Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Prologue
- Route map
- 1 Waves versus particles
- 2 Heisenberg and uncertainty
- 3 Schrödinger and matter waves
- 4 Atoms and nuclei
- 5 Quantum tunnelling
- 6 Pauli and the elements
- 7 Quantum co-operation and superfluids
- 8 Quantum jumps
- 9 Quantum engineering
- 10 Death of a star
- 11 Feynman rules
- 12 Weak photons and strong glue
- 13 Afterword – quantum physics and science fiction
- Epilogue
- Appendix 1 The size of things
- Appendix 2 Solving the Schrödinger equation
- Glossary
- Quotations and sources
- Suggestions for further reading
- Photo-credits
- Name index
- Subject index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Prologue
- Route map
- 1 Waves versus particles
- 2 Heisenberg and uncertainty
- 3 Schrödinger and matter waves
- 4 Atoms and nuclei
- 5 Quantum tunnelling
- 6 Pauli and the elements
- 7 Quantum co-operation and superfluids
- 8 Quantum jumps
- 9 Quantum engineering
- 10 Death of a star
- 11 Feynman rules
- 12 Weak photons and strong glue
- 13 Afterword – quantum physics and science fiction
- Epilogue
- Appendix 1 The size of things
- Appendix 2 Solving the Schrödinger equation
- Glossary
- Quotations and sources
- Suggestions for further reading
- Photo-credits
- Name index
- Subject index
Summary
The popularization of science is now an established business for booksellers and publishers. The traditional formula for a ‘trade’ book on popular science is a text of about 100 000 words or so (around 200 pages) with relatively few diagrams or pictures. The target audience is the educated reader with a general interest in science. At the other end of the scale we have popular science reference books such as encyclopedias and atlases. Our target audience lies in between these two extremes. We wish to write a book that will not only interest the ‘educated reader’ as above but, more importantly, capture the interest and imagination of young people. We believe that it is vitally important to give young people a glimpse of the excitement of physics so that they may be motivated to take up the challenge themselves. Nowadays, there are many more alternatives for young people and there is a general perception that science and mathematics are ‘hard’ subjects. It is certainly true that understanding in these subjects does not come without effort and real mastery may indeed take years. So we cannot promise instant gratification. What we can promise is that the study of science and mathematics will provide a gateway to a deeper understanding of a fascinating universe – our universe, a quantum universe. And paradoxically, as our world becomes more and more dependent on science and technology, it has also become increasingly technologically fragile in that fewer people understand the technology on which we all depend.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The New Quantum Universe , pp. ix - xiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003