Under alien skies : a sightseer's guide to the universe

by Philip C. Plait

Paper Book, 2023

Status

Available

Call number

520

Publication

New York, NY : W.W. Norton & Company, [2023]

Description

Drawing on the latest scientific research and his prodigious imagination, a renowned astronomer and science communicator takes us on an immersive tour of the universe to view ten of the most spectacular sights outer space has to offer, including the strange, beautiful shadows cast by a hundred thousand stars.

User reviews

LibraryThing member TomDonaghey
Under Alien Skies (2023) by Philip Plait, PhD. This book can be looked upon as the local version of “The Hitchhiker’s Guide…” not the Earth published novel but the intergalactic guide mentioned therein. Take a tour of the heavens and beyond with “The Bad Astronomer” Dr. Philip Plait and
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experience the wonder and awe and weirdness that awaits beyond our skies.
The Doctor puts FUN into (well I was going to use a word that has fun as a beginning, middle or end, but that would be the exact opposite of what I was going for, so…) everything he is talking about. From the moon to Mars to Saturn, asteroids and comets and beyond, Dr. Plait takes you to alien worlds where our common sense is skewed and slued into mind twisting, yet real, calisthenics that will have you amazed but wanting more.
This book is an essential introduction to what awaits further travelers. And it is a great introduction to young readers as a gateway to the wonders of science, astronomy, space exploration and much more.
It would seem I am very enthused about this book. Read it and you will be likewise.
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LibraryThing member fpagan
Vivid and lively descriptions of what it would be like to be on the surface of, or in the surroundings of, Luna ("the Moon"), Mars, an asteroid, a comet, Saturn, Pluto, a planet in the Trappist-1 red-dwarf system, planets in a binary-star system, a planet in a system within a globular cluster of
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stars, a stellar-nursery nebula, and a supermassive black hole. Plait's alternation of factual sections with fictional you-are-there scenarios works to ensure that the book will leave all readers with a good deal of astronomical knowledge. Particularly knowledge-solidifying, I think, is the chapter on black holes.
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LibraryThing member knightlight777
An interesting twist on the fascinating thing out there called out universe. The book profiles and number of the planets and then moves on to asteroids, star factories, and the ultimate mystery black holes. Wait he missed dark matter, something we know almost nothing about. It seems we are still in
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the dark ages here.

The author takes the position of something like a tour guide and show you the experience you would have along for the ride close up. It is an entertaining approach but he does get bogged down into some heavy wonkish science that brings back flashbacks as the type of text books you have read.
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Language

Physical description

336 p.; 24 cm

ISBN

0393867307 / 9780393867305
Page: 0.2248 seconds