The Fayetteville Observer

‘The Warped Side of Our Universe’ is a novel look at secrets of cosmos

- Andrew DeMillo ASSOCIATED PRESS

Black holes, wormholes and other mysteries of the universe are so firmly embedded in popular culture – from Carl Sagan’s “Contact” to Christophe­r Nolan’s “Interstell­ar” – that readers with no scientific background have some images in mind when the concepts are mentioned.

But in “The Warped Side of Our Universe: An Odyssey Through Black Holes, Wormholes, Time Travel, and Gravitatio­nal Waves,” physicist Kip Thorne and artist Lia Halloran find a novel approach to exploring these topics in startling detail.

The collaborat­ion between the two is just as fascinatin­g as the book itself. Thorne is among three astrophysi­cists who won the Nobel prize in physics in 2017 for their research into gravitatio­nal waves. For the past 13 years he and Halloran have partnered on this book as a way to explain the research that has helped shed light on the far reaches the universe.

Written in verse form, Thorne’s writing is perfectly complement­ed by Halloran’s vivid illustrati­ons in explaining how that research has pierced a universe that is “varied and vast.”

The paintings portray a swirling universe of wonders, explaining a black hole’s characteri­stics with images of Halloran’s wife being bent by its warped spacetime. Images of other scientists such as Sagan and Stephen Hawking appear throughout the paintings in the book, alongside illustrati­ons of black holes colliding and wormholes metamorphi­zing into time machines.

The book guides readers through the history of the research into these concepts, including the work on the Laser Interferom­eter Gravitatio­nal-Wave Observator­y, or LIGO, that led to the 2017 Nobel. And it offers a glimpse at the work ahead that physicists hope will reveal more about the birth of the universe.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States