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The Friendly Guide to the Universe: A Down-To-Earth Tour of Space, Time and the Wonders of the Cosmos,9780140153811

The Friendly Guide to the Universe: A Down-To-Earth Tour of Space, Time and the Wonders of the Cosmos

by Hathaway, Nancy (Author)
Edition:
Reprint
ISBN13:

9780140153811

ISBN10:
0140153810
Format:
Paperback
Pub. Date:
11/1/1995
Publisher(s):
Penguin Group USA
  • Other versions by this Author
List Price: $16.00
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Summary

Is anybody out there? How long is a lightyear? And what's a quark, anyway? The Friendly Guide to the Universe answers all these questions and many more in this accessible, fact-crammed compendium, perfect for anyone who wants to have a deeper appreciation of deep space. The Friendly Guide to the Universe is based on the theory that there's nothing dull about the cosmos. Written for readers who already love astronomy as well as for those who have long been afraid to approach the wonders of the celestial spheres, it includes a chronology of the universe from the Big Bang to the decay of all matter; easy-to-understand explanations of key astronomical concepts, from Kepler's laws of planetary motion to the work of Stephen Hawking; a description of our unsuccessful attempts to contact other civilizations - and the many rumors about their attempts to get in touch with us; a history of observation - from Stonehenge to the Keck Telescope, and beyond; a look at the way the starry skies have been portrayed by artists, including Albrecht Durer, Diego Rivera, and Vincent van Gogh; and Myriad quotations from lovers of astronomy as varied as Geoffrey Chaucer, Lord Byron, H. G. Wells, Gertrude Stein, and, above all, James Joyce ... and more. The Friendly Guide to the Universe is designed to be fun to read, with illustrations, sidebars, and at-a-glance maps and charts throughout. Written in a friendly formula all its own, it illuminates not only the mystery and beauty of the solar system, the galaxy, and the universe as a whole, but also the people behind the continuing search for knowledge about the heavens. It's a book that makes for an entertaining, idiosyncratic astronomical companion - one thatwill be irresistible for any earthling who's ever looked skyward in wonder!

