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Listed
alphabetically by title.
Q
Burkhard
Polster 
Q.E.D.:
Beauty in Mathematical Proof
Walker
& Company, 2004, ISBN: 0-8027-1431-5, $10
The
latest in a series of small books about big ideas. Originally published
in the UK, Wooden Books is a series of concise, accessible introductions
to timeless sciences and vanishing arts, recreating the essence
of medieval texts through elegant designs and writing. Q.E.D. presents
some of the most famous mathematical proofs for nonmathematicians
and math experts alike. Grasp why Pythagoras's theorem must be correct.
Follow the ancient Chinese proof of the volume formula for the frustrating
frustum, and Archimedes' method for finding the volume of a sphere.
Discover the secrets of pi and why, contrary to popular belief,
squaring the circle really is possible. Study the subtle art of
mathematical domino tumbling, and find out how slicing cones helped
save a city and put a man on the Moon.
Frederick
Hess, Andrew Rotherham & Kate Walsh, eds. 
A
Qualified Teacher in Every Classroom? Appraising Old Answers and
New Ideas
Harvard
Education Press, 2004, ISBN: 1-891792-20-2, $22.95 (paper)
Under
the No Child Left Behind Act, states will have to ensure that every
public school classroom is staffed by a highly qualified teacher.
This mandate--and the fact that many children, especially low-income
and minority students, are taught by underqualified teachers ill-equipped
for the challenges ahead--gives new urgency to debates over teacher
recruitment, preparation, and induction. For several years, these
debates have been dominated by competing groups of partisans. One
denies that teaching requires a professional base of knowledge and
skill, while the other tries to promote professionalism by ensuring
that traditional programs retain their control over licensure and
formal certification. The conflict confuses policymakers, frustrates
educators, and stifles potentially promising solutions.
In
this volume, eleven contributors with rich experience in policy
and teaching take a fresh look at a number of issues, including:
-
Current systems for preparing and licensing teachers, and how
they affect the quality and supply of teachers in the work force;
-
An array of reform models for teacher preparation and licensure,
and what they would mean for the profession;
-
Questions of rigor and ideology in the core curricula of education
schools or programs;
-
The federal role in teacher preparation and licensure, especially
in light of NCLB.
Johnjoe
McFadden 
Quantum
Evolution: How Physics Weirdest Theory Explains Lifes
Biggest Mystery
W. W. Norton & Company, 2002, ISBN: 0-393-32310-2, $16.95
Four
billion years ago, the molten earth cooled and formed a crust. Even
as a particularly harsh period of meteoric bombardment tapered out,
carbon-fixing life quickly sprung from the primordial soup. Considering
the mind-boggling odds against the formation of the chemicals needed
to start terrestrial life, how did the inanimate amino acids, indeed
very abundant in the primordial soup, defeat the axioms of thermodynamics
and leap from the chaotic soup into ordered life? McFadden maintains
that life started too fast, and has been too successful, for the
blind chance of classical mechanics to explain. Quantum mechanics
has some powerful explanations.
Barry
Parker 
Quantum
Legacy: The Discovery That Changed Our Universe
Prometheus Books, 2002, ISBN: 157392993X, $29
Today
we all take for granted the many technological marvels that have
sprung from quantum physics without ever appreciating the radical
paradigm shift that led to these discoveries. The story of the physicists
who made the quantum leaps that have so altered ours is a provocative
and intriguing one.
Parker
introduces us to all the major players in this history, offering
interesting biographical details that shed light on their important
discoveries: Max Planck, Albert Einstein, Niels Bohr, Werner Heisenberg,
Erwin Schrödinger, Paul Dirac, Richard Feynman, and Julian
Schwinger. Parker also discusses Einstein's objections to quantum
theory ("God does not play dice with the universe."),
philosophical implications and "quantum weirdness," as
well as the seemingly miraculous practical applications of quantum
theory — in lasers, transistors, integrated circuits, computer
technology, nuclear energy, and genetics.
Andrew
Watson 
The
Quantum Quark
Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN: 0-521-82907-0, $30
The
world you can feel and touch is built of atoms, the smallest identifiable
chunks of matter. Yet the heart of each atom is itself a whole new
world, a world populated by quarks: indivisible, vanishingly small,
the ultimate building blocks of our Universe. This inner world where
quarks reign is subject to new and unfamiliar rules, the rules of
the quantum world. Colossal particle accelerators enable physicists
to bring this inner world into focus, and have helped them to shape
a theory respectful of quantum rules that explains how quarks feel
one another's presence. The Quantum Quark is the story of that theory:
quantum chromodynamics.
Roland
Omnès 
Quantum
Philosophy: Understanding and Interpreting Contemporary Science
Princeton University Press, 2002, ISBN: 0-691-09551-5, $16.95
(paperback)
One
of the world's leading quantum physicists, Omnès reviews
the history and recent development of mathematics, logic, and the
physical sciences to show that current work in quantum theory offers
new answers to questions that have puzzled philosophers for centuries:
Is the world ultimately intelligible? Are all events caused? Do
objects have definitive locations? Omnès addresses these
profound questions with vigorous arguments and clear, colorful writing,
aiming not just to advance scholarship but to enlighten readers
with no background in science or philosophy.
Jonathan
Allday
Quarks,
Leptons and the Big Bang, 2/e
Institute of Physics Publishing, 2002, ISBN: 0 7503 0806 0, $25
From
the Preface to the First Edition: "This is a book about particle
physics (the strange world of objects and forces that exists at
length scales much smaller than the size of an atom) and cosmology
(the study of the origin of the universe). It is quite extraordinary
that these two extremes of scale can be drawn together in one book.
