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The Case of the Missing Neutrinos

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The best-selling author of In Search of Schrodinger's Cat presents a collection of essays addressing topics in astronomy, such as supernova explosions, neutron stars, white holes, black holes, and wormholes. Reprint.

272 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1998

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About the author

John Gribbin

386 books858 followers
John R. Gribbin is a British science writer, an astrophysicist, and a visiting fellow in astronomy at the University of Sussex. His writings include quantum physics, human evolution, climate change, global warming, the origins of the universe, and biographies of famous scientists. He also writes science fiction.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
7 reviews
March 7, 2011
I read this book several years ago and enjoyed it very much. If you like "The Bathroom Reader" series of books, you should like this; enough detail to give you a decent understanding of the topic, but not so deep that you feel overwhelmed. Also, a great book for the bathroom.
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30 reviews
January 10, 2026
This was written in 1997 so was ridiculously out of date. It was actually comical at times how wrong it was. Despite being a science non-fiction book some of it read like a sci-fi as it was so convinced that utterly wrong ideas were what is going to happen. All that white-hole and wormhole crap, come one dude, do better. I know I know, it's 30 decades old but there were no quantifiers that any of this was unproven or just a little side theory that two people are convinced by. Anything that was not out of date and is currently accepted knowledge was explained below my level of understanding so those parts were a bit dull. All in all it was either wildly incorrect or correct and woefully simplified. Thus it took me almost a year to get through this.
Profile Image for Waven.
197 reviews
June 14, 2010
While much of the information in the pages of this book has become commonplace or obsolete, it's still a fun read, very accessible with a lot of good history, and not a bad measure of how quickly our scientific understanding changes. I first picked it up in the late 1990s, when some of his subjects were still new, and found it a very enjoyable book. It's still enjoyable and interesting, not a bad primer, but not a good source for up-to-date information, either.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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