Measuring Distances in the Universe
Science and Cosmos
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Narrateur(s):
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John Klymshyn
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Auteur(s):
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Boris Kriger
À propos de cet audio
Measuring distances in the Universe is one of the most demanding intellectual achievements in the history of science. The objects studied by astronomy are separated from us by such vast expanses that no direct measurement is possible. Every number describing the scale of the cosmos must therefore be inferred indirectly, through light, motion, geometry, and carefully constructed physical models.
This book offers a clear and rigorous exploration of how humanity has learned to determine cosmic distances, from the earliest geometric ideas of antiquity to the highly sophisticated techniques of modern astrophysics. It follows the logical progression of methods that together form the cosmic distance ladder: radar ranging within the Solar System, stellar parallax, Cepheid variable stars, Type Ia supernovae, and redshift-based measurements on cosmological scales. Each method is explained not only in terms of how it works, but why it works, grounding observation in physical principles.
Beyond technique, the book reveals how distance measurements underpin our understanding of the structure, history, and evolution of the Universe itself. The determination of cosmic scale is shown to be essential for discovering the expansion of the Universe, the existence of dark energy, and the limits of observational certainty. Technological advances—telescopes, satellites, and space missions—are presented as extensions of human reasoning rather than mere instruments.
Written in a clear and accessible style,
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