in Washington, DC during the 2013
National Book Festival Livio has popularized astronomy and mathematics through books, lectures, magazine articles, and radio and television appearances. He has appeared on TV and radio outlets including
PBS,
NPR, and
CBS to discuss scientific and mathematical subjects. Livio's first book of popular science was
The Accelerating Universe (2000), which described the theory that the
universe was expanding at a faster and faster rate. He explored the possible causes and the theoretical implications of continuing expansion, especially its implications for beliefs about the
"beauty" of the scientific laws that govern the cosmos. Livio's next book,
The Golden Ratio: The Story of Phi (2002), concerned
patterns in nature and art. He traced the influence of the
golden ratio through many centuries of art,
architecture,
music, and even
stock market theories. ''The Equation That Couldn't Be Solved'' (2005) described how efforts to solve the
quintic equation led to
group theory and to the mathematics of
symmetry. He emphasizes the crucial roles of
Évariste Galois and
Niels Henrik Abel in developing this branch of mathematics. The book contains biographical sketches of Galois, Abel, and several other mathematicians.
Is God A Mathematician? (2009) discusses the ability of mathematics to describe and predict accurately the physical world. Livio also attempts to answer a question with which mathematicians and philosophers have struggled for centuries:
Is mathematics ultimately invented or discovered? The book was selected by the
Washington Post as one of the best books of 2009.
Brilliant Blunders (2013) investigates serious mistakes by five notable figures in science:
Charles Darwin,
Lord Kelvin,
Linus Pauling,
Fred Hoyle, and
Albert Einstein.
Why? What Makes Us Curious (2017) explores the nature of human curiosity, focusing on
Leonardo da Vinci and
Richard Feynman.
Galileo and the Science Deniers (2020) seeks to place
Galileo Galilei's life and discoveries in modern scientific and social contexts, and draws a parallel between modern science denialism and the heresy charges against Galileo.
Is Earth Exceptional? (2024), written with Nobel laureate Jack Szostak, describes cutting-edge research on the origin of life on Earth and the astronomical search for extraterrestrial life. == Personal life ==