Physics & Astronomy

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Ingrid Gnerlich
Publisher, Sciences -
Abigail Johnson
Assistant Editor, Physical & Earth Sciences
91桃色鈥檚 list in physics and astronomy encompasses a wide spectrum of fields and genres, including trade titles, monographs, and textbooks on topics ranging from the quantum to the cosmic. Over our distinguished history, we have been proud to publish multiple Nobel laureates, including Albert Einstein, Werner Heisenberg, Richard Feynman, Philip Anderson,
Roger Penrose, Frank Wilczek, and Kip Thorne, as well as such luminaries as Stephen Hawking, Martin Rees, Janna Levin, and Neil deGrasse Tyson. Connecting serious, cutting-edge science with scholarly and popular readers, our carefully curated list informs and stimulates researchers, students, and the public.
New & Noteworthy
Featured Audiobooks
Series
Ideas
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PUP Speaks: Claudia de Rham on a life spent in gravity鈥檚 pull
How do you go from being a curious child to a cosmologist, chasing the secrets of gravity and defying and redefining how it works? Here, PUP Speaks speaker Claudia de Rham explores how mankind's curiosity for the workings of the natural world have impacted the way we interact with this unifying force.
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The Beauty of Falling
While many of us presume to know gravity quite well, the brightest scientists in history have yet to fully answer the simple question: what exactly is gravity? De Rham reveals how great minds鈥攆rom Newton and Einstein to Stephen Hawking, Andrea Ghez, and Roger Penrose鈥攍ed her to the edge of knowledge about this fundamental force.
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Books by (and for) women in STEM
A significant gender gap has long plagued all areas of science, technology, engineering and mathematics disciplines across our global community. While progress has been made in increasing women鈥檚 participation in these areas of research and higher education, they remain under-represented in STEM fields.
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The women who opened the doors to astronomy
In France, Dorothea Klumpke earned her Docteur-猫s-Sciences at the University of Paris in mathematical astronomy in 1893, after completing her thesis, 鈥淟鈥檈tude des Anneaux de Saturne鈥 (A study of the rings of Saturn), thereby becoming the first woman to achieve the academic distinction of earning an advanced degree for work done in astronomy.