Aczel,
A. D. (1999). God’s Equation, Four Walls Eight Windows. New
York.
Adams, F. & Laughlin,
G. (1999). The Five Ages of the Universe. New York: The Free Press.
Asimov, I. (1985). The
Exploding Suns. New York: Truman Talley Books-E.P. Dutton, Inc.
Barrow, J. D. (1994).
The Origin of the Universe. New York: BasicBooks.
Chaisson, E. (1981).
Cosmic Dawn. Boston, MA: Little, Brown & Company. [An interdisciplinary
tour of 15 billion years of cosmic history, drawing on every field
of modern science—astronomy, physics, chemistry, biology,
geology, anthropology, and sociology.]
Darling, D. (1989). Deep
Time. New York: Delacorte Press. [Ride with a proton backward and
forward through time and space to visualize the birth of stars and
the construction of the galaxies—and finally Earth.]
Davies, P. (1981). The
Edge of Infinity. New York: Simon & Schuster.
Davis, P. (1996). About
Time. New York: Simon & Schuster.
Davis, P. (1994). The
Last Three Minutes. New York: BasicBooks.
Epstein, L. C. (1997).
Relativity Visualized. San Francisco, CA: Insight Press.
Ferris, T. (1988). Coming
of Age in the Milky Way. New York: William Morris and Company, Inc.
Ferris, T. (1997). The
Whole Shebang. New York: Simon & Schuster. [The author uses
analogies in his nontechnical overview of current research and visionary
account of the near-future of our universe.]
Fritzsch, H. (1984).
The Creation of Matter. New York: Basic Books, Inc. [A very readable,
engaging, comprehensive account of a modern cosmological view of
the universe. Many first-year chemistry or physics students would
enjoy this scenario which includes a “magical oven”
and a “dialogue with a quark.”]
Fritzsch, H. (1983).
Quarks: The Stuff of Matter. New York: Basic Books, Inc.
Goldsmith, D. (2000).
The Runaway Universe, Perseus Books, New York.
Green, Brian. (no date
given). The Elegant Universe. (no publisher given).
Gribbin, J. (1998). In
Search of the Big Bang, 2nd Ed. New York: Penquin Books.
Gribbin, J. (1992). Unveiling
the Edge of Time. New York: Three Rivers Press.
Guth, A. H. (1997). The
Inflationary Universe. Reading, MA: Perseus Books.
Hawking, S. (1996). A
Brief History of Time. New York: Bantam Books.
Kilmister, C. (1971).
The Nature of the Universe. New York: E.P. Dutton, Inc.
Lederman, L. M. &
Schramm, D. N. (1995). From Quarks to the Cosmos. New York: Scientific
American Library.
Lerner, E. J. (1991).
The Big Bang Never Happened. New York: Vintage Books.
Lightman, A. (1991).
Ancient Light. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Longair, M. S. (1992).
Modern Cosmology-A Critical Assessment. (no publisher given).
Longair, M. S. (1996).
Our Evolving Universe. New York: Cambridge University Press.
National Academy of Sciences.
(1998). Teaching About Evolution and the Nature of Science. Washington,
DC: Author.
Peacock, R. E. (1990).
A Brief History of Eternity. Wheaton, IL: Good News Publishers.
Rees, M. (1997). Before
the Beginning. Helix Books.
Ronan, C. A. (1994).
The Universe Explained. New York: Henry Holt & Co. [Heavily
illustrated introduction to the terminology and concepts of the
universe.]
Rubin, V. (1997). Bright
Galaxies, Dark Matters. Woodbury, NY: American Institute of Physics
Press. [The last section of Vera Rubin’s book, Bright Galaxies,
Dark Matters, entitled “The Astronomical Life: Women in Science
and Other Heroes, Colleagues and Friends,” would make very
interesting reading for students considering a career in astronomy
or cosmology. The section includes personal interviews, copies of
correspondence, and short biographies of many outstanding scientists.]
Trefil, J. (1988). The
Dark Side of the Universe. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons.
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