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21 de dez. de 2000 · With a new introduction, epilogue, and chapter updates, Krauss updates his classic for 1999 and shares one of the most stunning discoveries of recent years: an anti-gravity force that explains recent observations of a permanently expanding universe. Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more.
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- 2000
- Lawrence Krauss
- Lawrence M. Krauss
Quintessence: The Search for Missing Mass in the Universe is the fifth non-fiction book by the American theoretical physicist Lawrence M. Krauss. [1] The book was published by Basic Books on December 21, 2000.
- Lawrence Krauss
- 2000
Compre online Quintessence the Search for Missing Mass in the Universe: The Mystery of Missing Mass in the Universe, de Krauss, Lawrence M. na Amazon. Frete GRÁTIS em milhares de produtos com o Amazon Prime. Encontre diversos livros escritos por Krauss, Lawrence M. com ótimos preços.
- Capa Comum
14 de jun. de 2021 · xxvii, 356 pages : 25 cm. Discusses the paradox of modern cosmology called dark matter in which there is too little visible matter to account for the observable behavior of galaxies, clusters and superclusters. Revised edition of: The fifth essence. c1989--Preface. Includes bibliographical references (pages 346-347) and index.
With a new introduction, epilogue and chapter updates, Krauss updates his classic and shares one of the most stunning discoveries of recent years: an antigravity force that explains recent...
Will the universe continue to expand forever, reverse its expansion and begin to contract, or reach a delicately poised state where it simply persists forever? The answer depends on the amount and properties of matter in the universe, and that has given rise to one of the great paradoxes of modern cosmology: there is too little visible matter ...
- Lawrence M. Krauss
Will the universe expand forever, begin to contract at some time in the future, or get to a balanced state? The answer depends on the amount of mass it contains. To explain the behavior of galaxies unaccountable by the mass of visible matter, the idea of "dark matter" was proposed in the 1980s.
- Lawrence Krauss