Table of Contents

A Friendly Preface to the Friendly Guide xv
PART I A Chronology: An Abbreviated History of the Universe 3(34)
PART II The Solar System 37(190)
Crystal Balls and Other Spheres: The Cosmology of the Ancient Greeks
39(4)
Copernicus and the Center of the Universe
43(4)
The Riddle of Retrograde
47(3)
Immanuel Kant and the Birth of the Solar System
50(4)
Classical Mythology and the Planets
54(3)
How Big Is It?
57(3)
The Solar System
60(2)
Sunspots
62(4)
The Green Flash
66(3)
The Moon
69(3)
The Birth of the Moon
72(2)
The Face of the Moon
74(2)
Cosmic Codependency
76(1)
About Eclipses
77(2)
Six Noteworthy Eclipses
79(4)
Edgar Allan Poe and the Man in the Moon
83(2)
How the Moon Got Its Spots
85(2)
Space Trash
87(2)
Mercury: A Heavy Metal World
89(3)
Sixteen Craters
92(1)
Venus: Toxic Twin
93(5)
The Emperor of Venus
98(3)
Gaia: The Once and Future Earth
101(1)
What Makes the Earth Unique
102(2)
Why There Are Seasons
104(1)
Why the Sky Is Blue
105(1)
Mars: The Reality
106(3)
Fear and Panic: The Moons of Mars
109(3)
Life on Mars
112(5)
Devil Girl from Mars (and Other Cultural Landmarks)
117(1)
Messages from Beyond
118(2)
Asteroids: Vermin of the Skies
120(3)
The First Twenty-five Asteroids
123(2)
T. Rex and the Attack of the Killer Rox
125(2)
Jupiter and the Great Red Spot
127(3)
The Search for Life Goes On...
130(3)
Galileo and The Starry Messenger
133(2)
H. G. Wells on the Invention of the Telescope
135(4)
A Chronology of Observational Technology
139(6)
Galileo's Starlets
145(6)
The Star of Bethlehem
151(2)
Johannes Kepler
153(6)
Kepler's Laws of Planetary Motion
159(1)
Kepler's Dream
160(3)
Saturn
163(4)
Rings
167(4)
Titan and Other Saturnian Moons: The Search for Life Continues...
171(4)
Sir Isaac Newton
175(3)
George Bernard Shaw on Isaac Newton
178(1)
Ralph Waldo Emerson on Gravity
179(2)
Principia Mathematica and the Universal Law of Gravity
181(2)
Uranus
183(5)
Caroline Herschel
188(2)
Bode's Law: A Formula That Shouldn't Work
190(3)
Neptune
193(3)
Triton: Moon Like a Cantaloupe
196(2)
The Sorry Tale of the Discovery of Neptune
198(4)
Pluto
202(4)
Pluto's Moon
206(2)
Many Moons
208(2)
Edmond Halley's Comet
210(6)
It Came from Outer Space
216(4)
Shooting Stars, Meteorites, and the Tears of Saint Lawrence
220(1)
Buried Treasure from Outer Space
221(1)
Meteor Showers Worth Watching
222(5)
PART III The Milky Way and Beyond 227(136)
A Star Is Born
229(2)
Stellar Nurseries
231(2)
William Henry Smyth and the Colors of Stars
233(2)
The Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram
235(4)
Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar and the Death of Stars
239(3)
Tycho's Star and Other Supernovae
242(7)
Neutron Stars, Pulsars, and Little Green Men
249(4)
Black Holes
253(4)
Falling into a Black Hole
257(2)
Charles Messier
259(1)
Selections from the Messier Catalogue
260(3)
Henry Draper and the Henry Draper Catalogue
263(4)
Annie Jump Cannon
267(3)
Henrietta Leavitt's Standard Candle
270(4)
Albert Einstein
274(7)
The Great Debate
281(5)
Theodore Roosevelt and the Queen of the Nebulae
286(1)
Edwin P. Hubble
287(3)
The Expanding Universe: The Usual Analogies
290(2)
The Hubble Constant
292(3)
The Hubble Space Telescope
295(4)
A Garden of Galaxies
299(5)
M51: The Whirlpool Galaxy
304(2)
The Mythology of the Milky Way
306(3)
Clusters, Superclusters, and Voids
309(4)
The Local Group
313(1)
The Big Bang
314(5)
Before the Big Bang
319(2)
Anti-matter
321(1)
Perils of Modern Living
322(2)
Dark Matter
324(3)
Fritz Zwicky
327(4)
Quasars
331(5)
The Life and Work of Stephen Hawking
336(3)
Stephen Hawking, Castaway
339(4)
Strings
343(1)
Krishna Opens His Mouth
344(2)
Why Is the Sky Dark at Night? The Riddle That Won't Go Away
346(4)
UFOs
350(3)
Waiting at the Water Hole: The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence
353(4)
The Drake Equation
357(2)
To Whom It May Concern
359(4)
PART IV An Album of Stars and Constellations 363(70)
Star Names
365(4)
How Bright Is It?
369(2)
The Dog Star and the Pup
371(2)
The Brightest Stars in the Sky
373(1)
Stella Polaris: The North Star
374(2)
The Sixty-first Star of the Swan and Other Nearby Stars
376(3)
The Nearest Stars to Earth
379(2)
F. W. Bessel and the Personal Equation
381(2)
Zodiac Tales
383(16)
The Ten Brightest Stars in the Zodiac
399(1)
A Drama of the Northern Skies: Perseus, Cassiopeia, Cepheus, Andromeda, Pegasus, and Cetus
400(3)
The Demon Star
403(2)
The Wonderful Star
405(2)
Orion: The California of the Sky
407(3)
The Pleiades
410(4)
Ursa Major and the Big Dipper
414(5)
Defunct Constellations
419(4)
The Original Forty-eight
423(1)
Celestial Art
424(9)
An Essential Glossary 433(6)
Selected Bibliography 439(6)
Star Charts 445(4)
Index 449


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