A Brief History of TimeRandom House Publishing Group, 1998 M09 1 - 240 páginas #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER |
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... stars all fall in on each other , and then to ask how things change if one adds more stars roughly uniformly distributed outside this region . According to New- ton's law , the extra stars would make no difference at all to the original ...
... stars lie in a single disklike configura- tion , one example of what we now call a spiral galaxy . Only a few decades later , the astronomer Sir William Herschel confirmed this idea by painstakingly cataloging the positions and ...
... stars . One of the first to be discovered is a star that is orbiting around Sirius , the brightest star in the night sky . Landau pointed out that there was another possible final state for a star , also with a limiting mass of about ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
A Brief History of Time: From the Big Bang to Black Holes Stephen Hawking,Carl Sagan Vista de fragmentos - 1990 |
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Referencias a este libro
Qualitative Data Analysis: A User-friendly Guide for Social Scientists Ian Dey Sin vista previa disponible - 1993 |
Postmodern Public Administration: Toward Discourse Charles J. Fox,Hugh T. Miller Vista de fragmentos - 1995 |