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Physics of the Impossible: A Scientific Exploration into the World of Phasers, Force Fields, Teleportation, and Time Travel Hardcover – March 11, 2008
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A fascinating exploration of the science of the impossible—from death rays and force fields to invisibility cloaks—revealing to what extent such technologies might be achievable decades or millennia into the future.
One hundred years ago, scientists would have said that lasers, televisions, and the atomic bomb were beyond the realm of physical possibility. In Physics of the Impossible, the renowned physicist Michio Kaku explores to what extent the technologies and devices of science fiction that are deemed equally impossible today might well become commonplace in the future.
From teleportation to telekinesis, Kaku uses the world of science fiction to explore the fundamentals—and the limits—of the laws of physics as we know them today. He ranks the impossible technologies by categories—Class I, II, and III, depending on when they might be achieved, within the next century, millennia, or perhaps never. In a compelling and thought-provoking narrative, he explains:
· How the science of optics and electromagnetism may one day enable us to bend light around an object, like a stream flowing around a boulder, making the object invisible to observers “downstream”
· How ramjet rockets, laser sails, antimatter engines, and nanorockets may one day take us to the nearby stars
· How telepathy and psychokinesis, once considered pseudoscience, may one day be possible using advances in MRI, computers, superconductivity, and nanotechnology
· Why a time machine is apparently consistent with the known laws of quantum physics, although it would take an unbelievably advanced civilization to actually build one
Kaku uses his discussion of each technology as a jumping-off point to explain the science behind it. An extraordinary scientific adventure, Physics of the Impossible takes readers on an unforgettable, mesmerizing journey into the world of science that both enlightens and entertains.
- Print length352 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherDoubleday
- Publication dateMarch 11, 2008
- Dimensions6.41 x 1.27 x 9.61 inches
- ISBN-100385520697
- ISBN-13978-0385520690
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
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From Bookmarks Magazine
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
Review
"The study of the impossible has opened up entirely new vistas for science, Kaku rightly points out. It is here that the book's strength lies: the impossible is a gateway for discussing what we still do not understand, those gray areas that are surely the most fascinating part of physics.....there is a surprising amount of heavyweight, cutting-edge science woven into the fabric of this book. String theory, dark energy, metamaterials and quantum theory are just a few topics - PHYSICS OF THE IMPOSSIBLE is, in fact, an easy-to-read physics primer in disguise. Kaku has huge reach as a writer and speaker. Hopefully, his acessible, entertaining, and inspiring book will set the next Einstein on his or her path to glory."
-The New Scientist
"Michio Kaku's latest book, PHYSICS OF THE IMPOSSIBLE, aims to explain exactly why some visions of the future may eventually realized while others are likely to remain beyond the bounds of possibility...Science fiction often explores such questions; science falls silent at this point. Mr. Kaku's work helps to fill a void."
-The Economist
"Kaku encourages us to take seriously ideas the world's great intellects consider crazy, reminding us that these same powerful minds sometimes wonder whether such way-out theories and models of the universe are crazy enough to be true."
-The Seattle Times.
"An invigorating experience"
-THe Christian Science Monitor
"A genuine tour de force, skillfully delivering cogent descriptions of everything from subatomic structure to the laws of the universe."
-Kirkus (starred review)
“Science and science fiction buffs can easily follow Kaku’s explanations as he shows that in the
wonderful worlds of science, impossible things are happening every day.” —Publishers Weekly
"Tour de force of science and imagination."
- LIbrary Journal (starred review)
"A fascinating exploration of the interface between science and science fiction, extremely well researched, lively, and tremendously entertaining. – Fritjof Capra, author of The Tao of Physics and The Science of Leonardo
CRITICAL ACCLAIM FOR PARALLEL WORLDS
“A wonderful tour, with an expert guide, of a cosmos whose comprehension forces us to stretch to the very limits of imagination.” —Brian Greene, author of The Fabric of the Cosmos
“A highly readable and exhilarating romp through the frontiers of cosmology.”
