TY - BOOK AU - Katz,Jonathan I. TI - The biggest bangs: the mystery of gamma-ray bursts, the most violent explosions in the universe SN - 0195145704 AV - QB471.7.B85 K38 2002eb U1 - 522/.6862 21 PY - 2002/// CY - Oxford, New York PB - Oxford University Press KW - Gamma ray bursts KW - Sursauts gamma KW - NATURE KW - Sky Observation KW - bisacsh KW - fast KW - Gamma-Burst KW - gnd KW - ram KW - Electronic book KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-207) and index; 1; Vela; 3 --; 2; Detectors; 12 --; 3; Where Are They?; 21 --; 4; What Are They?; 29 --; 5; Compactness; 40 --; 6; The Large Magellanic Cloud; 50 --; 7; False Lines; 60 --; 8; False Light; 70 --; 9; The Copernican Dilemma; 82 --; 10; Soft Gamma Repeaters; 94 --; 11; Batse; 106 --; 12; The Great Debate; 116 --; 13; The Theorists' Turn; 126 --; 14; Afterglows; 139 --; 15; A Supernova Connection?; 152 --; 16; The Holy Grail; 162 --; 17; The End of the Beginning; 178 --; Appendix; Did a Gamma-ray Burst Kill the Dinosaurs? Will a Burst Kill Us?; 185 N2 - "Gamma-ray bursts are the most violent events since the birth of the universe. They are about ten times more energetic than the most powerful supernovas. At their peak, gamma-ray bursts are the brightest objects in space, about 100,000 times brighter than an entire galaxy. And yet until recently these titanic eruptions were the most mysterious events in astronomy." "In The Biggest Bangs, astrophysicist Jonathan Katz offers an account of the scientific quest to unravel the mystery of these incredible phenomena. With an eye for colorful detail and a talent for translating scientific jargon into plain English, Katz ranges from the accidental discovery of gamma-ray bursts (by a Cold War satellite system monitoring the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty) to the frustrating but ultimately successful efforts to localize these bursts in distant galaxies. He describes the theories, the equipment (the most recent breakthrough was made with a telescope you could carry under your arm), and the pioneers who have finally begun to explain these strange events. And along the way, he offers important lessons about science itself, arguing that "small science" is as valuable as institutionalized "big science," that observations are more the product of advances in technology than of theory, and that theory is only "the concentrated essence of experiment."" "With the advent of the space age a mere forty years ago, we have grown used to strangeness in the universe and confident in science's ability to explain it. In The Biggest Bangs, Jonathan Katz shows that there are still wonders out there that exceed the bounds of our imagination and defy our ability to understand them."--Jacket UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=139286 ER -