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Hardcover Sky in a Bottle Book

ISBN: 0262162342

ISBN13: 9780262162340

Sky in a Bottle

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

Children ask, "Why is the sky blue?" but the question also puzzled Plato, Leonardo,and even Newton, who unlocked so many other secrets. The search for an answer continued forcenturies; in 1862 Sir John Herschel listed the color and polarization of sky light as "the twogreat standing enigmas of meteorology." In Sky in a Bottle, Peter Pesic takes us on a quest to theheart of this mystery, tracing the various attempts of science, history, and art to solve it. Hebegins with the scholars of the ancient world and continues through the natural philosophers of theEnlightenment, the empiricists of the scientific revolution, and beyond. The cast of charactersincludes Aristotle, Leonardo da Vinci, Kepler, Descartes, Euler, Saussure, Goethe, Rayleigh, andEinstein; but the protagonist is the question itself, and the story tells how we have tried toanswer it.Pesic's odyssey introduces us to central ideas of chemistry, optics, and atomic physics.He describes the polarization of light, Rayleigh scattering, and connections between the appearanceof the sky and Avogadro's number. He discusses changing representations of the sky in art, from newstyles of painting to new pigments that created new colors for paint. He considers what the sky'snighttime brightness might tell us about the size and density of the universe. And Pesic asksanother, daring, question: Can we put the sky in a bottle? Can we recreate and understand itsblueness here on earth? This puzzle, he says, opens larger perspectives; questions of the color andbrightness of the sky touch on secrets of matter and light, the scope of the universe in space andtime, the destiny of the earth, and deep human feelings.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Another gem from Peter Pesic

I have read Peter Pesic's book on Abel in which he does a very good job of explaining the issues. Coming from a physicist (and serious musician apparently) "Sky in a bottle" is not what I expected. He certainly develops ideas rigorously but he also gives non-technical readers a bit of a "travelogue" about the history of man's attempts to answer the non-trivial question of why the sky is blue. Thus there are fascinating comments such as that 'as late as the 18th century carriages passing through the Alps would close their blinds to spare their passengers what was considered alarming and monstrous scenery." There is an appendix on the various experiments and you can have a go at some of them yourself to get a feel for why a solution to the problem was so elusive. The book also contains useful material on the resolution of Olber's Paradox (why isn't the night sky bright). So what is the answer to the problem? Get the book and after a quick read you will have the answer and have experienced a pleasant intellectual journey

Terrifically intelligent read

One could read this book as a day in the life of the sky with a large thermals of interesting scientific hisotry shooting upwards for effect. It is well written and for anyone interested in scientifc methodology the vignettes of past geniuses make arresting reading. Nearly all teh late Enlightemnt greats and early modern scientists make substantial appearances. The idiosyncratic lengths the went to to test hypotheses, designe experiments and damge the opposition are both instructional and striking ina world used to computer simulations and technology. If anything is is teh bare briliant simplicity of their thinkign, beutifuclly reconstructed, that lends this book an inspirational tone. Definitely one to pass onot to your older children if their interest in science is flagging or, hopefully, burgeoning.

A Very Intriguing Story

Simply put, this book is about human efforts in trying to understand why the daytime clear sky is blue. In the earliest parts of the book, ancient thought on this issue is discussed; hence, the arguments are more philosophical in nature, as one would expect. As the book progresses, more and more recent, and hence more technical, arguments are presented. Finally, the latter part of the main text involves the latest, fairly detailed scientific explanations for the blueness of the sky. The prose is kept simple and technical arguments are very clearly explained. Over 40 pages of notes are included at the end of the book where the reader can find references and more detailed explanations for the some of the material given in the main text. Finally, the book contains descriptions of simple experiments that one can try at home - experiments that are meant to illustrate some of phenomena described in the book. Adequately illustrated with useful diagrams, this book would be of interest mainly, I believe, to science buffs.

Blue skies, nothing but blue skies

This isn't exactly light reading, but it is very readable. Peter Pesic demonstrates an artful ability to describe the history or scientific thought by focusing on one particular issue. In so doing, he educates the reader on how some very great writers, philosophers and early scientists approached the world. Never pedantic, Pesic displays an amazingly wide source of knowledge cutting across many fields. I am enjoying it thus far.

An excellent description of how science happens

One could almost use this book for the central organization of history of science course, and I think the students would understand the true nature of science better than in other presentations. (The book even includes some experiments.) It shows science in the making, from the earliest philosophers to experimentalists and theoreticians, emphasizing the somewhat rocky and cicuitous road to "truth". Clearly, the obvious is not always so, even to the best of minds. Anyway, to understand the color of the sky requires a lot of physical and chemical knowledge that the author slowly develops in a non-mathematical way. He also becomes a Renaissance man, talking about more than just the science involved.
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