A Brief History of Time (subtitled "From the Big
Bang to Black Holes") is a popular-science book written by British
physicist Stephen Hawking and first published by the Bantam Dell Publishing
Group in 1988. It became a best-seller and has sold more than 10 million
copies. It was also on the London Sunday Times best-seller list for more than
four years.
A
Brief History of Time attempts to explain a range of subjects in cosmology,
including the Big Bang, black holes and light cones, to the nonspecialist
reader. Its main goal is to give an overview of the subject but, unusual for a
popular science book, it also attempts to explain some complex mathematics. The
1996 edition of the book and subsequent editions discuss the possibility of
time travel and wormholes and explore the possibility of having a universe
without a quantum singularity at the beginning of time.
The author notes that an editor
warned him that for every equation in the book the readership would be halved,
hence it includes only a single equation: E = mc2. Early in 1983, Hawking
approached Simon Mitton, the editor in charge of astronomy books at Cambridge
University Press, with his ideas for a popular book on cosmology. Mitton was
doubtful about all the equations in the draft manuscript, which he felt would
put off the buyers in airport bookshops that Hawking wished to reach. It was
with some difficulty that he persuaded Hawking to drop all but one equation. In
addition to Hawking's notable abstention from presenting equations, the book
also simplifies matters by means of illustrations throughout the text,
depicting complex models and diagrams.
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