—Martin Rees, author of Our Cosmic Habitat and Our Final Century
“A roller-coaster ride through the universe—and beyond—by one of the world’s finest science writers.” —Paul Davies, Australian Centre for Astrobiology, Macquarie University, Sydney, and author of How to Build a Time Machine
CRITICAL ACCLAIM FOR HYPERSPACE
“One of the best popular accounts of higher physics.” —Jim Holt, Wall Street Journal
“Among the best of the genre to appear in recent years . . . What a wonderful adventure it is.” —New York Times Book Review
“Mesmerizing . . . the reader exits dizzy, elated, and looking at the world in a literally revolutionary way.” —Washington Post Book World
About the Author
MICHIO KAKU is the Henry Semat Professor of Theoretical Physics at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He is the cofounder of string field theory. He has written several books, including Parallel Worlds and Beyond Einstein, and his bestseller, Hyperspace, was voted one of the best science books of the year by the New York Times and the Washington Post. He is a frequent guest on national TV, and his nationally syndicated radio program is heard in 130 cities. He lives in New York City.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
I. When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong.
II. The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.
III. Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
-ARTHUR C. CLARKE'S THREE LAWS
"Shields up!"
In countless Star Trek episodes this is the first order that Captain Kirk barks out to the crew, raising the force fields to protect the starship Enterprise against enemy fire.
So vital are force fields in Star Trek that the tide of the battle can be measured by how the force field is holding up. Whenever power is drained from the force fields, the Enterprise suffers more and more damaging blows to its hull, until finally surrender is inevitable.
So what is a force field? In science fiction it's deceptively simple: a thin, invisible yet impenetrable barrier able to deflect lasers and rockets alike. At first glance a force field looks so easy that its creation as a battlefield shield seems imminent. One expects that any day some enterprising inventor will announce the discovery of a defensive force field. But the truth is far more complicated.
In the same way that Edison's lightbulb revolutionized modern civilization, a force field could profoundly affect every aspect of our lives. The military could use force fields to become invulnerable, creating an impenetrable shield against enemy missiles and bullets. Bridges, superhighways, and roads could in theory be built by simply pressing a button. Entire cities could sprout instantly in the desert, with skyscrapers made entirely of force fields. Force fields erected over cities could enable their inhabitants to modify the effects of their weather-high winds, blizzards, tornados-at will. Cities could be built under the oceans within the safe canopy of a force field. Glass, steel, and mortar could be entirely replaced.
Yet oddly enough a force field is perhaps one of the most difficult devices to create in the laboratory. In fact, some physicists believe it might actually be impossible, without modifying its properties.
Michael Faraday
The concept of force fields originates from the work of the great nineteenth-century British scientist Michael Faraday.
Faraday was born to working-class parents (his father was a blacksmith) and eked out a meager existence as an apprentice bookbinder in the early 1800s. The young Faraday was fascinated by the enormous breakthroughs in uncovering the mysterious properties of two new forces: electricity and magnetism. Faraday devoured all he could concerning these topics and attended lectures by Professor Humphrey Davy of the Royal Institution in London.
One day Professor Davy severely damaged his eyes in a chemical accident and hired Faraday to be his secretary. Faraday slowly began to win the confidence of the scientists at the Royal Institution and was allowed to conduct important experiments of his own, although he was often slighted. Over the years Professor Davy grew increasingly jealous of the brilliance shown by his young assistant, who was a rising star in experimental circles, eventually eclipsing Davy's own fame. After Davy died in 1829 Faraday was free to make a series of stunning breakthroughs that led to the creation of generators that would energize entire cities and change the course of world civilization.
The key to Faraday's greatest discoveries was his "force fields." If one places iron filings over a magnet, one finds that the iron filings create a spiderweb-like pattern that fills up all of space. These are Faraday's lines of force, which graphically describe how the force fields of electricity and magnetism permeate space. If one graphs the magnetic fields of the Earth, for example, one finds that the lines emanate from the north polar region and then fall back to the Earth in the south polar region. Similarly, if one were to graph the electric field lines of a lightning rod in a thunderstorm, one would find that the lines of force concentrate at the tip of the lightning rod. Empty space, to Faraday, was not empty at all, but was filled with lines of force that could make distant objects move. (Because of Faraday's poverty-stricken youth, he was illiterate in mathematics, and as a consequence his notebooks are full not of equations but of hand-drawn diagrams of these lines of force. Ironically, his lack of mathematical training led him to create the beautiful diagrams of lines of force that now can be found in any physics textbook. In science a physical picture is often more important than the mathematics used to describe it.)
Historians have speculated on how Faraday was led to his discovery of force fields, one of the most important concepts in all of science. In fact, the sum total of all modern physics is written in the language of Faraday's fields. In 1831, he made the key breakthrough regarding force fields that changed civilization forever. One day, he was moving a child's magnet over a coil of wire and he noticed that he was able to generate an electric current in the wire, without ever touching it. This meant that a magnet's invisible field could push electrons in a wire across empty space, creating a current.
Faraday's "force fields," which were previously thought to be useless, idle doodlings, were real, material forces that could move objects and generate power. Today the light that you are using to read this page is probably energized by Faraday's discovery about electromagnetism. A spinning magnet creates a force field that pushes the electrons in a wire, causing them to move in an electrical current. This electricity in the wire can then be used to light up a lightbulb. This same principle is used to generate electricity to power the cities of the world. Water flowing across a dam, for example, causes a huge magnet in a turbine to spin, which then pushes the electrons in a wire, forming an electric current that is sent across high-voltage wires into our homes.
In other words, the force fields of Michael Faraday are the forces that drive modern civilization, from electric bulldozers to today's computers, Internet, and iPods.
Faraday's force fields have been an inspiration for physicists for a century and a half. Einstein was so inspired by them that he wrote his theory of gravity in terms of force fields. I, too, was inspired by Faraday's work. Years ago I successfully wrote the theory of strings in terms of the force fields of Faraday, thereby founding string field theory. In physics when someone says, "He thinks like a line of force," it is meant as a great compliment.
The Four Forces
Over the last two thousand years one of the crowning achievements of physics has been the isolation and identification of the four forces that rule the universe. All of them can be described in the language of fields introduced by Faraday. Unfortunately, however, none of them has quite the properties of the force fields described in most science fiction. These forces are
1. Gravity, the silent force that keeps our feet on the ground, prevents the Earth and the stars from disintegrating, and holds the solar system and galaxy together. Without gravity, we would be flung off the Earth into space at the rate of 1,000 miles per hour by the spinning planet. The problem is that gravity has precisely the opposite properties of a force field found in science fiction. Gravity is attractive, not repulsive; is extremely weak, relatively speaking; and works over enormous, astronomical distances. In other words, it is almost the opposite of the flat, thin, impenetrable barrier that one reads about in science fiction or one sees in science fiction movies. For example, it takes the entire planet Earth to attract a feather to the floor, but we can counteract Earth's gravity by lifting the feather with a finger. The action of our finger can counteract the gravity of an entire planet that weighs over six trillion trillion kilograms.
2. Electromagnetism (EM), the force that lights up our cities. Lasers, radio, TV, modern electronics, computers, the Internet, electricity, magnetism-all are consequences of the electromagnetic force. It is perhaps the most useful force ever harnessed by humans. Unlike gravity, it can be both attractive and repulsive. However, there are several reasons that it is unsuitable as a force field. First, it can be easily neutralized. Plastics and other insulators, for example, can easily penetrate a powerful electric or magnetic field. A piece of plastic thrown in a magnetic field would pass right through. Second, electromagnetism acts over large distances and cannot easily be focused onto a plane. The laws of the EM force are described by James Clerk Maxwell's equations, and these equations do not seem to admit force fields as solutions.
