Friday, 15 July 2011 15:07

Wrinkles in Time

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Nobel Prize winner George Smoot's compelling account of his work leading up to COBE, which was the first probe to produce maps of the Cosmic Microwave Background.

George Smoot led the team behind COBE, the first space probe to make maps of the Cosmic Microwave Background, the "echo" of the Big Bang which permeates all of space. The maps showed minute fluctuations in temperature in the CMB; these would later form the "seeds" around which matter formed and concentrated. The "wrinkles in time" of the title.

But long before COBE, Smoot and team were launching experiments from balloons in the Antarctic and over the jungles of South America. They were designing and building cutting-edge instruments which could make measurements of the cosmos from high-flying U2 spyplanes. These tales are filled with equal measure of triumph and tragedy, punctuated throughout with Smoot's wry humour. Smoot brings the actual business of doing science to life beautifully: we freeze with him in Anarctica when he is launching balloons or wrestling against the wind to construct a telescope, and sweat with him in the jungle as his team searches for a crashed balloon gondola with its priceless scientific payload. Along the way we learn the science behind Smoot's quest: to make those historic maps of the CMB, revealing the first signs of structure in the early Universe. It's an engrossing tale, written for non-scientists and eloquently described.

Smoot, of course, won the Nobel Prize for his work in 2006, and this book makes you realise how richly it was deserved. A classic book.

Additional Info

  • Year Published: 1995
  • ISBN: 978-0349106021
  • Author: George Smoot
  • Publisher: Abacus
  • Price: 3.99 GBP
Read 2402 times Last modified on Friday, 15 July 2011 17:20
Andy Briggs

The creator and publisher of Science File, Andy is a software educator and developer by profession, having worked professionally in IT for 25 years for some of the world's largest companies such as HP and IBM as well as local and central government. As well as technology, his interests include astronomy, astrophysics, cosmology, writing music, archaeology and palaeontology.  Andy is married, lives in Catalonia, Spain and has a 13-month-old baby daughter, who is the absolute apple of his eye. Andy is currently researching how the new generation of electronic publishing tools can help him to build a bigger, better and more professional version of Science File.

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Website: www.sciencefile.org
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