Waves in an impossible sea How everyday life emerges from the cosmic ocean

Matt Strassler

Book - 2024

"At this very moment, we are moving through space at 130 miles per second, and yet we don't notice at all. Nothing slips and falls off the kitchen table as the Earth spins, and our bodies aren't catapulted against random buildings and trees by the planet orbiting the Sun. We, and everything around us, move at the same rate, so we simply don't notice the force that propels us through space. Nor do we notice the strangest fact of all, that we and everything around us ripple through the universe like whitecaps on the ocean, emerging from the cosmic backdrop and yet moving through it as though the backdrop wasn't even there. Indeed, whether it be through our senses of sight and touch, through our ability to drink soda o...n an airplane, or through navigation apps on our phones, we are constantly engaging with these peculiar aspects of the cosmos, even though we rarely recognize it. In Waves in an Impossible Sea, theoretical physicist Matthew J. Strassler explains how our lives, every day and every moment, are shaped by the core tenants of physics that make up the universe. Examining big picture concepts, like motion, mass, waves, fields, quanta, the Higgs field, and the quantum world, Strassler relates these theories to our ordinary lives. Ultimately, concludes Strassler, we humans are integrated into the universe - one might well say we are a part of it, an instantiation of the cosmos in action - rather than merely outsiders living inside it. Accessible and profound, Waves in an Impossible Sea offers a crash course in everything from the theory of relativity to the Higgs field, relatable to anyone who has ever rode in a car or laid in bed"--

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Subjects
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Popular works
Published
New York, NY : Basic Books, Hachette Book Group 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Matt Strassler (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 373 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 339-357) and index.
ISBN
9781541603295
  • 1. Overture
  • Motion
  • 2. Relativity: The Greatest Illusion
  • 3. Coasting: Easier Than It Appears
  • Mass
  • 4. Armor Against the Universe
  • 5. Enter Einstein: Rest Mass
  • 6. Worlds Within Worlds: The Structure of Material
  • 7. What Mass Is (and Isn't)
  • 8. Energy, Mass, and Meaning
  • 9. That Most Important of Prisons
  • Waves
  • 10. Resonance
  • 11. The Waves of Knowing
  • 12. What Ears Can't Hear and Eyes Can't See
  • Fields
  • 13. Ordinary Fields
  • 14. Elementary Fields: A First, Unsettling Look
  • 15. Elementary Fields: A Second, Humble Look
  • Quantum
  • 16. The Quantum and the Particle
  • 17. The Mass of a Wavicle
  • 18. Einstein's Haiku
  • Higgs
  • 19. A Field Like No Other
  • 20. The Higgs Field in Action
  • 21. Basic Unanswered Questions
  • 22. Deeper Conceptual Questions
  • 23. The Really Big Questions
  • Cosmos
  • 24. Protons and Neutrons
  • 25. The Wizardry of Quantum Fields
  • 26. Coda: The Extraordinary in the Ordinary
  • Acknowledgments
  • Glossary
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Although we know that much of the universe is made of matter (dark matter) and energy (dark energy) that humans do not yet fully understand, there is that sticky question of what gives the things that have the kind of mass that we do understand their substance. Another way of asking the question is how can we, and everything else, be here? Inquiries into the nature of mass are challenging even for the greatest of physicists. But in this illuminating book, theoretical physicist and writer Strassler explores the answers and delivers a deep understanding of the Higgs boson and the Higgs field, the field that, as he says, "stiffens all the other known stiff fields." Without it, the universe as we currently understand it would cease to exist. In order to fully comprehend the Higgs field, Strassler delivers a comprehensive background in a reader-friendly and enjoyable review of mass, energy, waves, fields, and quantum mechanics. Along the way, he poses such mind-boggling questions as what happens if the Higgs field even slightly strengthens or weakens?

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Harvard University theoretical physicist Strassler debuts with a mind-bending investigation of "how the most esoteric-seeming physics affects every aspect of human existence." Examining what makes mass possible, Strassler explains that though atoms are mostly "empty space," humans "don't sink through the Earth" because "two atoms cannot occupy the same space without the addition of a lot of energy." The author devotes much of the volume to correcting oversimplifications of physics concepts, as when he notes that the common description of protons as "made merely of two up quarks and one down quark" is an "antiquated idea from the 1960s," with more recent research revealing that protons also contain "strange quarks," anti-quarks, and gluons, the latter of which help draw the proton's particles together. Strassler strives to make the physics accessible through the use of helpful analogies ("Whereas atoms are elegant ballrooms, protons are chaotic dance floors," he writes, emphasizing the energy and movement of protons' constituent particles), but the nuanced discussions are still difficult to follow for anyone without a background in the subject (indirect interactions between Higgs and electromagnetic fields, Strassler observes, "rely on the quantum uncertainty of the top quark field and are possible only in a universe with a cosmic certainty limit"). This is tough going, but the enlightening science is worth the effort. Agent: Toby Mundy, Aevitas Creative Management. (Mar.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

An overview of the universe from neutrinos to gravity. Theoretical physicist and blogger Strassler, who often works with the Large Hadron Collider, assures readers that they'll encounter few equations in his book, and he provides the painful truth that many concepts in physics (mass, photons, quarks) are not as simple as they may seem. Faced with a layperson's question, a physicist often must choose between giving a simple, memorable, but wrong answer and giving a correct but incomprehensible one. The author calls these wrong answers fibs or "phibs," which "are mostly harmless and…quickly forgotten." Some, however, cause more harm than good. Most readers understand that such exceedingly difficult concepts as quantum phenomena and the Higgs field lend themselves to phibbing. Provided readers pay attention, Strassler is a competent guide to complex topics, but most impressive is his approach to simpler concepts--mass, energy, light--where observation and common sense have been misleading. For thousands of years, people believed that objects moved when pushed or pulled; otherwise, they didn't. Everything on Earth seemed to behave this way, but the sun, moon, stars, and planets seemed to move eternally, which led many to believe the heavens must be a different realm, perhaps under divine influence. Strassler provides the correct explanation: Newton's. Many basic phenomena defy reason: Empty space contains stuff; time can change, depending on where you are and how you move; light always travels away at the speed of light no matter how fast you chase it. Popular physics books begin with familiar phenomena and proceed to areas that physicists themselves find difficult. Strassler is an imaginative thinker and a capable writer, but late in the text, readers may find themselves struggling. The author suggests reading some sections more than once, so even science buffs will have to concentrate. A fine introduction to the cosmos for attentive readers. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.