The Scientific American Book of Astronomy

by Editors of Scientific American Magazine

Hardcover, 1999

Call number

520 SCI AMER

Collection

Publication

Lyons Press (1999), Edition: 1st, 396 pages

Description

Space has captivated and confounded human beings since our earliest ancestors first gazed upward toward the starry heavens. From the seventeenth century, when Galileo viewed the moon through his newly invented telescope, to the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope a few years ago, mankind has pursued the quest to unlock the mysteries of the universe. Indeed, the quest itself seems infinite, as made abundantly clear by the breadth of scientific theory and research within these pages. Now, for the first time in paperback, The Scientific American Book of Astronomy compiles over thirty articles culled from the magazine, written by some of the biggest names presently working in the field. Included here is Leonard Susskind on Black Holes and the Information Paradox, Kenneth R. Lang on newly discovered Secrets of the Sun, and David H. Levy and Eugene Shoemaker on the heart-stopping collision between Comet Shoemaker -- Levy 9 and Jupiter. Read about the newest theory of the self-reproducing universe. Learn how a meteorite found in Antarctica offers strong evidence of life on Mars. Divided into categories including The Universe, Galaxies, and Planets, among others, these articles present cutting-edge technology as well as the history of discoveries that have shaped our understanding of space. With black-and-white illustrations and a color section, this book will take readers to new heights of knowledge and imagination.… (more)

Subjects

Pages

396

ISBN

1558219668 / 9781558219663
Page: 0.3421 seconds