3 & 4. The weak and strong nuclear forces. The weak force is the force of radioactive decay. It is the force that heats up the center of the Earth, which is radioactive. It is the force behind volcanoes, earthquakes, and continental drift. The strong force holds the nucleus of the atom together. The energy of the sun and the stars originates from the nuclear force, which is responsible for lighting up the universe. The problem is that the nuclear force is a short-range force, acting mainly over the distance of a nucleus. Because it is so bound to the properties of nuclei, it is extremely hard to manipulate. At present the only ways we have of manipulating this force are to blow subatomic particles apart in atom smashers or to detonate atomic bombs.
Although the force fields used in science fiction may not conform to the known laws of physics, there are still loopholes that might make the creation of such a force field possible. First, there may be a fifth force, still unseen in the laboratory. Such a force might, for example, work over a distance of only a few inches to feet, rather than over astronomical distances. (Initial attempts to measure the presence of such a fifth force, however, have yielded negative results.)
Second, it may be possible to use a plasma to mimic some of the properties of a force field. A plasma is the "fourth state of matter." Solids, liquids, and gases make up the three familiar states of matter, but the most common form of matter in the universe is plasma, a gas of ionized atoms. Because the atoms of a plasma are ripped apart, with electrons torn off the atom, the atoms are electrically charged and can be easily manipulated by electric and magnetic fields.
Plasmas are the most plentiful form of visible matter in the universe, making up the sun, the stars, and interstellar gas. Plasmas are not familiar to us because they are only rarely found on the Earth, but we can see them in the form of lightning bolts, the sun, and the interior of your plasma TV.
Plasma Windows
As noted above, if a gas is heated to a high enough temperature, thereby creating a plasma, it can be molded and shaped by magnetic and electrical fields. It can, for example, be shaped in the form of a sheet or window. Moreover, this "plasma window" can be used to separate a vacuum from ordinary air. In principle, one might be able to prevent the air within a spaceship from leaking out into space, thereby creating a convenient, transparent interface between outer space and the spaceship.
In the Star Trek TV series, such a force field is used to separate the shuttle bay, containing small shuttle craft, from the vacuum of outer space. Not only is it a clever way to save money on props, but it is a device that is possible.
The plasma window was invented by physicist Ady Herschcovitch in 1995 at the Brookhaven National Laboratory in Long Island, New York. He developed it to solve the problem of how to weld metals using electron beams. A welder's acetylene torch uses a blast of hot gas to melt and then weld metal pieces together. But a beam of electrons can weld metals faster, cleaner, and more cheaply than ordinary methods. The problem with electron beam welding, however, is that it needs to be done in a vacuum. This requirement is quite inconvenient, because it means creating a vacuum box that may be as big as an entire room.
Dr. Herschcovitch invented the plasma window to solve this problem. Only 3 feet high and less than 1 foot in diameter, the plasma window heats gas to 12,000°F, creating a plasma that is trapped by electric and magnetic fields. These particles exert pressure, as in any gas, which prevents air from rushing into the vacuum chamber, thus separating air from the vacuum. (When one uses argon gas in the plasma window, it glows blue, like the force field in Star Trek.)
The plasma window has wide applications for space travel and industry. Many times, manufacturing processes need a vacuum to perform microfabrication and dry etching for industrial purposes, but working in a vacuum can be expensive. But with the plasma window one can cheaply contain a vacuum with the flick of a button.
But can the plasma window also be used as an impenetrable shield? Can it withstand a blast from a cannon? In the future, one can imagine a plasma window of much greater power and temperature, sufficient to damage or vaporize incoming projectiles. But to create a more realistic force field, like that found in science fiction, one would need a combination of several technologies stacked in layers. Each layer might not be strong enough alone to stop a cannon ball, but the combination might suffice.
The outer layer could be a supercharged plasma window, heated to temperatures high enough to vaporize metals. A second layer could be a curtain of high-energy laser beams. This curtain, containing thousands of crisscrossing laser beams, would create a lattice that would heat up objects that passed through it, effectively vaporizing them. I will discuss lasers further in the next chapter.
