Wrinkles in Time: Imprint of Creation by George Smoot


Wrinkles in Time: Imprint of Creation
Title : Wrinkles in Time: Imprint of Creation
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0349106029
ISBN-10 : 9780349106021
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 332
Publication : First published January 1, 1993

In April 1992 astrophysicist George Smoot announced how he and his team of scientists had found "ripples in the fabric of space-time" that were made in the first trillionth of a second after the cataclysmic moment of creation. Their discovery of the ripples was central to the Big Bang Theory, which explains why the universe did not remain uniformly smooth, but became the "lumpy" universe of today, filled with stars, planets and galaxies. By the summer of 1991 Smoot's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) satellite had discovered the tiny ripples that had been put there by the primeval explosion process. Shaped by the force of gravity, the smaller of these ripples have grown into galaxies and the great voids in space. This is Smoot's account of his discovery of the driving mechanism of the universe, a discovery which will stimulate debate for years to come.


Wrinkles in Time: Imprint of Creation Reviews


  • Manny

    I am warned that I should take this book with a pinch of salt, since Smoot may not be telling us the whole truth and nothing but the truth. But dammit, I want to believe him. This is what science should be like: go out and look for the data, no matter what it costs you. At several points, you just can't help comparing him with Indiana Jones.

    Smoot started off in the early 70s as a particle physicist, where the norm was already for people to work together in big teams. But he was ambitious, and thought he'd never get anywhere as an anonymous member of a giant collaboration. He looked around and got interested in observational cosmology, which was finally starting to take off. In particular, he was greatly influenced by Peebles's book on the subject. People had just found the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation - the faint radiation coming from all over the sky that was generally assumed to come from the Big Bang - but no one knew much about it. Peebles urged researchers to find out more.

    Smoot started doing cosmology, though he didn't immediately get involved with the CMBR. His first project was an attempt to detect antimatter atoms in cosmic rays, which at the time was another hot topic: some people thought there was a lot of antimatter out there just waiting to be discovered. Maybe there were antimatter suns with antimatter planets orbiting them. (This is for example the premise of Jack Williamson's SF novel
    Seetee Ship). Now, it's hard to remember that it was ever more than science-fiction, but then it was taken seriously.

    Smoot set out to look for antimatter in cosmic rays, flying experiments in balloons to get them high enough to have a chance of catching something. There were all sorts of exotic accidents. One balloon crashes on a farm in the Badlands, and they have to retrieve the tapes from the wreckage. At the end, they have tens of thousands of events recorded, and they analyze them all to try and figure out if they've found any antimatter. They can explain every event as normal, with one single exception; as far as they can see, it's possible that it's antimatter. But the odds are only three to one in their favor, so they decide to run a bunch more balloon experiments. They never find another possible antimatter event - so it's a negative result, but an interesting one which more or less refutes the idea that there are antimatter stars.

    As you can see, Smoot is a careful guy who knows how to get things done. He then starts a new project which finally does get to looking at the CMBR; he wants to use it to establish a universal frame of reference, so that he can measure the absolute velocity of the Earth. Everyone tells him this can't be done, since it means measuring temperature differences in the CMBR of around a thousandth of a degree, and there is no way to fly the experiment. But Smoot has heard that old U-2 spy planes are possibly being made available for scientific research purposes, he works his connections, he persuades people to do the incredibly tricky engineering, and he gets data which indicates that the Earth's velocity (indeed, our galaxy's velocity) is far greater than it should be, which has many interesting consequences for cosmology. Unfortunately, skeptics argue that it could be a false signal, and the only way to find out is to redo the experiment in the Southern Hemisphere. He somehow ships everything down to Peru, bribes and wheedles his way into getting approval, and collects his data. It turns out that the signal is genuine.

    I haven't even got to the COBE satellite mission, the high point of the book, but you get the picture. In a way, I don't care if Smoot is stretching the truth or exaggerating his role. I think people like him are essential when you have a new field that's just opening up; another example that springs to mind is Galileo, clearly one of his heroes. Smoot advanced the state of our understanding of the universe a great deal by being willing to do whatever it took to find answers to questions that many people thought were too difficult to investigate. He learned tricky theoretical ideas and turned them into concrete experiments, he put together crack teams of engineers and forced them to build devices with ridiculous levels of robustness and accuracy, he sat in budget meetings and persuaded people who didn't like him to give him money, and when necessary he went in person to the Amazon jungle or the South Pole to get the observations he needed.

