Stars and Atoms

Library of Alexandria · MI ierunātājs: Ava (no Google)
Audiogrāmata
3 h 35 min
nesaīsināta
Piemērota
MI ierunāta
Atsauksmes un vērtējumi nav pārbaudīti. Uzzināt vairāk
Vai vēlaties iegūt fragmentu (21 min)? Klausieties jebkurā laikā — pat bezsaistē. 
Pievienot

Par šo audiogrāmatu

THE sun belongs to a system containing some 3,000 million stars. The stars are globes comparable in size with the sun, that is to say, of the order of a million miles in diameter. The space for their accommodation is on the most lavish scale. Imagine thirty cricket balls roaming the whole interior of the earth; the stars roaming the heavens are just as little crowded and run as little risk of collision as the cricket balls. We marvel at the grandeur of the stellar system. But this probably is not the limit. Evidence is growing that the spiral nebulae are ‘island universes’ outside our own stellar system. It may well be that our survey covers only one unit of a vaster organization.

A drop of water contains several thousand million million million atoms. Each atom is about one hundred-millionth of an inch in diameter. Here we marvel at the minute delicacy of the workmanship. But this is not the limit. Within the atom are the much smaller electrons pursuing orbits, like planets round the sun, in a space which relatively to their size is no less roomy than the solar system.

Nearly midway in scale between the atom and the star there is another structure no less marvellous—the human body. Man is slightly nearer to the atom than to the star. About 1027 atoms build his body; about 1028human bodies constitute enough material to build a star.

From his central position man can survey the grandest works of Nature with the astronomer, or the minutest works with the physicist. To-night I ask you to look both ways. For the road to a knowledge of the stars leads through the atom; and important knowledge of the atom has been reached through the stars.

The star most familiar to us is the sun. Astronomically speaking, it is close at hand. We can measure its size, weigh it, take its temperature, and so on, more easily than the other stars. We can take photographs of its surface, whereas the other stars are so distant that the largest telescope in the world does not magnify them into anything more than points of light. Figs. 1 and 2 show recent pictures of the sun’s surface. No doubt the stars in general would show similar features if they were near enough to be examined.

Novērtējiet šo audiogrāmatu

Izsakiet savu viedokli!

Informācija par klausīšanos

Viedtālruņi un planšetdatori
Instalējiet lietotni Google Play grāmatas Android ierīcēm un iPad planšetdatoriem/iPhone tālruņiem. Lietotne tiks automātiski sinhronizēta ar jūsu kontu un ļaus lasīt saturu tiešsaistē vai bezsaistē neatkarīgi no jūsu atrašanās vietas.
Klēpjdatori un galddatori
Varat lasīt pakalpojumā Google Play iegādātās grāmatas, izmantojot datora tīmekļa pārlūkprogrammu.

Vairāk no: Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington

Līdzīgas audiogrāmatas

Ierunā Ava