Le portail officiel :Ville de MontréalAccueilMon dossierAideEnglish
Site Web du Réseau des bibliothèques publiques de MontréalCatalogue Nelligan :  Toutes les collections – Adultes et Jeunes
 

Réserver ce titre Ajouter à vos coups de coeur Ajouter au panier Nouvelle recherche
 
 
 

 
     
Limiter la recherche aux exemplaires disponibles

 
     
 
Titre The Janus point : a new theory of time / Julian Barbour.
Auteur Barbour, Julian B., author
Éditeur New York : Basic Books, [2020]
©2020
Résultat Titre précédent Titre suivant  
 
Sujet anglais Space and time
Thermodynamics
Entropy
Second law of thermodynamics
General relativity (Physics)
Sujet français Espace et temps
Thermodynamique
Entropie
Deuxième principe de la thermodynamique
Relativité générale (Physique)
Description xiv, 383 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
Édition First edition.
Bibliographie Includes bibliographical references (363-368) and index.
Dépouillement Time and its arrows -- Bare-bones thermodynamics -- Statistical mechanics in a nutshell -- Boltzmann's tussle with Zermelo -- The curious history of Boltzmann brains -- The Janus point -- The minimal model -- The foundations of dynamics -- The complexity of shapes -- Shape space -- A role reversal -- This most beautiful system -- Two kinds of dynamical laws -- A blindfolded creator -- An entropy-like concept for the universe -- A glimpse of the big bang? -- The big bang in general relativity -- The large-scale structure of the universe -- The creation of structure in the universe -- What does it all mean?
Résumé "Time seems commonplace, but it is perhaps the Universe's greatest mystery. At a basic level, the laws of physics say it should be able to flow either forward or backward. And yet we -- and it seems everything in the entire Universe -- experience it in only one direction. Most physicists think they have the answer. In The Janus Point, Julian Barbour argues that those physicists have it all wrong. The most common descriptions of time rely on the concept of entropy, a measure of disorder. According to a common interpretation of entropy, it inevitably increases in the Universe. And that increase is what we experience as the flow of time. Barbour attacks this reasoning on several fronts. First, he shows that their premises are all off: the concept of entropy, originally developed to describe the behavior of steam engines, is inappropriately applied to the Universe as a whole. Second, he demonstrates that it isn't disorder, but order, that increases as the Universe has developed from the highly energetic but uniform blob that existed after the Big Bang to the highly structured universe -- full of galaxies, stars, planets, and life -- that we live in today. Third he shows that, if we run that tape of increasing complexity in reverse, we reach a point he calls the Janus Point, a reimagined Big Bang from which time actually did flow forth in two directions, of which we only experience one. This may sound impossible, but the leading theory of physics today, string theory, predicts that we live in just one of 105̂00 different universes. In that context, the argument that we live in one of two possible timelines seems much more reasonable indeed. And fourth, and perhaps most important of all, is the implication of The Janus Point for the destiny of our Universe. If the entropists are correct, our Universe is doomed to a future of useless disorder, where nothing -- no memory, no poetry, no beauty -- can exist. If Barbour is correct, the destiny of our Universe is in fact one of limitless potential, where all things we, or anyone, could care about can grow without bound. It is hard to think of a theoretical prediction that could be more hopeful than that. This is the promise of The Janus Point. The product of almost fifty years' work in physics, spanning from thermodynamics to cosmology, relativity to quantum mechanics, The Janus Point is destined to be a classic: read and re-read, argued with and championed. It is proof that the dogged pursuit of apparently commonplace questions can lead to some of the biggest revolutions of all"-- Provided by publisher.
ISBN 9780465095469 (hardback)
   
   
 
Bibliothèque Note Cote Statut
 SAUL-BELLOW - Adultes - Documentaires    530.11 BAR  RETOUR 23-07-02
 
 
 
   
    Résultat Titre précédent Titre suivant

 
 
  Crédit, bandeau Nelligan :
Roseline Granet, Monument à Émile Nelligan (2005).
Square Saint-Louis, arrondissement du Plateau-Mont-Royal, ©Ville de Montréal 2006.