    And all the time, he was careful never to believe he'd found something when it was possible that all he had was wishful thinking. He tried his damnedest to eliminate uncertainties, and at one point towards the end of the COBE project he offered a substantial reward to any member of the team who could show why the current results were not correct. Maybe he wasn't 100% honest, but neither was Galileo. For my money, Smoot will go down in history as another truly first-rate experimental scientist.

  • Andrés Astudillo

    Awesome. First of all, let me say that I was lucky. Why? I bought this from Amazon, a used copy... and I discovered that the book came to me with the author's signature on it, the real one... so, this is my second signed copy of a book. Haha, geeky lucky bastard.

    Anyway, ripples and wrinkles in time. What are they? The first glimpse about their probable existence was detected by another pair of lucky bastards, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, who discovered the MBR (microwave background radiation). The author (and quoting wikipedia) won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2006 for his work on the Cosmic Background Explorer with John C. Mather that led to the "discovery of the black body form and anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background radiation". This is deep.

    There was a time in which the big bang theory was attacked, with sharp arguments. This discovery assured that the universe was not isotropic, meaning that it is in fact, dynamic. Thus, letting behind concepts related to "stationary universe" or that it was somehow special. Finding these "wrinkles" let scientists assure that the universe evolved, and will continue to do so.

    I heard from the author while watching Sheldon Cooper making fun of him in an episode of the series. It may seem a bit boring at times because it narrates the author's adventure concerning this discovery, that actually occupied 18 years of his life.

  • Nick Black

    This was a good introduction to the pop aspects of quantum fluctuation, COBE's confirmation of quadrapolar background radiation following Penzias-and-Wilson's discovery of the isotropic 2.725K CMBR (as immortalized on the back of an
    XKCD shirt I bought the day of release -- the front reads: "SCIENCE: IT WORKS, BITCHES". Huzzah! Popular garb down at the Institute of Technology), and the exciting cosmological research of the late twentieth century. On the con side: Smoot is a ruthless self-propagandist with an ego the size of the observable universe (necessary, it seems, to work at LBNL); his constant self-congratulation was already nauseating to read at 16 (although not so bad as
    Michio Kaku). When I went back and reread this a few years ago, knowing much more about the drama and intrigues behind COBE (especially as exposed around the 2006 awarding of Smoot's (deserved) Nobel prize), it made me physically ill.

    This book is worth reading, and George Smoot's one hell of a scientist, but this could all have been done a lot better. Check out
    John Mather's book
    The Very First Light for the rest of the story.

  • Ellen

    I really enjoyed this book. First, I have a story of how I found this book-I love these kinds of stories. We love the Big Bang Theory sit com on CBS. We find the writing exceptional, the characters endearing and the situations hysterical. I also love that they really work hard to make the science authentic by having a scientific consultant. They also have very impressive cameo appearances by well-know members of the scientific community. In one episode, our beloved characters are on a train on the way to a conference in Pasadena. On the train, Leonard is reading a book by George Smoot, the man they are going to the conference to see. The book is Wrinkles in Time. I'm intrigued by the book and the play on the title of the beloved Madeline L`Engle book.
    I loved this book! I can't say that I completely understood it but I found it incredibly interesting and written for a layperson to understand. It really makes me want to read and understand more.

  • Remo

    Relato del maravilloso descubrimiento del "eco del big bang", el espectro completo la radiación de fondo de microondas, incluyendo su asimetría de cuadrupolo, que ponía firmes cimientos a la teoría del Big Bang. Desde que Arno Penzias y Robert Wilson descubrieran
    accidentalmente la señal ubicua que dejó el petardazo del Big Bang hasta la publicación, en intensa rueda de prensa, de los resultados del satélite COBE en 1992 (al autor del estudio y del libro le caería el Nobel de 2006). Maravillosa aventura por la historia del Universo, muy, muy recomendable.

