1 minute read
The Beauty of Falling by Claudia de Rham
AGENT
Jeff Shreve
Advertisement
PUBLISHER
Princeton University Press
PUBLICATION Autumn 2023
STATUS
Draft manuscript
LENGTH
62,000 words
RIGHTS SOLD
• World English Language (Princeton
University Press) • France (Quanto) • Germany (Aufbau) • Romania (Editura Trei)
The Beauty of Falling
A Life in Pursuit of Gravity
CLAUDIA DE RHAM
A brilliant physicist traces the trajectory of her tumultuous life in science, revealing how her ground-breaking research is providing a new perspective on gravity
We all know what gravity feels like – when we throw a ball, swing in a hammock or send a stone skipping along the surface of a pond, we’re all carrying out our own personal experiments with gravity. Yet the brightest minds in history have yet to answer the simple question: what exactly is gravity?
Physicist Claudia de Rham has been playing with gravity for her entire life, as a pilot soaring through the sky, as a diver delving into the deep sea and very nearly as an astronaut with the European Space Agency. In THE BEAUTY OF FALLING, she builds the most intimate, vivid portrait of gravity we have so far, from Newton, through Galileo and Einstein, to modern researchers such as the Nobel Prizewinning astrophysicist Andrea Ghez. De Rham closes with the theory of ‘massive gravity’ that she and her colleagues have uncovered, a theory that may finally move physics beyond general relativity and help to unravel some knotty mysteries of our Universe.
Along the way, she tells her own story, from her globe-trotting upbringing, to her rollercoaster-ride astronaut selection process, to her cutting-edge research. THE BEAUTY OF FALLING gives readers a window into the world of science today in a way that can inspire people from all backgrounds to fully appreciate our mysterious, playful, gravity-driven universe.
Claudia de Rham is a professor of theoretical physics at Imperial College London, a 2020 Simons Investigator in Physics, a 2020 Blavatnik Laureate in Physical Sciences and Engineering, and winner of the 2018 Adams Prize for contributions to mathematics. In 2008, she was one of the final 42 candidates for the European Space Agency’s astronaut selection campaign, before a surprise diagnosis of latent tuberculosis derailed her chances. In 2011, she and her colleagues gained worldwide attention by publishing a theory of massive gravity that has the potential to solve some of cosmology’s biggest mysteries.