The Mysterious Universe
The Mysterious Universe is a popular science book by the British astrophysicist Sir James Jeans, first published in 1930 by the Cambridge University Press. In the United States, it was published by Macmillan.
The book is an expanded version of the Rede Lecture delivered at the University of Cambridge in 1930. It begins with a full-page citation of the famous passage in Plato's Republic, Book VII, laying out the allegory of the cave. The book made frequent reference to the quantum theory of radiation, begun by Max Planck in 1900, to Albert Einstein's general relativity, and to the new theories of quantum mechanics of Heisenberg and Schrödinger, of whose philosophical perplexities the author seemed well aware.
A second edition appeared in 1931. The book was reprinted 15 times between 1930 and 1938 and in September 2007.
Contents
- Foreword
- The Dying Sun
- The New World of Modern Physics
- Matter and Radiation
- Relativity and the Ether
- Into the Deep Waters
- Index
- "The Depths of Space," taken with the Mount Wilson Observatory;
- "The Diffraction of Light and of Electrons," bearing out the wave nature of electrons and protons predicted by quantum theory.