Cutting-Edge Science: Up-to-the-Minute Discoveries, Facts and Inventions

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Cutting-Edge Science: Up-to-the-Minute Discoveries, Facts and Inventions
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Colin Barras
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:224
Dimensions(mm): Height 237,Width 185
Category/GenrePopular science
Astronomy, space and time
Earth sciences
ISBN/Barcode 9781787393097
ClassificationsDewey:500
Audience
General
Illustrations 300 illus

Publishing Details

Publisher Welbeck Publishing Group
Imprint Carlton Books Ltd
Publication Date 8 August 2019
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

How did the atom bomb help save the elephant? Have we found the secret to eternal youth? Could a parasite be manipulating you right now? This dazzling collection of stories reveals the key recent breakthroughs in science, across all fields. Inside you will meet the killers lurking in Earth's ice, the super-coral that could save our seas and the neuroscientists hunting ghosts. You will travel beyond our galaxy to worlds where the sun sets twice, and beyond our time to a future where the Internet is unhackable and chickenosaurs roam the land. Divided into sections covering physics, space, humanity, the brain, plants and animals, and linking stories from different fields, Cutting-Edge Science offers a boundless journey of discovery for anyone with a passion for the world around them. Prepare to be shocked and amazed on every page.

Author Biography

Colin Barras holds degrees in geology, palaeobiology and science communication, and a PhD in palaeontology. He has been technology news editor, life science, and biomedical news editor of New Scientist and continues to write for the magazine on a weekly basis. In 2012/2013, he was employed by CERN to write Hunting the Higgs, an introductory book on the science of the Large Hadron Collider and the discovery of the Higgs Boson. He also works for BBC Worldwide, writing and editing for the BBC Future and BBC Earth websites, and is frequently asked to comment on scientific breakthroughs.