Como cliente Amazon Prime obtén 3 meses de Audible gratis
Tau Ceti
The Nearest Sun-Like Star (Science and Cosmos)
No se ha podido añadir a la cesta
Error al eliminar la lista de deseos.
Se ha producido un error al añadirlo a la biblioteca
Se ha producido un error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
Suscríbete a la prueba gratuita para poder disfrutar de este libro a un precio exclusivo para suscriptores
Compra ahora por 13,99 €
-
Narrado por:
-
Bryan L Bernard
-
De:
-
Boris Kriger
Twelve light-years from Earth, a star burns quietly in the constellation of the Whale. It is the nearest solitary star that resembles our Sun—a little older, a little cooler, a little poorer in the heavy elements from which planets are made. For sixty years, astronomers have trained the world’s finest instruments on Tau Ceti, searching for planets, for signals, for signs of life. What they have found is something more unexpected and more instructive: a masterclass in the limits of human knowledge.
Every planet reported around this star remains unconfirmed. The debris disk once declared ten times more massive than the Solar System’s may, after a correction that went unnoticed for twenty years, be smaller than our own. The star’s orientation— pole-on, aimed directly at Earth—suppresses the very signals that would reveal its worlds, turning the most studied Sun-like star into one of the least understood. In this book, Boris Kriger tells the story of Tau Ceti as a story about what we see, what we miss, and why the difference matters. Drawing on a peer-reviewed research paper included as an appendix—which introduces the Detection Completeness Principle and the Observational Asymmetry Theorem—the book translates the science into narrative without equations, explores the speculative biology of worlds we cannot yet observe, and makes the case that astrophysics needs its analysts as much as its observers.
Part science, part speculation, and part meditation on the nature of discovery, Tau Ceti: The Nearest Sun-Like Star invites readers to look at the night sky with fresh eyes and to consider the possibility that the most important things about our cosmic neighborhood are the things we have not yet learned to see.
©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger