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-Title: The Sky at Einstein's Feet.
-Author:
William Keel.
-Publisher:
Springer Verlag.
-Pages:
14 + 246
-Illustrations:
B/W and color photos and graphics.
-Language:
English.
-Publication Date:
January 2006.
-ISBN: 0387261303

Front Cover

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EDITORIAL INFORMATION

The insights of relativity have illuminated a century of astronomical discovery, often going beyond the phenomena that Einstein lived to see. This book shows, in nonmathematical ways, how deeply these ways of viewing the Universe have informed our interpretations of it, and how many of the amazing discoveries of these decades have made sense only as part of Einstein's universe. The author brings together the ways in which we see the bizarre effects of relativity played out on a cosmic scale. None of this is particularly new to practicing astronomers, but much has yet to be seen outside technical journals. The presentation avoids mathematics (except for the most famous equation in all of physics!), and is designed to be accessible to the interested public. Gravitational lenses, the visible effects of light-travel delays, the search for black holes, the ways relativity in atomic nuclei makes stars shine, are all treated. In many cases, some of the principals are still alive and provided new commentary on the discoveries. Numerous illustrations are newly produced from data in the archives of such observatories as Hubble and Chandra.

(Extracted from the press info).
 

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GENERAL TABLE OF CONTENTS

-Contents.
-The Sky at Einstein's Feet.
-Bookkeeping at the speed of light.
-Relativistic matter.
-Gravitional deflection and lensing.
-Through the gravitational telescope.
-The stars themselves.
-Extreme spacetime bending.
-Relativity and Cosmology.
-Beyond Einstein.
-Index.

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