A
BRIEF HISTORY OF TIME
STEPHEN
HAWKING
I
didnt write a foreword to the original edition of A Brief
History of Time. That was done by Carl Sagan. Instead, I wrote
a short piece titled Acknowledgments in which I was
advised to thank everyone. Some of the foundations that had given
me support werent too pleased to have been mentioned, however,
because it led to a great increase in applications.
I
dont think anyone, my publishers, my agent, or myself, expected
the book to do anything like as well as it did. It was in the London
Sunday Times best-seller list for 237 weeks, longer than
any other book (apparently, the Bible and Shakespeare arent
counted). It has been translated into something like forty languages
and has sold about one copy for every 750 men, women, and children
in the world. As Nathan Myhrvold of Microsoft (a former post-doc
of mine) remarked: I have sold more books on physics than Madonna
has on sex.
The
success of A Brief History indicates that there is widespread
interest in the big questions like: Where did we come from? And
why is the universe the way it is?
I
have taken the opportunity to update the book and include new theoretical
and observational results obtained since the book was first published
(on April Fools Day, 1988). I have included a new chapter
on wormholes and time travel. Einsteins General Theory of
Relativity seems to offer the possibility that we could create and
maintain wormholes, little tubes that connect different regions
of space-time. If so, we might be able to use them for rapid travel
around the galaxy or travel back in time. Of course, we have not
seen anyone from the future (or have we?) but I discuss a possible
explanation for this.
I
also describe the progress that has been made recently in finding
dualities or correspondences between apparently different
theories of physics. These correspondences are a strong indication
that there is a complete unified theory of physics, but they also
suggest that it may not be possible to express this theory in a
single fundamental formulation. Instead, we may have to use different
reflections of the underlying theory in different situations. It
might be like our being unable to represent the surface of the earth
on a single map and having to use different maps in different regions.
This would be a revolution in our view of the unification of the
laws of science but it would not change the most important point:
that the universe is governed by a set of rational laws that we
can discover and understand.
On
the observational side, by far the most important development has
been the measurement of fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background
radiation by COBE (the Cosmic Background Explorer satellite) and
other collaborations. These fluctuations are the finger-prints of
creation, tiny initial irregularities in the otherwise smooth and
uniform early universe that later grew into galaxies, stars, and
all the structures we see around us. Their form agrees with the
predictions of the proposal that the universe has no boundaries
or edges in the imaginary time direction; but further observations
will be necessary to distinguish this proposal from other possible
explanations for the fluctuations in the background. However, within
a few years we should know whether we can believe that we live in
a universe that is completely self-contained and without beginning
or end.
Stephen
Hawking
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