Astro-Physics: New Theories & Layman's Book Recs

  • Thread starter Thread starter FawkesCa
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Book Theories
AI Thread Summary
For those seeking accessible recommendations on the latest theories in astrophysics, a notable suggestion is "Quantum – A Guide for the Perplexed" by Jim Al Khalili. This book effectively bridges the concepts of astrophysics and quantum physics, emphasizing the interconnectedness of large-scale cosmic phenomena and subatomic interactions. It provides a clear overview of fundamental topics such as star and planet formation, the nature of sunlight, and insights into the early universe post-Big Bang. While it may not cover every specific question, it serves as a solid starting point for further exploration into the complexities of both astrophysics and quantum mechanics.
FawkesCa
Messages
43
Reaction score
0
can anyone give me a good book recommendation for the newest theories in astro-physics? in reletively layman's terms
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I strongly suspect that this thread should be on, and will very shortly find itself moved to, the science books forum. A book focussed particularly on astro-physics I can’t help you with, but as is frequently pointed out these days, the physics of the truly vast and the physics of the incredibly tiny are turning out to be much the same. If you want to understand how stars and planets form, why suns shine, how they have figured out what happened in the early period after the big bang, all those kind of questions on the astrological scale, the answers lie in how subatomic particles interact and in all the kind of questions you ask at the quantum scale. A book I can recommend that gives an excellent overview of these things on both scales is ‘Quantum – A Guide for the Perplexed’ by Jim Al Khalili. It is very accessible, very clearly explained and superbly illustrated. I don’t suggest for a moment that it will have all of the answers you want. But it should be an excellent start point, and should guide you on what specifics you want to investigate more deeply.
 
The book is fascinating. If your education includes a typical math degree curriculum, with Lebesgue integration, functional analysis, etc, it teaches QFT with only a passing acquaintance of ordinary QM you would get at HS. However, I would read Lenny Susskind's book on QM first. Purchased a copy straight away, but it will not arrive until the end of December; however, Scribd has a PDF I am now studying. The first part introduces distribution theory (and other related concepts), which...
I've gone through the Standard turbulence textbooks such as Pope's Turbulent Flows and Wilcox' Turbulent modelling for CFD which mostly Covers RANS and the closure models. I want to jump more into DNS but most of the work i've been able to come across is too "practical" and not much explanation of the theory behind it. I wonder if there is a book that takes a theoretical approach to Turbulence starting from the full Navier Stokes Equations and developing from there, instead of jumping from...
Back
Top