Faster than Light: How Your Shadow Can Do It but You Can't

Faster than Light: How Your Shadow Can Do It but You Can't

by Robert J. Nemiroff
Faster than Light: How Your Shadow Can Do It but You Can't

Faster than Light: How Your Shadow Can Do It but You Can't

by Robert J. Nemiroff

eBook

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Overview

Albert Einstein knew already in the early 1900s, when he first published his famous paper about the constancy of the speed of light, that not only did this constancy imply that mass contains energy (E = m c squared), but that faster-than-light motion could lead to paradoxes -- some that seemed to involve backwards time travel.

What are these paradoxes? Why is light and its speed relevant? This book will lead you through an obstacle course of conundrums and oddities, building up your understanding of how light's speed creates simple but mind-expanding paradoxes -- one conceptual riddle at a time.

This is not your average popular science book. This is also not a textbook. This book takes one theme -- the universally constant speed of light -- and shows how it may appear compromised on scales from the quantum mechanics of the very small to the cosmology of the very large, and the resulting surprising implications can result.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940185867938
Publisher: Betelgeuse Press
Publication date: 09/09/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 297,568
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

Dr. Robert Nemiroff is a Professor of Physics at Michigan Technological University. He is quite proud of his award as an “exceptional graduate student mentor.” He holds a PhD from the University of Pennsylvania and became a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2022. Dr. Nemiroff is perhaps best known as a creator and editor for one of NASA's most popular science websites: The Astronomy Picture of the Day at apod.nasa.gov/.

This book is a humorous popularization of surprising research published in top physics and astrophysics journals. In his spare time, Robert likes to play basketball, read and watch science fiction, and think about concepts in science that are both very simple and very strange.
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