Description
The second edition of The Cambridge Guide to the Solar System brings this comprehensive description of the planets and moons up to date, by extending it to include fascinating new discoveries made during the previous decade. As with the first edition, it is written at an introductory level appropriate for high-school and undergraduate students, while also providing fresh, current insights that will appeal to professionals as well as general readers with an interest in planetary science. This is accomplished in a light and uniform style, including everyday metaphors and many spacecraft images.
This second edition is filled with vital new facts and information, and lavishly illustrated in color throughout. Hundreds of new images have been provided. Most of these illustrations have never appeared together in print before, and many of them have a beauty comparable to works of art.
An Internet site for use by the instructor, students or casual reader also supports this book. It contains all of the images in this second edition, together with their legends and overview bullets of their seminal content. This site also includes similar material for the author’s books about the Sun, including the second edition of Sun, Earth and Sky and the second edition of The Sun from Space. The website address is http://ase.tufts.edu/cosmos/.
Striking examples of new images from contemporary planetary spacecraft include the Chandrayaan-1 and LCROSS missions to the Moon, the MESSENGER spacecraft that is viewing the unseen half of Mercury, the 2001 Mars Odyssey, Spirit and Opportunity Exploration Rovers and Phoenix lander on Mars, the Cassini–Huygens mission to Saturn and its moons Enceladus and Titan, the Deep Impact and Stardust encounters with comets, with Stardust’s sample return to Earth, and the Hayabusa encounter with the asteroid Itokawa.
The more effective illustrations from previous spacecraft have been retained, without an excessive increase in the length of the book, including those from the Apollo missions to the Earth’s Moon, the Viking 1 and 2 missions to Mars, the Mars Global Surveyor, the Voyager 1 and 2 missions to the four giant planets, the Galileo mission to Jupiter, and several spacecraft encounters with asteroids and comets.
We have not forgotten our home planet Earth, which continues to provide the reference background for discussions of volcanoes, water, geology, atmospheres and magnetospheres. The second edition also includes an updated appraisal of the effects of global warming, with attempts to combat it, and investigations of space weather that can threaten astronauts and influences the performance, reliability and lifetime of interplanetary spacecraft, Earth-orbiting satellites, and terrestrial communications and power systems.