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Published by Viking Adult, 2007
ISBN 10: 067003858XISBN 13: 9780670038589
Seller: SecondSale, Montgomery, IL, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: Good. Good condition ex-library book with usual library markings and stickers.
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Published by Penguin Publishing Group, 2008
ISBN 10: 0143113739ISBN 13: 9780143113737
Seller: Better World Books, Mishawaka, IN, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: Very Good. Reprint. Used book that is in excellent condition. May show signs of wear or have minor defects.
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Published by Penguin Random House, 2008
ISBN 10: 184595131XISBN 13: 9781845951313
Seller: Better World Books, Mishawaka, IN, U.S.A.
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Condition: Good. Used book that is in clean, average condition without any missing pages.
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Published by Jonathan Cape, 2007
ISBN 10: 0224072560ISBN 13: 9780224072564
Seller: WorldofBooks, Goring-By-Sea, WS, United Kingdom
Book
Hardback. Condition: Fine.
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Published by Viking (2007) no place given, 2007
ISBN 10: 067003858XISBN 13: 9780670038589
Book First Edition
Very good minus, light shelfwear. First Printing hardbound Lightly edgeworn, lightly rubbed jacket.
Published by Viking Adult, New York, NY, 2007
ISBN 10: 067003858XISBN 13: 9780670038589
Book First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition (Unstated); First Printing. Very Good overall condition. No noteworthy defects. No markings.; 6.5 X 1.25 X 9.25 inches; 310 pages.
Published by Viking, New York, Etc., 2007
Seller: Hackenberg Booksellers ABAA, El Cerrito, CA, U.S.A.
x, 310p., b/w illus., dj.
Published by Pimlico, London UK, 2008
Seller: Sarah Zaluckyj, KINGTON, United Kingdom
First Edition
Soft Cover. Condition: Very Good ++. First British Edition - Later Print Run. 310 pages. Black background soft covers with light wear to covers' corners. Veyr clean pages. Size: 9 1/4" Tall.
Published by New York 2007, 2007
Seller: ART CONSULTING:SCANDINAVIA, Books on Art, Calabasas, CA, U.S.A.
A physicist himself, Gino Segr? writes about what scientists do and why they do it with intimacy, clarity, and passion. In Faust in Copenhagen, he evokes the fleeting, magical moment when physics and the world was about to lose its innocence forever. Known by physicists as the miracle year, 1932 saw the discovery of the neutron and antimatter, as well as the first artificially induced nuclear transmutations. However, while scientists celebrated these momentous discoveries which presaged the nuclear era and the emergence of big science?during a meeting at Niels BohrĘs Copenhagen Institute, Europe was moving inexorably toward totalitarianism and war., English, Year2007, Illust. B/W, Illust. Color, ISBN 9780670038589, Code 6398. Hardbound with Jacket, In Pristine Condition, Index. Bibl. Pages 310, Size 9öx 6ö.
