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Astrobiology involves the study of the origin and history of life
on Earth, planets and moons where life may have arisen, and the
search for extraterrestrial life. It combines the sciences of
biology, chemistry, palaeontology, geology, planetary physics and
astronomy. This textbook brings together world experts in each of
these disciplines to provide the most comprehensive coverage of the
field currently available. Topics cover the origin and evolution of
life on Earth, the geological, physical and chemical conditions in
which life might arise and the detection of extraterrestrial life
on other planets and moons. The book also covers the history of our
ideas on extraterrestrial life and the origin of life, as well as
the ethical, philosophical and educational issues raised by
astrobiology. Written to be accessible to students from diverse
backgrounds, this text will be welcomed by advanced undergraduates
and graduates who are taking astrobiology courses.
Astrobiology involves the study of the origin and history of life
on Earth, planets and moons where life may have arisen, and the
search for extraterrestrial life. It combines the sciences of
biology, chemistry, palaeontology, geology, planetary physics and
astronomy. This textbook brings together world experts in each of
these disciplines to provide the most comprehensive coverage of the
field currently available. Topics cover the origin and evolution of
life on Earth, the geological, physical and chemical conditions in
which life might arise and the detection of extraterrestrial life
on other planets and moons. The book also covers the history of our
ideas on extraterrestrial life and the origin of life, as well as
the ethical, philosophical and educational issues raised by
astrobiology. Written to be accessible to students from diverse
backgrounds, this text will be welcomed by advanced undergraduates
and graduates who are taking astrobiology courses.
Providing a definitive history of the formative years of radio
astronomy, this book is invaluable for historians of science,
scientists and engineers. The whole of worldwide radio and radar
astronomy is covered, beginning with the discoveries by Jansky and
Reber of cosmic noise before World War II, through the wartime
detections of solar noise, the discovery of radio stars, lunar and
meteor radar experiments, the detection of the hydrogen spectral
line, to the discoveries of Hey, Ryle, Lovell and Pawsey in the
decade following the war, revealing an entirely different sky from
that of visual astronomy. Using contemporary literature,
correspondence and photographs, the book tells the story of the
people who shaped the intellectual, technical, and social aspects
of the field now known as radio astronomy. The book features quotes
from over a hundred interviews with pioneering radio astronomers,
giving fascinating insights into the development of radio
astronomy. Woodruff T. Sullivan III has been awarded the 2012 Leroy
E. Doggett Prize for Historical Astronomy.
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