Astrophysicist Emma Chapman's <b><i>Radio Universe</i></b> reveals how we use radio waves to explore the distant universe. Chapman follows one on a journey from Earth into the wider Milky Way, passing black holes and pulsars
New Scientist
A brave new world of cosmis surveillance is here
The Spectator
A dazzling trip into outer space reveals how radio waves have helped us solve the mysteries of the universe's darkest corners and deepest past
Bookseller
PRAISE FOR <i>FIRST LIGHT</i>, BY EMMA CHAPMAN
:
A dispatch from the frontiers of science, from a brain<b> fizzing with ideas and energy</b>
- Chris Lintott, BBC Sky at Night,
An<b> illuminating and entertaining</b> look at the earliest stars of our cosmos. Chapman is a witty and straightforward guide, and her enthusiasm is infectious
Washington Post
<b>Thoroughly engaging</b> . . . allows us to see science in the making. Chapman serves as a wonderful guide, whose voice is reminiscent of Carl Sagan's, although with an extra and very welcome dollop of impish humor
Wall Street Journal