  • Last Ranger

    Taming the Cosmic Zoo:

    Written primarily for the layman reader, "Wrinkles in Time" nevertheless attracted a lot of attention from the academic world as well. The authors, Nobel Laureate George Smoot and award-winning journalist Keay Davidson, chronicle a paradigm changing discovery in Cosmology; the texture of the early universe. Part personal memoir and part science-history, Smoot shares his thoughts and insights on the efforts to solve the cosmic mystery of the Big Bang and why the Universe is filled with planets, stars and galaxies. While this is not a cosmological text-book it does offer up some complex scientific concepts and gives an in depth journal of how scientists work with, and compete with, one another. Starting out in the heady days before the 20th Century, Smoot sheds light on some early workers in astronomy and their ground breaking discoveries. Anyone who has read Sagan's "Cosmos" or Tyson's "Origins" may find themselves in some familiar territory here but Smoot's covers it in a fresh way so that it doesn't come across as repetitive. How did people arrive at the concepts of an evolving, as opposed to a static, universe? Who were some of these early workers and how did society judge them? The book really takes off when it cover Smoot's efforts prior to his days on the COBE Mission. His work on the "Echo" projects and his flights on the U-2 aircraft were, for him, both fruitful and frustrating. Doing research with High-altitude balloons had him, and his colleagues, on the edge of their seats. His memories of where he was and what he was doing during the Challenger Disaster and other important moments in science add a personal touch to some historic moments. It's not enough just to make scientific discoveries, you must decide when and how to publish your findings. Too soon and you might overlook vital information or miss minor errors, too late and other teams might "scoop you" by reaching the same conclusions as yours. You and your whole team could end up as "also rans" with nothing to show for all your time and effort but a footnote on someone else's paper. Apparently scientific research is not for the faint of heart. Two years after launching the COBE Satellite Smoot found himself in Antarctica checking on his satellite's telemetry and verifying his theory. He and his team would work together in preparation for going public with his findings to the American Physical Society in 1992. Even with all his work there would still be some controversy about the Big Bang and his evidence for "Wrinkles" in the cosmic background radiation. But that's how science works and Smoot and Davidson cover it all in this wonderful book. If you'r at all interested in Cosmology and what it takes to make a paradigm changing theory then this book may be right up your alley. "Wrinkles in Time" is profusely illustrated with numerous charts, graphs and schematic drawings along with archival and personal photo's, B&W and color too. For me this was a very satisfying read and a close look at some historic moments in science.

    Last Ranger

  • Kathleen

    Spoiler Alert: COBE totally gives viable evidence of inflationary theory!

    This book is an accounting of science as it ought to be done. George Smoot was the project head of the Cosmic Background Explorer satellite that in the early nineties mapped the radiation discovered by Penzias and Wilson in 1964. COBE's discovery of "Wrinkles" in this radiation gives a beautiful picture of what the universe must have looked like only 300,000 years after the Big Bang.

    So yes, dramatic evidence of a cosmological theory is always interesting, you say, but you've read A Brief History of Time, and you don't really need to know anything more about inflationary theory.

    This book is not about inflationary theory.

    This book is about doing research. It is about designing a satellite to be launched by the space shuttle only to have the Challenger explode and shuttles put on indefinite hold. It is about working obsessively to make every carefully designed instrument half of its original size in order to fit it on a Delta rocket. This book is about traveling to Antarctica for a month in order to rule out every other possibility before publishing your extremely promising data. Therefore, I would argue that this book isn't just about finding extremely compelling scientific information; this book is about conducting reasonable, responsible, resplendent science.

    I highly recommend it.

  • Kim

    As someone who is interested in cosmology and astronomy, I found this book to be very interesting. Smoot does a very good job of explaining the history of cosmology and the background to COBE, his satellite to study the cosmic microwave background radiation. He also adds a little bit of personal experiences to lighten the tone - so it's not ALL science-speak. And then he rounds it off by talking about the experiment and its findings. The book is not very difficult to read, like some science books can be.

    I noticed that another reviewer made the comment that Smoot is very self-congratulatory. I would have to agree that, by his writing, he thinks very highly of himself and his accomplishment. But I did not find this to be distracting. He was proud of what he had done and rightly so; this tone did not detract from the book for me.

  • Keith

    I finally got around to reading this because it was referenced in
    About Time
    . This was not nearly so well written, but it was an interesting companion read nonetheless.

    Both book cover some of the same background, bringing the reader up to speed on certain necessary concepts and the history of astronomy and cosmology. The focus here is a bit more narrow, however, as well it should be since the author is dealing with the story of his own contributions to the science, rather than providing an overview. Still, it felt a bit more disjointed, jumping through history seemingly at random to set up elements of what amounts to Smoot's professional biography as much as, if not more than, the story of the COBE project and its sister-studies.

    Nevertheless, that personal touch made it a more... well, personal story, which assuredly is less dry than the usual science book. Astronomy can seem like a very straightforward study, and not particularly exciting in any way other than the wonder of the stars, but the stories of Smoot's failures as well as successes, and the obstacles—financial, administrative, and competitive—he and his fellows faced lend an air of urgency that scientific discovery tales often lack.

    Not to mention that I now have a much better understanding of the then-current evidence for and against the standard "big bang theory" of the origin of the cosmos. The two books together served well to stitch the fabric of space-time together in my mind in a way my academic studies never did.

  • Vishakha Sarkar

    I saw Leonard Hofstadter reading this book in one of the episodes of The Big Bang Theory,ever since then I've wanted to read it and I am not disappointed at all.The only thing that I didn't like about George's writing is that its quite self- congratulatory,he praises himself for the work he has done but that's only fair because it is praise worthy. The book is not just about quantum fluctuation or inflationary theory or George Smoot's research,its a peek into the world of how science and scientists work,about designing a satellite to be launched by the space shuttle only to have the Challenger explode and shuttles put on indefinite hold. It is about working obsessively to make every carefully designed instrument half of its original size in order to fit it on a Delta rocket. This book is about traveling to Antarctica  for a month in order to rule out every other possibility before publishing your extremely promising data.Its a book about how hard scientists work to bring us the information we just read and get amazed by.A must read for all cosmic lovers.

  • Wagner Gutierrez

    Disfruté esta lectura. Es el primer libro medianamente extenso que leo sobre ciencia y me gustó. Primero, si hay muchas partes donde un lector común no entiende, en muchas explicaciones técnicas me perdía. Sin embargo, la mayoría es muy entendible, utiliza un lenguaje común. George Smoot nos relata sus logros científicos a través de este libro de manera amena, no es solo una explicación científica de su descubrimiento, sino que nos relata todas las dificultades que sufrió y sus anécdotas, eso hace muy llevadera la lectura. Además, todas las preguntas que se plantea a lo largo del libro, sus conclusiones y el final es muy bueno. Finalmente, esta lectura me gustó, nos hace comprender nuestro origen y nos plantea muchas preguntas, sobre todo nos insta a no perder las esperanzas y esforzarnos por lo que nos gusta.

    "Todos nosotros estamos hechos, literalmente, de polvo de estrellas."

  • Jan Graf von der Pahlen

    An incredible read: Talking about the discovery and investigation of the cosmic microwave background and the resulting consequences to the physics community would have been fascinating enough. Yet the author actually gives a concise and understandable introduction to cosmology and astronomy with many useful illustrations, making this a truly enjoyable read for a student of physics.

  • G.R. Reader

    Almost everything in this book is true. My lawyer strongly suggests I should leave it at that.

