Astrophysics for Supervillains

Dr Matthew Bothwell author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Dorling Kindersley Ltd

Published:4th Jul '24

Should be back in stock very soon

Astrophysics for Supervillains cover

Learn how to destroy the universe with the power of astrophysics in this fun and factual space book for kids.

"Could you crash the Moon into the Earth? If the Sun explodes, would we all get vaporised? What’s the weather like on Mercury?"

Discover the answers to these questions and many more at the Supervillain Academy: the magnificently morbid school for young villains in training. Facts about space are all well and good, but discovering that if you threw someone into a black hole, they would be spaghettified – stretched out long and thin before getting squashed smaller than an atom – is truly, fascinatingly gruesome.

A factual and full-of-fun astronomy book for young big thinkers and budding scientists.

  • An accessible and enjoyable introduction to astrophysics, explaining big topics in a simple way
  • Packed with facts about the solar system, galaxies and the universe
  • Each chapter is linked to science topics that children study at school
  • Scientific concepts are brought to life with humorous illustrations

Based on real questions from children, expert astronomer and author Dr. Matt Bothwell has created this kids' science book to teach astrophysics to middle graders. Perfect for fans of Kay’s Marvellous Medicine and the Horrible Histories series, Astrophysics for Supervillains is the first book of the Supervillain Academy series that will have curious kids keen to get to school on time!

Bothwell is the public astronomer at the University of Cambridge's Institute of Astronomy, so engaging a school-age audience is all in a day’s work, and Astrophysics for Supervillains is no exception.

It cleverly weaves around tough answers that might require an actual PhD to unpick, coupling them with plenty of cartoon illustrations and the kind of choice typography that makes an intriguing Buzzfeed article. It’s a really fun insight into the cosmos that could inspire future generations of astronomers.

* How it Wor

ISBN: 9780241674512

Dimensions: 197mm x 129mm x 14mm

Weight: 160g

176 pages