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Index
Cover Title Page Copyright Page Dedication Page Contents Acknowledgments Prologue Preface 1. From Myth to Science
The Word Creation Ex Nihilo Other Cultures Greek Physical Cosmology
Thales Anaximander Anaximenes The Atomists Pythagoras and Philolaus Empedocles Plato Aristotle Aristarchus Hipparchus Ptolemy
2. Toward the New Cosmos
Cosmology in Christendom Cosmology in the Arabic Empire Copernicus and the Sun-Centered Universe Initial Reaction Kepler and the Laws of Planetary Motion
Kepler's Laws of Planetary Motion
Turning the Telescope on the Heavens Galilean Relativity
Principle of Galilean Relativity
The Mechanical Universe
Newton's Second Law of Motion
Opticks Newton and God
3. Beyond Unaided Human Vision
Eighteenth-Century Astronomy Kant's Cosmos Herschel's Heavens Olbers's Paradox Sufficient Reason The Center of the Universe
4. Glimpses of the Unimagined
The Advance of Celestial Mechanics Laplace's Demon Nineteenth-Century Astronomy
5. Heat, Light, and the Atom
Thermodynamics
First Law of Thermodynamics Second Law of Thermodynamics
Electromagnetism Atoms and Statistical Mechanics Violating the Second Law The Arrow of Time The End of Classical Physics Anomalies
6. The Second Physics Revolution
Everything Explained? Not Quite Special Relativity The Relativity of Time and Space Time and Space Defined The Relativity of Energy and Momentum General Relativity Black Holes Noether's Theorem Quantum Mechanics The Planck Scale Atoms and Nuclei
7. Island Universes
The Cepheid Scale Off Center High-Speed Astronomy A Spiraling Debate The Realm of Hubble
8. A Dynamic Cosmos
Relativistic Cosmology Friedmann's Universe Lemaître's Universe Hubble's Law Lemaître is Noticed Lemaître's Primeval Atom “Therefore, God Exists!” Tired Light Variable Constants Milne's Cosmology Missing Mass Radio Astronomy
9. Nuclear Cosmology
Filling in More Details A Hot, Dense Past Ylem The Steady-State Challenge Stellar Nucleosynthesis The Steady State and God Active Galaxies
Seyfert Galaxies Radio Galaxies Quasars
Pulsars
10. Relics of the Big Bang
Static from the Sky The Spectrum Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis Reborn David Schramm: The Gentle Giant of Cosmology Temperature in the Expanding Universe The Light Nuclei On to Atoms
11. Particles and the Cosmos
The Visible Universe The Structure Problem Gravitational Lensing The Invisible Universe The Rise of Particle Physics Symmetry and Invariance Symmetries and the “Laws of Physics” Particles or Fields? The Birth of Particle Astrophysics Matter-Antimatter Asymmetry The Search for Proton Decay The GUT Phase Transition Supersymmetry (SUSY) M-Theory
12. Inflation
Big-Bang Bugs
The Flatness Problem The Horizon Problem The Structure Problem The Monopole Problem
Inflation, Old and New
The Flatness Problem Solved The Horizon Problem Solved The Monopole Problem Solved
Chaotic Inflation Large-Scale Structure Structure and Inflation Looking Back to the Beginning
13. Falling Up
Wrinkles in Time New Windows on the Universe Very High-Energy Astrophysics Neutrino Mass Dark Matter WIMPS and SUSY Dark Energy The Cosmological-Constant Problem Back to the Source Jumping on the Bandwagon
14. Modeling the Universe
Surveying the Sky Hearing the Bang ΛCDM The First Stars The Planck Satellite Gravitational Waves Searching for Dark Matter Recent Hints of Sterile Neutrino Dark Matter Highest-Energy Neutrinos Ever A Word of Caution
15. The Eternal Multiverse
From the Big Bang to Now The Future Did the Universe have a Beginning? At the Planck Time Quantum Gravity The Biverse The Multiverse Eternal Inflation Solving the Entropy Problem Discovering other Universes The Many Worlds of Quantum Mechanics Timeless Reality Are Many Worlds Real? What is Real? The Mormon Multiverse The Multiverse in Philosophy and Literature
16. Life and God
Planets and Life The Fine-Tuning Question Trivial Parameters Parameters Needed for any Form of Life
The Ratio of Electrons to Protons in the Universe The Ratio of Electromagnetic Force to Gravity The Expansion Rate and Mass Density of the Universe The Cosmological Constant
Other Parameters
The Hoyle Prediction Relative Masses of the Elementary Particles Relative Strengths of the Forces and other Physics Parameters Cosmic Parameters Simulating Universes
Summary of the Case against Fine-Tuning Something Rather than Nothing
1. How can Something Come from Nothing? 2. Where do the Laws of Physics Come from? 3. Why is there Something Rather than Nothing?
The Grand Accident The God Hypothesis A Summary
1. We are Alone 2. We are not Alone
Notes Bibliography About the Author Index Back Cover
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