- Shopping Bag ( 0 items )
Available on NOOK devices and apps
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
Science, biography, and arctic exploration coverage in this extraordinary true story of the life and work of Norwegian scientist Kristian Birkeland, the troubled genius who solved the mysteries of one of nature’s most spectacular displays.
Captivated by the otherworldly lights of the aurora borealis, Birkeland embarked on a lifelong quest to discover their cause. His pursuit took him to some of the most forbidding landscapes on earth, from the remote snowcapped mountains of Norway to the war-torn deserts of Africa. In the face of rebuke by the scientific establishment, sabotage by a jealous rival, and his own battles with depression and paranoia, Birkeland remained steadfast. Although ultimately vindicated, his theories were unheralded—and his hopes for the Nobel Prize scuttled—at the time of his suspicious death in 1917.
The Northern Lights offers a brilliant account of the physics behind the aurora borealis and a rare look inside the mind of one of history's most visionary scientists.
From the Trade Paperback edition.
In Birkeland's day, auroras were one of the last unsolved phenomena of the natural world. It was his belief that they marked the link between earth and the energy forces in the universe. His Arctic voyages make for wonderful reading in their own right, but they are only a prelude to the tale that follows. When Birkeland -- and what remained of his crew -- returned to Norway, he wanted to build a safe laboratory environment that re-created the Arctic conditions of the northern lights. His scheme was to create inventions that he hoped to sell to industry, but most were spectacular failures. One blew up in his face, threw him across the room, and set fire to a power station all at once. Another shot flames and an electric arc at an audience he had gathered to demonstrate his new creation. But Birkeland finally figured out that by using the same technology that had led to his former pyrotechnic disasters, he could produce saltpeter fertilizer. The discovery made him a very wealthy man and freed him up to do his work. Unencumbered by financial restraints and divorced by his desperately lonely wife, whom he had all but abandoned, he was able to give free rein to his brilliant obsessions.
In Birkeland's remaining years he worked demonically, devising a cosmogony that included the electromagnetic nature of the universe and the splitting of the atom. His story ends tragically, with drug and alcohol abuse, paranoia, and death in Japan in 1917 at the age of 51. For many years thereafter, his theories were ignored, but in 1966 a U.S. Navy navigation satellite observed magnetic disturbances on nearly every pass it made over the polar regions. Birkeland was vindicated, and today he is acknowledged as being the first scientist to have a correct explanation of the aurora borealis. "Birkeland currents," as they were christened in 1967, pay homage to his vision. (Judith Estrine)
| List of Illustrations | ix | |
| Author's Note | xi | |
| Acknowledgments | xiii | |
| Part I | Aurora Borealis | 1 |
| 1 | Odin's Messengers | 3 |
| 2 | Land of the Lapps | 13 |
| 3 | The Castle | 29 |
| 4 | A Warning | 47 |
| 5 | "Riddle Solved!" | 61 |
| 6 | The Cannon | 85 |
| 7 | Mad Dogs | 100 |
| Part II | The Terrella | 117 |
| 8 | Explosion! | 119 |
| 9 | The Furnace | 130 |
| 10 | Ida | 147 |
| 11 | Looking Back from Space | 161 |
| 12 | The Divine Option | 177 |
| 13 | Vast, Infinite Space | 190 |
| Part III | Zodiacal Light | 207 |
| 14 | The Dusty Disc | 209 |
| 15 | War | 229 |
| 16 | Letters from Home | 245 |
| 17 | Brittle Remains | 255 |
| Epilogue | 269 | |
| Select Bibliography | 283 | |
| Index | 289 |
Anonymous
Posted October 31, 2003
Fascinating book on what the Northern Lights were thought to be and the revelations of what they really are. I found the best part of the book is when Berkeland is first trying to determine what the Northern Lights are and the winter he and his team spent on top of a mountain in Norway. Harrowing.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted December 21, 2009
No text was provided for this review.
Anonymous
Posted October 14, 2010
No text was provided for this review.
Anonymous
Posted October 27, 2010
No text was provided for this review.
Overview
Science, biography, and arctic exploration coverage in this extraordinary true story of the life and work of Norwegian scientist Kristian Birkeland, the troubled genius who solved the mysteries of one of nature’s most spectacular displays.
Captivated by the otherworldly lights of the aurora borealis, Birkeland embarked on a lifelong quest to discover their cause. His pursuit took him to some of the most forbidding landscapes on earth, from the remote snowcapped mountains of Norway to the war-torn deserts of Africa. In the face of rebuke by the scientific establishment, sabotage by a jealous rival, and his own battles with depression and ...