  • Voyt

    POSTED BY ME AT AMAZON 2008
    ...I bought it in 1995. Since then I have cherished books about cosmology, especially chronicling the most important discoveries based on observation.
    We have had currently three major important milestone developments, changing our perception of the space-time:
    --In 1981 Alan Guth and Andre Linde introduced rapid, exponential, near zero time "inflation theory". It was crucial theory explaining why it is natural for the Universe to be expanding close to the critical rate today. Today inflationary model still prevails over other models among majority of cosmologists.
    --Scientists were able to obtain a background measure at all in the Universe, using COBE satellite. In 1992 George Smoot announced existence of primordial seeds of modern-day structures such as galaxies, clusters of galaxies, and so on. Later these infrared readings were called "face of God".
    --In 1998, acceleration of visible space expansion (that occurred about 6 billions year ago and still continues) was officially acknowledged as a breakthrough of the years. Robert Kirshner- supernova guru from Harvard, is one of the most important scientists studying this "acceleration" phenomena. Dark Energy component has been introduced.
    George Smoot's work belongs to this category of essential "collector's item". Reader will learn first hand how COBE project has been planned, completed and its results confirmed by measurements of Milky Way's radio emissions taken at the South Pole. Book delivers substantial amount of basic information about Universe as well. As for today, it is a bit of outdated info because COBE project had been completed before we gained knowledge of acceleration and concept of dark energy. Still - author's writings about personal life, work and experience are definitely recommended and by all means worth of perusal.
    Alan Guth's "Inflationary Universe" and Robert Kirshner's "Extravagant Universe" will be two other milestone books being written by directly involved scientists.

  • Sindy Vanessa

    Un libro maravilloso. Cómo dice el lector... se debe leer 2 veces para entender mejor los conceptos y las teorías. Es un libro que te lleva a indagar, ampliar la lectura y maravillarte por lo que hay más allá de lo visible. Siempre he sostenido que la noche y las estrellas tienen una magia extraordinaria que parte de la simpleza.

  • Amedeo Balbi

    Una specie di autobiografia scientifica di Smoot, prima del Nobel ma dopo COBE. Interessante e ben scritta.

  • ScienceWorldKnows

    Not merely a great book, but an absolutely essential reading for any physics and wholly Science curious explorer. A certainly must buy and must read.

  • Lawrence Plummer

    Great read of the development and discoveries made by the COBE satellite. Description of the Antarctic episode was very interesting. Very much enjoyed it!

  • Peter Timson

    I have a Little, Brown & Co edition from 1993 in hardback. Very interesting but heavy going. Not one to give up, it took me ages to complete.

  • Laura

    The first part of this book was a slog: Smoot made the history of Cosmology as dry and dull as he possibly could. However, once the story switched to his personal search for the structure in the microwave background it picked up. I was an undergraduate when the COBE results came out in 1992 and I remember how excited people were around the JHU Physics & Astronomy Department. I didn't fully appreciate what these observations meant at the time - but it certainly made it feel exciting to be becoming an astronomer. Big Things were being discovered - we knew so much and so little, there was lots to do and I was heading off to do some of it! It was rather fun to read about all the things going on in the background, all the hard work and persistence that lead up to this momentous announcement.

  • Erik Graff

    This is a book on physical cosmology intended for the general public. After the briefest of introductions to the field the issue at hand resolves to defending the big bang theory by accounting for the formation of structured matter (galaxies, nebulae and the like) in the cosmos. The portion of this work done by Smoot and colleagues is detailed.

    In fact, much of this book would not be readily accessible to the general public. Personally, I found much of it dull and obscure, though I did appreciate his treatment of 'dark matter.'

  • Connie

    When I was younger and was interested in this topic (and more up on my chemistry and physics) I would have enjoyed this book more. Dr. Smoot mentioned that he had to pared down the manuscript from 600 pages and lost a lot of personal dynamics...I may have been more interested in that manuscript.

    If you are physics, cosmology, or astrology enthusiast...you will find this book very rewarding!

  • Kadri

    It was a lot more interesting than I thought it would be. Basically you get the story of how an important discovery was made - what the scientists had to do to get answers to the problems they were trying to solve and how they had a lot of interesting adventures in the mean time from Brazilian jungles to the South Pole.

    A certain thing to take away from reading this book - doing scientific experiments on high altitude balloons is a nerve-wrecking business.

  • Andrew Rothschild

    Loved the book. Clearly the title plays on Hawkings A Brief History but the subject matter is very different, dealing with the origins of space and time and the adventure that the author and his team embarked upon attempting to discover why the universe is not just comprised of dust. For the curious mind with a bent for science, a must read.

  • Rian Nejar

    A descriptive, well-written book about the history of advancement of our understanding of cosmic phenomena. Nevertheless, the mix of travel, ballooning, and budget adventures with historical and contemporary scientific advancements bewilders the serious and the lay reader alike.

    Did the author really need his formally attired persona on the front cover?