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Physics of the Future '11
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Описание:
Michio Kaku: Physics of the Future - How Science Will Shape Human Destiny and Our Daily Lives by the Year 2100
Автор:
xcislav
Создан:
до 15 июня 2009 (текущая версия от 6 января 2012 в 11:57)
Публичный:
Да
Тип словаря:
Книга
Последовательные отрывки из загруженного файла.
Содержание:
1725 отрывков, 826273 символа
1 Copyright 2011 by Michio Kaku
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Kaku, Michio.
Physics of the future : how science will shape human destiny and
our daily lives by the year 2100 Michio Kaku.—1st ed
Empires of the future will be empires of the mind.
—WINSTON CHURCHILL
When I was a child, two experiences helped to shape the person I am today and spawned two passions that have helped
to define my entire life.
2 First, when I was eight years old, I remember all the teachers buzzing with the latest news that a great scientist had
just died. That night, the newspapers printed a picture of his office, with an unfinished manuscript on his desk. The
caption read that the greatest scientist of our era could not finish his greatest masterpiece. What, I asked myself, could
be so difficult that such a great scientist could not finish it?
3 What could possibly be that complicated and that
important? To me, eventually this became more fascinating than any murder mystery, more intriguing than any
adventure story. I had to know what was in that unfinished manuscript.
Later, I found out that the name of this scientist was Albert Einstein and the unfinished manuscript was to be his
crowning achievement, his attempt to create a "theory of everything," an equation, perhaps no more than one inch
wide, that would unlock the secrets of the universe and perhaps allow him to "read the mind of God."
But the other pivotal experience from my childhood was when I watched the Saturday morning TV shows,
especially the Flash Gordon series with Buster Crabbe.
4 Every week, my nose was glued to the TV screen. I was
magically transported to a mysterious world of space aliens, starships, ray gun battles, underwater cities, and monsters.
I was hooked. This was my first exposure to the world of the future. Ever since, I've felt a childlike wonder when
pondering the future.
But after watching every episode of the series, I began to realize that although Flash got all the accolades, it was the
scientist Dr.
5 Zarkov who actually made the series work. He invented the rocket ship, the invisibility shield, the power
source for the city in the sky, etc. Without the scientist, there is no future. The handsome and the beautiful may earn
the admiration of society, but all the wondrous inventions of the future are a by-product of the unsung, anonymous
scientists.
Later, when I was in high school, I decided to follow in the footsteps of these great scientists and put some of my
learning to the test.
6 I wanted to be part of this great revolution that I knew would change the world. I decided to build
an atom smasher. I asked my mother for permission to build a 2.3-million electron volt particle accelerator in the
garage. She was a bit startled but gave me the okay. Then, I went to Westinghouse and Varian Associates, got 400
pounds of transformer steel, 22 miles of copper wire, and assembled a betatron accelerator in my mom's garage.
7 Previously, I had built a cloud chamber with a powerful magnetic field and photographed tracks of antimatter. But
photographing antimatter was not enough. My goal now was to produce a beam of antimatter. The atom smasher's
magnetic coils successfully produced a huge 10,000 gauss magnetic field (about 20,000 times the earth's magnetic
field, which would in principle be enough to rip a hammer right out of your hand).
8 The machine soaked up 6 kilowatts
of power, draining all the electricity my house could provide. When I turned on the machine, I frequently blew out all
the fuses in the house. (My poor mother must have wondered why she could not have a son who played football
instead.)
So two passions have intrigued me my entire life: the desire to understand all the physical laws of the universe in a
single coherent theory and the desire to see the future.
9 Eventually, I realized that these two passions were actually
complementary. The key to understanding the future is to grasp the fundamental laws of nature and then apply them to
the inventions, machines, and therapies that will redefine our civilization far into the future.
There have been, I found out, numerous attempts to predict the future, many useful and insightful. However, they
were mainly written by historians, sociologists, science fiction writers, and "futurists," that is, outsiders who are
predicting the world of science without a firsthand knowledge of the science itself.
10 The scientists, the insiders who are
actually creating the future in their laboratories, are too busy making breakthroughs to have time to write books about
the future for the public.
That is why this book is different. I hope this book will give an insider's perspective on what miraculous discoveries
await us and provide the most authentic, authoritative look into the world of 2100.
Of course, it is impossible to predict the future with complete accuracy.
 

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