|
Showing 1 - 10 of
10 matches in All Departments
It's Fall in Manhattan a time when tourist and residents a like are
enjoying the fashions, the crisp fall air and the Broadway nights.
Everyone that is except for Detective Samantha Stephens and her
partner Detective Steiner. They are on the hunt for a deviant
serial killer who is preying on young petite women. With the
collaborative efforts of FBI profiler Psychologist Dr. Franklin
Houston they track down lead after lead as the bodies begin to pile
up across the borough. The story begins with the discovery of yet
another body. A young blonde woman lies dead, a victim of torture,
strangulation, and sexual assault, just like the other victims. Sam
realizes that this has all the makings of a serial killer- the
victims all have the same stature, but differ in ethnicity. Thus
begins the task of sifting through missing person's profiles to see
if there are any more victims out there. The rest of the story
takes the reader on a journey with Sam as she scours the borough of
Manhattan in an effort to track down the killer and prevent any
more victims. The combination of Sam's aggressiveness and Steiner's
experience makes this tale an interesting cat-and-mouse chase. With
the twists and turns in the plot along with deftly drawn
characters, the reader is captivated at the outset.
'Everything you wanted to know about physics but were afraid to
ask' Priyamvada Natarajan, author of Mapping the Heavens
__________________________ When leading theoretical physicist
Professor Michael Dine was asked where you could find an accessible
book that would teach you about the Big Bang, Dark Matter, the
Higgs boson and the cutting edge of physics now, he had nothing he
could recommend. So he wrote it himself. In This Way to the
Universe, Dine takes us on a fascinating tour through the history
of modern physics - from Newtonian mechanics to quantum, from
particle to nuclear physics - delving into the wonders of our
universe at its largest, smallest, and within our daily lives. If
you are looking for the one book to help you understand physics,
written in language anyone can follow, this is it.
__________________________ 'An extraordinary journey into what we
know, what we hope to know, and what we don't know, about the
universe and the laws that govern it' Leonard Susskind, author of
The Theoretical Minimum series 'This book is a rare event . . .
presented by someone who is a true master' Sean Carroll, author of
From Eternity to Here 'Dine's enthusiastic storytelling makes the
read worth it for those who want to finally wrap their mind around
string theory or the Higgs boson' Tess Joosse, Scientific American
The book is based on lectures given at the TASI summer school of
2010. It aims to provide advanced graduate students, postdoctorates
and senior researchers with a survey of important topics in
particle physics and string theory, with special emphasis on
applications of methods from string theory and quantum gravity in
condensed matter physics and QCD (especially heavy ion physics).
This text is an introduction to the fields of experimental and
theoretical particle physics and cosmology. The book focuses on
three principal areas: supersymmetry, string theory, and
astrophysics and cosmology. The chapters on supersymmetry introduce
the basics of supersymmetry and its phenomenology, and cover
dynamics, dynamical supersymmetry breaking, and electric-magnetic
duality. The book then introduces general relativity and the big
bang theory, and the basic issues in inflationary cosmologies. The
section on string theory discusses the spectra of known string
theories, and the features of their interactions. Material added in
the second edition includes the pivotal Higgs discovery and the
results of the WMAP and Planck experiments. This book will be of
great interest to graduates and researchers in the fields of
particle theory, string theory, astrophysics, and cosmology. It has
been reissued as an Open Access publication on Cambridge Core.
This text is an introduction to the fields of experimental and
theoretical particle physics and cosmology. The book focuses on
three principal areas: supersymmetry, string theory, and
astrophysics and cosmology. The chapters on supersymmetry introduce
the basics of supersymmetry and its phenomenology, and cover
dynamics, dynamical supersymmetry breaking, and electric-magnetic
duality. The book then introduces general relativity and the big
bang theory, and the basic issues in inflationary cosmologies. The
section on string theory discusses the spectra of known string
theories, and the features of their interactions. Material added in
the second edition includes the pivotal Higgs discovery and the
results of the WMAP and Planck experiments. This book will be of
great interest to graduates and researchers in the fields of
particle theory, string theory, astrophysics, and cosmology. It has
been reissued as an Open Access publication on Cambridge Core.
'Extraordinary' Leonard Susskind 'A rare event' Sean Carroll _____
When leading theoretical physicist Professor Michael Dine was asked
where you could find an accessible and authoritative book that
would teach you about the Big Bang, Dark Matter, the Higgs boson
and the cutting edge of physics now, he had nothing he could
recommend. So he wrote it himself. In This Way to the Universe,
Dine takes us on a fascinating tour through the history of modern
physics - from Newtonian mechanics to quantum, from particle to
nuclear physics - delving into the wonders of our universe at its
largest, smallest, and within our daily lives. If you are looking
for the one book to help you understand physics, written in
language anyone can follow, this is it. _____ 'A tour de force of
literally all of fundamental physics' BBC Sky at Night magazine
'Everything you wanted to know about physics but were afraid to
ask' Priyamvada Natarajan, author of Mapping the Heavens
It's Fall in Manhattan a time when tourist and residents a like are
enjoying the fashions, the crisp fall air and the Broadway nights.
Everyone that is except for Detective Samantha Stephens and her
partner Detective Steiner. They are on the hunt for a deviant
serial killer who is preying on young petite women. With the
collaborative efforts of FBI profiler Psychologist Dr. Franklin
Houston they track down lead after lead as the bodies begin to pile
up across the borough. The story begins with the discovery of yet
another body. A young blonde woman lies dead, a victim of torture,
strangulation, and sexual assault, just like the other victims. Sam
realizes that this has all the makings of a serial killer- the
victims all have the same stature, but differ in ethnicity. Thus
begins the task of sifting through missing person's profiles to see
if there are any more victims out there. The rest of the story
takes the reader on a journey with Sam as she scours the borough of
Manhattan in an effort to track down the killer and prevent any
more victims. The combination of Sam's aggressiveness and Steiner's
experience makes this tale an interesting cat-and-mouse chase. With
the twists and turns in the plot along with deftly drawn
characters, the reader is captivated at the outset.
Sometimes people happen into a life of crime. But for this assassin
a life of crime happened upon "the gun." Follow along as this "gun"
moves from job to job while trying to maintain a decorum of
humanity. Until that is the day "the gun" meets the one client who
will change "the gun's" life forever.
This Way to the Universe is a celebration of the astounding,
ongoing scientific investigations that have revealed the nature of
reality at its smallest, at its largest, and at the scale of our
daily lives. The enigmas Professor Michael Dine discusses are like
landmarks on a fantastic journey to the edge of the universe. Dine
is widely recognized as one of the greatest living physicists,
having made profound contributions to our understanding of matter,
time, the Big Bang and even what might have come before it. Asked
where to find out about the Big Bang, Dark Matter and Energy, the
Higgs boson - the cutting edge of physics now - Dine had no single
book he could recommend. This is his accessible, authoritative and
up-to-date answer. Written in language anyone can follow, if you
are looking for one book to help you understand physics, this is
it.
|
|