And behind this laser curtain one might envision a lattice made of "carbon nanotubes," tiny tubes made of individual carbon atoms that are one atom thick and that are many times stronger than steel. Although the current world record for a carbon nanotube is only about 15 millimeters long, one can envision a day when we might be able to create carbon nanotubes of arbitrary length. Assuming that carbon nanotubes can be woven into a lattice, they could create a screen of enormous strength, capable of repelling most objects. The screen would be invisible, since each carbon nanotube is atomic in size, but the carbon nanotube lattice would be stronger than any ordinary material.
So, via a combination of plasma window, laser curtain, and carbon nanotube screen, one might imagine creating an invisible wall that would be nearly impenetrable by most means.
Yet even this multilayered shield would not completely fulfill all the properties of a science fiction force field-because it would be transparent and therefore incapable of stopping a laser beam. In a battle with laser cannons, the multilayered shield would be useless.
Product details
- Publisher : Doubleday; First Edition (March 11, 2008)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0385520697
- ISBN-13 : 978-0385520690
- Item Weight : 1.25 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.41 x 1.27 x 9.61 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #729,884 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #124 in Physics of Time (Books)
- #2,302 in Popular Culture in Social Sciences
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About the author

Michio Kaku is the co-founder of String Field Theory and is the author of international best-selling books such as Hyperspace, Visions, and Beyond Einstein. Michio Kaku is the Henry Semat Professor in Theoretical Physics at the City University of New York.
Photo by Cristiano Sant´Anna/indicefoto.com for campuspartybrasil [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons.
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Customers find this physics book engaging and accessible, particularly noting its easy-to-grasp language and approach. Moreover, the content is rooted in science while exploring the fringes of physics, with each chapter focusing on a different topic. Additionally, they appreciate how the book brings science fiction concepts to life, with one customer highlighting the concept of three different types of impossibilities.
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Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as fascinating and a great read for sci-fi enthusiasts, with one customer noting it's the best popular work in the genre.
"...It entertains, educates and inspires." Read more
"Physics of the Impossible is an interesting read. It discusses many of the cool science fictional devices we see on television and in movies...." Read more
"...When Michio Kaku speaks or writes, he does it with an almost childlike enthusiasm that's infectious...." Read more
"The approach Kaku has taken with this book is very good. He has different ratings for (im)possibility: 1...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's physics content, noting that it is rooted in science and provides incredible insight into various topics, exploring the fringes of scientific knowledge.
"...'s passion is the impossible, and in this book he explores different kinds of impossibilities...." Read more
"...The physical plausibility of each technology is discussed, and a rough guess of how long it might take to develop (if at all)...." Read more
"...Although he is fearless in his speculations, they are always rooted in science and what may be truly possible...." Read more
"...Dr. Kaku's gift is to make modern physics comprehensible to those of us without a mathematical background...." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read, appreciating its accessible language and conversational tone, with one customer noting it's written at the perfect level for non-physicists.
"...The result is an imminently readable physics primer...." Read more
"...The book was an easy read, and very entertaining." Read more
"...The chapters are short and easily read in short sittings, which lends well to a book that stretches the imagination so dramaticaly...." Read more
"...The book is written well and is easily understood by anyone. Michio Kaku is an amazing physicist with an even greater imagination...." Read more
Customers appreciate the science fiction content of the book, with each chapter exploring a different topic, and one customer noting how the levels of impossibility are neatly partitioned.
"...It discusses many of the cool science fictional devices we see on television and in movies...." Read more
"...He hasn't lost his sense of wonder and love for science fiction...." Read more
"...I found the book interesting, but not quite compelling...." Read more
"...be edified by the very real possibilities produced from this imaginative genre, a genre that has inspired many a scientist over the years...." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 22, 2008I think the biggest reason some people reject evolution is a lack of imagination. It's difficult for humans to picture the vast amount of time it takes for organisms to evolve. To speculate on the many mysteries of science takes a vivid imagination. Fortunately, author Michio Kaku has one. He brings a bright-eyed, gee-whiz sense of wonder to his subject, and his writing makes it contagious.