Published by Jonathan Cape Ltd./Random House Ltd., London,, 2007
Seller: lamdha books, Wentworth Falls, NSW, Australia
Octavo; hardcover, with gilt spine-titling and black endpapers; 310pp., with monochrome illustrations and 8pp. of monochrome plates. Minor wear; somewhat rolled; text block edges toned. Dustwrapper now professionally protected by superior non-adhesive polypropylene film. Near fine. Postage quoted is for a standard format octavo book. Final charges may vary depending on size and weight. "As though their knowledge of the quantum secrets came with the power of prophecy, some three dozen of Europe's best physicists ended their 1932 meeting in Copenhagen with a parody of Goethe's Faust. Just weeks earlier, James Chadwick had discovered neutrons - the bullets of nuclear fission - and before long Enrico Fermi was shooting them at uranium atoms. By the time of the first nuclear explosion a little more than a decade later in New Mexico, the idea of physics as a Faustian bargain was to its makers already a cliche. Robert Oppenheimer, looking for a sound bite, quoted Vishnu instead: 'Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.' Innocent of all that lay before them, the luminaries gathering at Niels Bohr's Institute for Theoretical Physics were in a whimsical mood. Werner Heisenberg, Paul Dirac and Lise Meitner were there. Max Delbruck, the young scientist charged with writing the spoof - it happened to be the centennial of Goethe's death - couldn't resist depicting Bohr himself as the Lord Almighty and the acerbic Wolfgang Pauli as Mephistopheles. They were perfect choices. The avuncular Bohr, with his inquisitive needling, had presided over the quantum revolution, revealing the strange workings within atoms, while the skeptical Pauli, who famously signed his letters 'The Scourge of God' could always be counted on for a sarcastic comment. Faust, who in the legend sells his soul for universal knowledge, was recast as a troubled Paul Ehrenfest, the Austrian physicist who despaired of ever understanding this young man's game in which particles were just smears of probability. Disguised with makeup, younger physicists played the parts of their 'elders.' (Pauli, who skipped the meeting, was just turning 32.) Faust's tormented love, Gretchen, appeared as the fairylike neutrino. It was only in retrospect that the silliness became profound. The players were becoming possessors of 'a truth with implicit powers of good and evil,' Gino Segre writes in Faust in Copenhagen, his inventive new book about the era. And 'the devil . was in the details.' The story of the quantum revolution has been told so many times that it has become as ritualized as the stations of the cross. How Max Planck, faced with some curious observations about hot glowing objects, reluctantly proposed that light is sputtered out in packets - the quanta. How Albert Einstein, seeing deeper, realized that light must also travel that way, that its waves were also particles. How Bohr brought the graininess into the atom, with electrons hopping between orbits in quantum jumps. How Heisenberg, marooning himself on the bleak isle of Helgoland, saw that there were no orbits, that what happened inside atoms was different from anything that could be pictured by a human brain. Any reluctance I had to revisit these shrines was quickly overcome by Segre's inviting touch. A theoretical physicist at the University of Pennsylvania and a nephew of Emilio Segre, who collaborated with Fermi on radioactivity research, the author begins with the Faust parody and circles back to it again and again. It acts like a magnet, reshaping the familiar into an interesting new design. One of the most striking things about the quantum revolutionaries was their youthfulness. Heisenberg was 23 when he had his epiphany. Pauli, when not quite 25, came up with a fundamental tenet called the exclusion principle. Dirac was just a little older when he predicted the positron - another particle discovered the same year as the Copenhagen fest. By then the threesome was already past its prime. 'Old age is a cold fever / That every physicist suffers with!' the actor playing Dirac complained. 'When one is past 30, / He is as good as dead!' Bohr at 46 was the grand old man. Absent altogether was Einstein, past 50 and out of the loop, trying to overthrow quantum mechanics with a wastebasket full of crumpled ideas. In the Copenhagen Faust he has a cameo role - the king leading his pet fleas. In Goethe's telling, no one in the court dared complain about the pests, and so it was, the devilish Pauli proclaims, with the aging Einstein: Half-naked, fleas came pouring/From Berlin's joy and pride,/Named by the unadoring:/'Field Theories - Unified.' In the end the most inspired part of the production was the transformation of Ehrenfest into Ehrenfaust. Assailed by self-doubt and family problems, and overwhelmed by the rapid pace of the new physics, he was falling into a dark depression. Trading his soul for enlightenment might have seemed like a good deal. The shocking details of his suicide the following year, and the way Segre ties them back to the Faust legend, brings a solemn close to a memorable retelling of one of science's most heroic eras." - George Johnson.
Published by Pimlico London 2008, 2008
Seller: Andrew Barnes Books / Military Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
First Edition
1st edition stiff wrappers Fine octavo 310pp., b/w pls., text ills., bibliog., index,
Published by Jonathan Cape, 2007
Seller: OPEN DOOR BOOKSHOP, Roma, RM, Italy
Book
brossura. Condition: molto buono. senza sovraccoperta. Jonathan Cape,2007,London.Paperback,copyright edition,pg.310.Good copy,very few pencil notes.
2. London, Pimlico, 2008, 310 pp, softcover.
Hardcover. Condition: new. New Copy. Customer Service Guaranteed.