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Why Does E=mc2?: (And Why Should We Care?) [Paperback]

Brian Cox , Jeff Forshaw
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Book Description

July 13 2010 0306818760 978-0306818769
What does E=mc2 actually mean? Dr. Brian Cox and Professor Jeff Forshaw go on a journey to the frontier of twenty-first century science to unpack Einstein&#8217;s famous equation. Explaining and simplifying notions of energy, mass, and light&#151;while exploding commonly held misconceptions&#151;they demonstrate how the structure of nature itself is contained within this equation. Along the way, we visit the site of one of the largest scientific experiments ever conducted: the now-famous Large Hadron Collider, a gigantic particle accelerator capable of re-creating conditions that existed fractions of a second after the Big Bang.<P>A collaboration between one of the youngest professors in the United Kingdom and a distinguished popular physicist,<I>Why Does E=mc2?</I> is one of the most exciting and accessible explanations of the theory of relativity.

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Review

Blogcritics.org, 8/22/10
“Cox and Forshaw make a good point in stating that space, time, and even nature are contained within the equation…Although the theory might be tricky, the authors show they understand readers are not on their level. By going one step at a time, the buildup ensures each chuck is absorbed slowly rather than all at once.”

Booktrade.info, 8/24/10
“This book takes the world’s most famous equation apart and puts it back together again in a way that is lively and understandable.  We were delighted to find our knowledge of equations—long forgotten since leaving school for some of us—reinvigorated and felt ourselves rediscovering our enjoyment of mathematics.”
 
Choice, September 2010
“Thorough, engaging.”
 
New Scientist, 8/28/10
“Brian Cox and Jeff Forshaw tackle the most famous equation of all time in a remarkable comprehensible way…The pair make some surprising points that I haven’t seen expressed in quite the same way…Well worth a read.”
 
January, 8/16/10
“Particle physics professor Brian Cox and professor of theoretical physics, Jeff Forshaw are clearly trained to have the answers. But here's something that training as a physicist simply can not teach: they deliver their message not only clearly, but with a deep and resonant humor.”
 
BiblioBuffet.com
“[Cox and Forshaw are] good communicators overall (they find understandable ways of explaining most concepts) and they have important things to say…What’s important about this book is not that it says something new about science. It’s that it gives a primer for understanding how a certain type of scientist sees the universe.”
 
New York Journal of Books
“[An] easy-to-read little book…[Cox and Forshaw] very cleverly introduce all the ideas we will need to get to the world’s most famous equation, E=mc2. What is more, they focus on the most puzzling part: the question of what c, the speed of light, is doing in there…Their arguments are so presented so clearly…It is to their credit that they do not always hide the complexity nor the long history of ideas behind relativity…It is also to their credit that they make the case, as Feynman and others have done before them, that, at some level, the weirdness of the universe just has to be accepted…Will help school science teachers as much as it will their students.”
 
The Guardian, 10/18/10
“The reader is in supremely capable hands with Brian Cox and Jeff Forshaw…For anyone afraid of technicalities, Cox and Forshaw lead the reader by the hand through the complexity, adding in rest stops of wit and real-world examples. Even the hardest bits feel like being taken on an army assault course by the two friendliest drill sergeants in the world. You may have to read some bits twice but, boy, will you feel better for it once the insights become clear. In the process of exposing the science, the authors do a good job of showing how the hard end of research works: abandon all assumptions and re-build everything from scratch.”

London
Daily Telegraph, 10/19/10
“[A] brilliant exposition of Einstein’s famous equation… [Gives] a fresh understanding of Einstein’s genius. A truly impressive achievement.”

The Independent,
10/20/10
“Brian Cox and Jeff Forshaw take Einstein's description of the relationship between energy and matter, pull it apart and put it together again, with some detours into space and time along the way. Not an easy read, but not an easy subject.”
 
Nature, 10/28/10
“Provide[s] an accessible explanation of Einstein’s iconic equation.”
 
Cape Times (South Africa),11/5/10
“Fans of the physical sciences will undoubtedly enjoy this read…The true success of Why Does E=mc2? lies in Cox and Forshaw having made the most esoteric of ideas…accessible to the layman…The pair manage to hold their readers' hands as they skip through the figures and facts—without patronizing them—to create a logical map between theory and consequence.”
 
Midwest Book Review, December 2010
“An easy survey of science for non-scientists.”

London Times (UK), 1/6/11
Name one of the “Top 10 Science Books of 2010.”
 
The Scotsman (Scotland), 12/11/10
Named one of the “Top Reads of 2010.”
 
The Bookseller, UK, 3/25/11
“[Cox] will join an elite group of just eight authors who’ve penned a science book that has sold in six figures.”

About the Author

<B>Brian Cox</B> is a distinguished particle physicist and popular TV host who divides his time between Manchester, England, and Geneva, Switzerland.<P><B>Jeff Forshaw</B> is a professor at the University of Manchester and a recipient of the Institute of Physics Maxwell Medal. He lives in Manchester, England.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A joy to read Dec 22 2010
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
This book is a detailed exploration of the wonderful ideas of Albert Einstein. The authors went to great lengths simplifying and explaining some of the math behind the greatest formula of the past century (perhaps of all time). A joy to read, this book will change the way you see your space and time on this planet.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By C. J. Thompson TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
I find the subject matter of this book fascinating and I have enjoyed others touching on the same basic subject. However, although the preface promises to illuminate the subject with mathematics no more difficult than the Pythagorean theorem, I found that this was a bit misleading... There are lots of formulas embedded within the text and, with my very basic mathematical education, I found the going very tough. Ulitimately, I abandoned the book somewhere around three-quarters of the way through. I am not qualified to comment on the accuracy of much these authors have to say but I would counsel those without a lot of experience working with mathematics and physics problems to be cautious in spending money on this book.
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By Ronald W. Maron TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
If you have been searching for a readable, understandable text that uses only Pythagorean mathematical concepts yet fully explains Einstein's basic theories, look no further. The book not only covers the concept of E=mc2, but also goes into the theories of general and specific relativity in a manner that most lay persons will come to understand these far-reaching anomalies.

You will discover by the end of the text that Einstein was not the intellectual superman that the media and we, the populace, needed him to be. While he was highly intelligent and had uncanny mathematical skills, his hard work, single mindedness and creative view towards problem solving was what propelled him to the tenuous position of intellectual superhero.
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