Author

Publication

1997 - Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England

Language

English

Word Count

47,750 words, Guess

Page Count

191 pages

Identifiers

and 3 more
  • Library of Congress Control Number96031468
  • Goodreads1788217
  • LibraryThing502416

Classifications

  • DDC539.7/54
  • LCCQC794.6.S75 H66 1997
  • LCCBX8217 .H3

Description

This is a first-hand account of one of the most creative and exciting periods of discovery in the history of physics. From 1965 until 1990 theoreticians and experimentalists worked together to probe deeper and deeper into the basic structure of reality, moving closer and closer to an understanding of the ultimate building blocks from which everything in the universe is made. Gerard 't Hooft worked in the field throughout this period of almost unprecedented discovery, and was closely involved in many of the advances in the development of the subject. In this book he gives a personal account of the process by which physicists came to understand the structure of matter through the development of what is now known as the Standard Theory. In the latter part of the book, he speculates on structures even smaller than those already known to exist, on black holes, grand unification and on possible directions in which the subject may evolve in the future. This fascinating personal account of the last twenty-five years in one of the most dramatic areas in twentieth century physics will be of interest to professional physicists and physics students, as well as the educated general reader with an interest in one of the most exciting scientific detective stories ever.

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