THE QUANTUM SEA OF VACUUM: WHY EMPTY SPACE BEHAVES LIKE AN OCEAN
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Beschrijving
Bol
For a hundred years the cosmological constant has been served up as physics' most embarrassing riddle. Empty space, we are told, has no structure at all-no grain, no direction, no preferred place to stand-and yet it presses outward on the universe, stretching the heavens apart with a quiet, relentless force. How can the same nothing be both featureless and full of push? How can emptiness shove? This book answers by refusing the trick question. The word "structureless," it turns out, smuggles two very different ideas into one. Water does not resist being sheared-stir it and it simply flows-yet squeeze it and it pushes back hard, for water is among the least compressible substances in your kitchen. It is disordered, frame-free, and stiff, all at once, with no contradiction whatsoever. The vacuum, this book argues, is empty in exactly the way water is empty: it yields to twisting but resists being compressed. And the "water" in question is no metaphor. It is the quark sea, a real condensate filling all of space, whose stiffness has already been measured in laboratories that never once looked at the sky. Without a single equation, leading the reader by a patient double step-first the ocean we can touch, then the vacuum we cannot-the book builds an entire discipline of "vacuum-dynamics." It tells of ripples and tides as two motions of one sea; of a global turning that stretches space without ever choosing a direction; of a vacuum with three states of matter, liquid and gas and a strange crystalline ice; of vacuum weather, with currents that drag the world along behind them. It is a tour of the fullest emptiness ever described, and an honest one: where knowledge runs out, the book says so, and turns the gaps into an invitation. >cosmology, vacuum, dark energy, quantum physics, cosmological constant, philosophy of science, popular science
For a hundred years the cosmological constant has been served up as physics' most embarrassing riddle. Empty space, we are told, has no structure at all-no grain, no direction, no preferred place to stand-and yet it presses outward on the universe, stretching the heavens apart with a quiet, relentless force. How can the same nothing be both featureless and full of push? How can emptiness shove? This book answers by refusing the trick question. The word "structureless," it turns out, smuggles two very different ideas into one. Water does not resist being sheared-stir it and it simply flows-yet squeeze it and it pushes back hard, for water is among the least compressible substances in your kitchen. It is disordered, frame-free, and stiff, all at once, with no contradiction whatsoever. The vacuum, this book argues, is empty in exactly the way water is empty: it yields to twisting but resists being compressed. And the "water" in question is no metaphor. It is the quark sea, a real condensate filling all of space, whose stiffness has already been measured in laboratories that never once looked at the sky. Without a single equation, leading the reader by a patient double step-first the ocean we can touch, then the vacuum we cannot-the book builds an entire discipline of "vacuum-dynamics." It tells of ripples and tides as two motions of one sea; of a global turning that stretches space without ever choosing a direction; of a vacuum with three states of matter, liquid and gas and a strange crystalline ice; of vacuum weather, with currents that drag the world along behind them. It is a tour of the fullest emptiness ever described, and an honest one: where knowledge runs out, the book says so, and turns the gaps into an invitation. >cosmology, vacuum, dark energy, quantum physics, cosmological constant, philosophy of science, popular science
AmazonPagina's: 220, Paperback, Independently published
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