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Cover of The science of The hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy

The science of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

By Michael Hanlon,Michael Hanlon

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Publish Date

2005

Publisher

Macmillan

Language

eng

Pages

202

Description:

Ever wonder what the Universe might actually look like? Why the number 42 is so significant? Whether time travel really would put a stop to history as we know it? If you are so clearly a fan of Douglas Adams' The Hitchhikker's Guide to the Galaxy, now a major motion picture. Much of the book is sheer whimsy: talking mattress, the Vogons, triple-breasted whores, and that Ol' Janx Spirit. But like all good science fiction, it contains more than a grain of scientific fact. Adams was a science and technology enthusiast and his books were inspired by - prefigured even - many of the great scientific debates of our times. The Science of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a light-hearted, accessible and informative tour of the real cutting-edge research behind the cornerstones of a cherished sci-fi classic - from the Big Bang to the end of the Universe via probability, supercomputing, time travel, instant translation, alien life, and more.