Join Books.org — it's free

Outer Space - Observation & Exploration
The Giant Leap by Adrian Berry β€” book cover

The Giant Leap

by Adrian Berry
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Some time within the next two centuries, humankind will embark on a momentous voyage that will take us out of our solar system and to the stars.

The Giant Leap explains why it will happen, how it might happen, and why it is a good idea.

Adrian Berry, dubbed "the Dean of English science writers," extrapolates from his wide knowledge to inquire into the possibilities of far-space exploration.

Berry writes with lucidity and humor, demonstrating not only a broad spectrum of scientific knowledge but also an intimacy with the works of science fiction writers. His predictions are always rooted in scientific fact.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Kirkus Reviews

Travel to the stars, long a staple of SF, is the subject of this optimistic look at our race's future. For Berry, longtime science correspondent for London's Daily Telegraph, the exploration of worlds beyond our own solar system is a given. As a means to this end, he directs our attention to antimatter drives, Bussard ramjets, and light sails, all of which are theoretically capable of getting a ship to the nearest stars in some acceptable fraction of a human lifetime. Nor does he ignore the question of how to shield passengers from the tremendous energies some of these devices can be expected to emit. There is due consideration of provisioning a years-long voyage through regions with no place to renew supplies-and the more one carries along, of course, the greater the demands for fuel and power, already stretched to the breaking point. One likely solution is recycling on a hitherto-unknown scale; in theory, one can take any organic substance (say, used tires) and turn it into food. Another is keeping the majority of the passengers in suspended animation, possibly by lowering their bodies to cryogenic temperatures. Elaborate computer games may be developed to help those of the crew who do remain awake to pass the lonely hours of deep space travel. Spacious accommodations for exercise will be essential if the space travelers are to arrive at the end of their journey in condition to begin a colony on an alien world. Never mind that even the shortest interstellar voyage could bankrupt most nations, or that the technology described here exists only in rudimentary form, if at all. Berry is interested in the big picture-and readers who can balance enthusiasm with healthy skepticism are likelyto enjoy the ride, even when the details remain unclear. Blue-sky speculation on the grandest possible scale.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2001
Publisher
New York, NY : Tor, 2000,1999.
Pages
352
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780312877859

More by Adrian Berry

Similar books