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With Astronomy Today, Eighth Edition, trusted authors Eric Chaisson
and Steve McMillan communicate their excitement about astronomy,
delivering current and thorough science with insightful pedagogy.
The text emphasizes critical thinking and visualization, and it
focuses on the process of scientific discovery, teaching students
how we know what we know. Alternate Versions *Astronomy Today,
Volume 1: The Solar System, Eighth Edition-Focuses primarily on
planetary coverage for a 1-term course. Includes Chapters 1-16, 28.
*Astronomy Today, Volume 2: Stars and Galaxies, Eighth
Edition-Focuses primarily on stars and stellar evolution for a
1-term course. Includes Chapters 1-5 and 16-28.
This book is emerged from an insightful essay by the American Nobel
chemist Dudley Herschbach, speculating about how the mythological
Hercules might have tackled a hypothetical, monumental task, or
"thirteenth labor," such as weighing the Earth's atmosphere.
Thestory of the World War II service of VP-63, a patrol wing
equipped with PBY-5 Catalina flying boats. VP-63's aircraft were
equipped with Magnetic Anomaly Detection (MAD) systems that allowed
them to locate and attack submerged submarines. The VP-63 Patrol
Wing played a crucial role for the US Navy in WW II.
...And indeed, these latest centuries merit praise because it is
during them that the arts and sciences, discovered Iry the
ancients, have been reduced to so great and constantlY increasing
perfec- tion through the investigations and experiments of
clear-seeing minds. This development is particularlY evident in the
case of the mathematical sciences. Here, without mentioning various
men who have achieved success, we must without hesitation and with
the unanimous approval of scholars assign the first place to Gali-
leo Galilei, Member of the Acadmry of the Lincei. This he de-
serves not onlY because he has effectivelY demonstrated faUacies in
many of our current conclusions, as is amplY shown Iry his
published works, but also Iry means of the telescope (invented in
this country but greatlY perfected Iry him) he has discovered the
four sateOites of Jupiter, has shown us the true character of the
Milky wa~ and has made us acquainted with spots on the Sun, with
the rough and cloudy portions of the lunar surface, with the
threefold nature of Saturn, with the phases of Venus and with the
physical character of comets. These matters were entirelY unknown
to the ancient astronomers and philosophers; so that we may trulY
say that he has restored to the world the science of astronomy and
has presented it in a new light.
The Hubble Space Telescope is the largest, most complex, and most
powerful observatory ever deployed in space, designed to allow
astronomers to look far back into our own cosmic past with
unprecedented clarity. Yet from its launch in 1990, when it was
discovered that a flawed mirror was causing severe "myopia" and
sending fuzzy images back to Earth, the HST has been at the center
of a controversy over who was at fault for the flaw and how it
should be fixed. Now Eric Chaisson, a former senior scientist on
the HST project, tells the inside story of the much heralded
mission to fix the telescope. Drawing on his journals, Chaisson
recreates the day-to-day struggles of scientists, politicians, and
publicists to fix the telescope and control the political spin.
Illustrated with "before and after" full-color pictures from the
telescope and updated with a new preface, The Hubble Wars tells an
engaging tale of scientific comedy and error. In this new edition,
coming at the half-way point in the HST's planned mission of
fifteen years, Chaisson has brought the Hubble story up-to-date by
sorting out the spectacular from the mundane contributions the HST
has made to our knowledge of the Solar System, the Milky Way
Galaxy, and the distant galaxies of deep space.
This book is emerged from an insightful essay by the American Nobel
chemist Dudley Herschbach, speculating about how the mythological
Hercules might have tackled a hypothetical, monumental task, or
"thirteenth labor," such as weighing the Earth's atmosphere.
For one-semester Introduction to Astronomy courses. With the Eighth
Edition of Astronomy: A Beginner's Guide, trusted authors Eric
Chaisson and Steve McMillan bring a renewed freshness and analysis
to recent changes in our understanding of the cosmos. As with the
other two books in their Astronomy suite (one for two-semester
courses and the other, a brief visual book), the authors continue
to emphasize three major themes: the process of science, the size
and scale of the universe, and the evolution of the cosmos. This
new edition ignites reader interest with new discoveries from the
latest space missions and a new focus on reader-oriented
engagement. Note: You are purchasing a standalone product; MyLab
(TM) & Mastering (TM) does not come packaged with this content.
Students, if interested in purchasing this title with MyLab &
Mastering, ask your instructor for the correct package ISBN and
Course ID. Instructors, contact your Pearson representative for
more information. If you would like to purchase both the physical
text and MyLab & Mastering, search for: 0134054725 /
9780134054728 Astronomy: A Beginner's Guide to the Universe Plus
MasteringAstronomy with eText -- Access Card Package Package
consists of: 0134060245 / 9780134060248 MasteringAstronomy with
Pearson eText -- ValuePack Access Card -- for Astronomy: A
Beginner's Guide to the Universe 0134087704 / 9780134087702
Astronomy: A Beginner's Guide to the Universe
Our Family Favorites is a collection of recipes that are just that
- our favorites. Most of the recipes are italian, but there are
some other favorites also. Some recipes have been passed down
through the generations and others we have only just discovered -
whatever the case - there is something about each recipe that
inspired us to enter it into this cookbook. Whether it is Grandma's
famous roasted peppers or Aunt Gertie's homemade Manicotti, each
meal was made with lots of loving care and more than a dash of fun.
We hope you enjoy making and eating these delicious meals as much
as we do!
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P.S. (DVD)
Laura Linney, Topher Grace, Gabriel Byrne, Marcia Gay Harden, Paul Rudd, …
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R397
R174
Discovery Miles 1 740
Save R223 (56%)
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Drama starring Laura Linney as Louise Harrington, a divorced,
thirty-something admission's officer at Columbia University's
School of Fine Arts. When Louise arranges to interview a
prospective student at least 15 years younger than she is, she's
shocked to find out he is the spitting image of her high-school
sweetheart, an artist who had died in a tragic car accident before
they graduated. Within hours of the interview, Louise and Scott
(Topher Grace) have embarked on a passionately uninhibited affair.
But is Scott just a reminder of Louise's lost love?
This book is about saving all of mom's bakeys that are getting
attacked by some sea creature. Which Larry is a crab and Joe is a
shrimp and they are detectives. They are the main creatures in the
story.
We are connected to distant space and time not only by our
imaginations but also through a common cosmic heritage. Emerging
now from modern science is a unified scenario of the cosmos,
including ourselves as sentient beings, based on the time-honored
concept of change. From galaxies to snowflakes, from stars and
planets to life itself, we are beginning to identify an underlying
ubiquitous pattern penetrating the fabric of all the natural
sciences--a sweepingly encompassing view of the order and structure
of every known class of object in our richly endowed universe.
This is the subject of Eric Chaisson's new book. In "Cosmic
Evolution" Chaisson addresses some of the most basic issues we can
contemplate: the origin of matter and the origin of life, and the
ways matter, life, and radiation interact and change with time.
Guided by notions of beauty and symmetry, by the search for
simplicity and elegance, by the ambition to explain the widest
range of phenomena with the fewest possible principles, Chaisson
designs for us an expansive yet intricate model depicting the
origin and evolution of all material structures. He shows us that
neither new science nor appeals to nonscience are needed to
understand the impressive hierarchy of the cosmic evolutionary
story, from quark to quasar, from microbe to mind.
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