Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 292 pages
- Published by: Universal Publishers March 1, 2008
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 159942987X
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-1599429878
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Book Dimensions:
8.4 x 5.5 x 0.9 inches
- Weighs: 13.4 ounces
Product Description
Learn how a world-class inventor-scientist is currently tackling the greatest scientific mysteries of the universe -- and succeeding. With his new book, Drexler provides a viable baseline to jump-start debate on a standard model for postmodern cosmology. It is the first book to not only address these seven unsolved cosmic mysteries, shown in this book's subtitle, but also offer plausible explanations for each of them. The correlation of these seven cosmic phenomena by Drexler offers a revolutionary advance in cosmological research and potentially broad acceptance and use of the related concepts. This book was written for open-minded cosmologists, astronomers, astrophysicists, physicists, engineers, students, enthusiasts and those at NASA, NSF, DOE and ESO who want to understand postmodern cosmology. The author's five years of cosmology research, and his successes, convinced him that his postmodern cosmology model is correctly based upon the relationships and linkages of these seven cosmic phenomena.
About The Author
Jerome Drexler is the author of three astro-cosmology books, a former Research Professor in physics at NJIT, former Chairman and chief scientist of LaserCard Corp. (Nasdaq: LCRD) and former Member of the Technical Staff of Bell Laboratories. He has been awarded 76 U.S. patents, honorary Doctor of Science degrees from NJIT and Upsala College, a degree of Honorary Fellow of the Technion, an Honorary Life Member of the Technion Board of Governors, an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship at Stanford University, a three-year Bell Labs graduate study fellowship, the 1990 "Inventor of the Year Award" for Silicon Valley, and the first patent on an optical disk "Laser Optical Storage System."
Reader ReviewsDrexler presents a series of explanations and arguments in support of his theory that dark matter is mainly relativistic protons. These arguments are presented in the format of press releases, an unusual form of authorship, but indicative of the excitement felt by the author and a format not subject to the politics of peer review. He traces his excitement over a period of several years, increasing his conviction regarding his theory. The press releases weave diverse observational evidence of others into a tapestry supporting Drexler's dark matter theory. Make no mistake, the scope of this book is so broad that there is lots of room for argument, for example regarding galactic structure. Nevertheless, Drexler's book is interesting, provocative and passionate.