history and the latest scientific discoveries. On her way, she subtly restores all the forgotten women scientists to their rightful places in what has been a male-dominated story until now.
Well-Read Naturalist - Johannes E. Riutta
What with all the commonly appearing stories about space making their way into both the old and new news media these days, an understanding of just what we presently know about what’s ‘out there,’ how we presently think it formed, how it all works together, and where it’s all going is not only fascinating, it also helps to keep things in perspective.
Martin Rees
Jo Dunkley is an internationally acclaimed cosmologist. She is also a fine expositor, and this book splendidly conveys what we’ve learnt about the universe, and the exhilarating progress we can expect in coming decades.
Space Review - Jeff Foust
Provides a high-level overview of our understanding of the universe that is a good introduction for those unfamiliar with astrophysics.
BBC Sky at Night - Govert Schilling
Dunkley takes her readers on a grand tour of space and time, from our nearest planetary neighbors to the edge of the observable Universe…If you feel like refreshing your background knowledge, or are looking for a present for your curious niece or nephew, this little gem certainly won’t disappoint.
Robert P. Kirshner
Jo Dunkley is an amiable guide to the universe, but there's no dawdling in this fast-paced tour. This slender volume whisks you from our own blue marble out to the edge of the universe and the beginning of time. Dunkley is especially good at explaining how the whispers from the Big Bang itself tell us about dark matter and dark energy and hint at its explosive origin in cosmic inflation.
Michael Strauss
A grand overview of modern cosmology from one of the leaders in the field. Dunkley guides us through astronomical history, at every stage explaining the twists and turns and surprises, right up to the most recent discoveries. Readers will have a real appreciation of the most exciting developments in astrophysics of the last millennium, the last century, and the last year.
Nature Lib
This luminous guide to the cosmos encapsulates myriad discoveries. Astrophysicist Jo Dunkley swoops from Earth to the observable limits, then explores stellar life cycles, dark matter, cosmic evolution, and the soup-to-nuts history of the Universe. No less a thrill are her accounts of tenth-century Persian astronomer Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi, twentieth- and twenty-first-century researchers Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, Jocelyn Bell Burnell and Vera Rubin, and many more.