This morning, I was still yesterday
This book presents the physical principles of time travel and three different types of time machines in a way that is easy to understand. It also discusses the technical feasibility of such machines and the social and political consequences of time travel.
In an entertaining way, it paints a speculative vision of what the year 2100 might look like in terms of society, politics and economics, medicine, technology and transport, and the natural sciences. To better assess this vision, it contrasts it with a look back at the year 1910. Would a person from 1910 have had any idea of technical achievements such as the computer or the discovery of the expansion of the universe? Science writer Andreas Müller takes readers on an adventurous journey through time.
The author , Dr Andreas Müller, is an astrophysicist. He obtained his doctorate in 2004 at the University of Heidelberg and subsequently conducted research on black holes in X-ray astronomy at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Munich.