Kaku's passion is the impossible, and in this book he explores different kinds of impossibilities. Class I ideas -- -- force fields, invisibility, phasers and death stars, teleportation, telepathy, psychokinesis, robots, extraterrestrials and UFOs, starships, antimatter and anti-universes -- could come true within a hundred years. Class II impossibilities, such as travel faster than light, time travel and parallel universes, may be possible in the next millennium. Class III ideas, like perpetual motion machines and precognition, may never be possible, given the underlying science.
As Kaku explores his subjects, he uses references anyone can understand: Star Trek, Back to the Future, The Wizard of Oz, Flash Gordon, Men in Black. The result is an imminently readable physics primer.
I hesitated to use the phrase "physics primer" in that last paragraph, because it might scare off people who would actually find this book fascinating. The truth is, this is nothing like that dry science book you remember from school. It entertains, educates and inspires.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 6, 2013Physics of the Impossible is an interesting read. It discusses many of the cool science fictional devices we see on television and in movies. The physical plausibility of each technology is discussed, and a rough guess of how long it might take to develop (if at all). As a fellow physicist, I thought Kaku did a good job of classifying each technology in terms of plausibility. The book doesn't go into much mathematical detail, as it it a pop science book. Instead, it reasons in terms of the general principals of scientific theories, which is arguably a more useful way to think about future possibilities. The book was an easy read, and very entertaining.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2011While we're busy with the minutiae of daily living, it's great to know that a physicist of Dr. Michio Kaku's stature is seeking answers to the big questions which he then explains in language everybody can understand. In that respect, Dr. Kaku takes up the mantle of Carl Sagan as an effective science popularizer. With nearly two hundred published research articles to his credit and eight bestselling books written for the general public, Michio Kaku is one of the most prolific science writers around.
When Michio Kaku speaks or writes, he does it with an almost childlike enthusiasm that's infectious. He hasn't lost his sense of wonder and love for science fiction. Although he is fearless in his speculations, they are always rooted in science and what may be truly possible. We could use more scientists like him to bring a bit more rational thinking to this crazy world. Carl Sagan and Martin Gardner were my inspirations early in life when I decided to study engineering. Michio Kaku may be serving the same function for future space explorers. May he live long and prosper.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2014The approach Kaku has taken with this book is very good. He has different ratings for (im)possibility: 1. possible, but existing technology is not quite there yet 2. could be possible if a new form of technology that we do not know of could be developed 3. not possible with our known laws of physics.
He also rates different kinds of civilizations based on their access to energy. A type 1 is for instance a civilization that is able to harness most of the power of the earth; a type 2 most of the power of the sun; a type 3 most of the power of the galaxy etc.
He uses the latest knowledge of physics to comment on cases ranging from time travel, force fields, anti-gravity and so forth. In each case he gives the (im)possibility rating and type of civilization he expects would be able to realize it. Watching sci-fi after reading this book will be different indeed, you will be able to jeer or praise the stories with much more authority.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 31, 2008This is probably Dr. Kaku's best popular work since Hyperspace or Visions. Here is a wide range of scientific possibilities to be explored. Dr. Kaku's gift is to make modern physics comprehensible to those of us without a mathematical background. In this book he uses his gift to explain how the standard model and string field theory (which he is coauthor of) can be applied to contemplation of some of our most wildest scifi dreams. The chapters are short and easily read in short sittings, which lends well to a book that stretches the imagination so dramaticaly. Dr. Kaku is also careful to remain objective in discussing different theoretical approaches which is an admirable feat given some of the topics ventured into in this book. If you enjoy cutting edge science, it doesn't get more cutting edge then this. Thank you Dr. Kaku for yet another wonderful journey.
Top reviews from other countries
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in India on March 25, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Universal knowledge identified.......
Sharing Centuries historical knowledge,insight into exploring ideas...... universal
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MarkusReviewed in Germany on September 8, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Der Klassiker für Physikinteressierte!
"Physics of the Impossible" gibt einem Novizen, wie mir einen sehr unterhaltsamen Einblick in die Natur des "Unmöglichen", von der aktuellen Forschung hin bis zu dem Perpetuummobile. Horizont-erweiternd und Neugier erweckend!
- Vicky abhishekReviewed in Singapore on May 14, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Serious, logical, insightful read
I read this along with and on recommendation from my teenage son. It drew me back to my high school physics days. It’s not a light read but very thoughtful and logical investigations of what’s possible in future and why ? Given that it is already a decade + old book now, we can see how some of the impossibilities discussed are closer or converted to reality.
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XaviBGoodReviewed in Spain on November 24, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente
Michio Kaku es un físico teórico quien, con tan sólo con 17 años, ganó una beca para estudiar en Harvard tras destacar con su trabajo de física en el instituto en el que estudiaba en San Franciso. Lo que presentó fue un acelerador de partículas doméstico para fabricar antimateria. Hoy en día es uno de los físicos más conocidos por su proliferación como escritor y también por sus apariciones en la televisión y la radio norteamericanas y también es un gran difusor de la Teoría de las Supercuerdas como la Teoría del Todo, del mismo modo que lo es Bryan Greene.
En Phisics of the Impossible, Kaku analiza las "imposibilidades" que aparecen, sobre todo, en las películas, series y literatura de Ciencia Ficción. No hace ni siquiera 100 años, cualquiera habría dicho que ir a la Luna era imposible. A finales del Siglo XIX, los físicos creían que los átomos no existían más que el el plano teórico, poco sospechaban que solo unos años más tarde se demostraría su existencia y que después de un siglo seríamos capaces de fotografiarlos y manipularlos.
¿Se puede viajar más rápido que la luz? ¿Se pueden construir naves estelares capaces de viajar por la galaxia en tiempos razonables? ¿Podemos generar campos de fuerza? ¿Podemos hacernos invisibles? ¿Podemos fabricar Fásers y Estrellas de la Muerte? ¿Podemos viajar en el tiempo?
Michio Kaku califica estas y otras "imposibilidades" en tres categorías, según podríamos conseguir esos retos en unos decenios, o en uno o varios siglos o si se vulneran las leyes actuales de la física y, por tanto, no podemos contar con resolver esos problemas, como sería el caso de las máquinas de movimiento perpetuo. Recorriendo las Leyes de la Física, desde las Leyes del Movimiento y la Gravedad de Newton, las Leyes de Maxwell del electromagnetismo, las Leyes de la Termodinámica, la Teoría de la Relatividad de Einstein, la Teorías de la Mecánica Cuántica y la Cromodinámica Cuántica y, desde luego, la candidata a Teoría del Todo, la Teoría de las Supercuerdas, Kaku estudia una a una las "imposibilidades" observando si nuestro conocimiento de la Física podría llegar a resolverlas y cuál sería el modo más plausible. Los entresijos de los átomos, las partículas subatómicas, la antimateria, la energía negativa, la deformación del Espacio-Tiempo, la Materia Obscura, los Universos Paralelos y los Multiversos... Todo ello pasa por delante de tus ojos de un modo simple y comprensible en Phisics of the Impossible.
Después de leerlo te quedas con ganas de más y yo ya he encargado el libro que fue el gran Best Seller de Kaku: Hyperspace.
- AReviewed in Brazil on June 2, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book
I haven’t finished the book yet, I’m still on the middle of it or something. But I can ensure that this is a great reading, the books teaches you a lot, and it is full of interesting ideas. I used to read it at school during breaks.
AGreat book
Reviewed in Brazil on June 2, 2024
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