Yet the advances of the past couple of decades have shown that there
is an intimate relationship between the world of the very large
and the very small." The second edition incorporates results established
over the last few years, especially in the cosmology sections that
give more balance to the two aspects of the book.
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R
Peter
Ward and Donald Brownlee 
Rare
Earth: Why Complex Life Is Uncommon in the Universe
Copernicus Books, 2000, ISBN: 0-387-98701-0, $27.50
Maybe
we really are alone. That's the thought-provoking conclusion of
Rare Earth, a book that is certain to have far-reaching impact in
the consideration of our place in the cosmos. While it is widely
believed that complex life is common, even widespread, throughout
the billions of stars and galaxies of our Universe, astrobiologists
Peter Ward and Donald Brownlee argue that advanced life may, in
fact, be very rare, perhaps even unique.
Ever
since Carl Sagan and Frank Drake announced that extraterrestrial
civilizations must number in the millions, the search for life in
our galaxy has accelerated. But in this brilliant and carefully
argued book, Ward and Brownlee question underlying assumptions of
Sagan and Drake's model, and take us on a search for life that reaches
from volcanic hot springs on our ocean floors to the frosty face
of Europa, Jupiter's icy moon. In the process, we learn that while
microbial life may well be more prevalent throughout the Universe
than previously believed, the conditions necessary for the evolution
and survival of higher life and here the consider everything
from DNA to plate tectonics to the role of our Moon are so
complex and precarious that they are unlikely to arise in many other
places, if at all.
Jessica
Helfand 
Reinventing
the Wheel
Princeton Architectural Press, 2002, ISBN: 1-56898-338-7, $24.95
As
inventive as instructive, information wheels — or volvelles
— have been used since the fourteenth century to measure,
record, predict, and calculate everything form time and space to
military history and recipes. In this fascinating book, designer
and critic Jessica Helfand offers and in-depth look at these unique
artifacts, which are not only clever and amusing — where else
could you dial-in ingredients to concoct "Creamed Oysters and
Celery"? — but, Helfand argues, relevant as a model for
modern interactive design.
From
circular mathematical slide rules to Captain Marvel phonetic decoders;
from nuclear bomb blast calculators to gestational breeding planners;
and from astronomical planispheres to presidential trivia plotters,
Reinventing the Wheel demonstrates the astonishing range and remarkable
utility of these ingenious "interactive" tools.
Ross
S. Kraemer, William Cassidy & Susan L. Schwartz 
Religions
of Star Trek
Westview Press (Perseus Books Group), January 2002, ISBN: 0-8133-6708-5,
$22
Is
there a God? What evil lurks beyond the stars? Can science save
one's soul? Profound questions like these have consumed human thought
over the ages; they also inspired the original creators of the Star
Trek canon of TV series and films. Religions of Star Trek
tackles these challenging questions head-on and examines in detail
the humanistic vision of creator Gene Roddenberry. Analyzing more
than three decades of screen adventure, the authors depict a Star
Trek transformed, corresponding to the resurgence of religion in
American public discourse. The authors analyze Star Trek's many
religious characters, tracing the roots of scientific humanism to
more contemporary aspects of religion and spirituality. Through
it all, the creators' visionary outlook remains constant: a humanistic
faith in free will and the nature of dispassionate scientific inquiry.
(This book was not prepared, licensed, approved, or endorsed by
any entity involved in creating or producing the Star Trek television
series or films.)
Ioan
James 
Remarkable
Physicists: From Galileo to Yukawa
Cambridge
University Press, 2004, ISBN: 0-521-01706-8/0-521-81687-4, $85/$30
The
250 years from the second half of the 17th century saw the birth
of modern physics and its growth into one of the most successful
of the sciences. All of the fifty-five physicists profiled have
made important contributions to physics, through their ideas and
teaching, or in other ways. The biographies are arranged chronologically
by the physicists' dates of birth, so that, when read in sequence,
they convey how physics developed over time. However, the book emphasizes
their varied life stories, not the details of their achievements.
Chris
Mooney 
The
Republican War on Science
Basic Books, September 2005, ISBN: 0-46504-674-4, $24.95
Science
has never been more crucial to understanding the political issues
facing the country and responding to them successfully; yet science
and scientists have less influence with the federal government than
at any time since the Eisenhower administration. From stem-cell
research to the “intelligent design” debate to global warming, the
rift between the Republican leadership and the scientific community
grows steadily wider. Chris Mooney ties together the disparate strands
of the attack on science into a compelling account of our government's
increasing unwillingness to distinguish between legitimate research
and ideologically driven pseudoscience.
Rebecca
Elson
A Responsibility to Awe
Carcanet Press (www.carcanet.co.uk),
2001, 1-903039-54-1
Rebecca
Elson was an astronomer. Her research involved dark matterhidden
mass which can be inferred only from its influence on observable
objects: "As if, from fireflies, one could infer the field."
Her poems, too, make inferences and speculate; they set out always
from meticulous observation and are not deterred by a knowledge
of how little we can know of the universe. A Responsibility to
Awe collects her best poetry, along with extracts from her notebooks.
In 1991, following time in Princeton and the Harvard Center for
Astrophysics, she returned to the Institute of Astronomy in Cambridge
where she worked on the first Hubble data. She died in Cambridge
in 1999, at the age of 39.
Aberration
(The Hubble Space Telescope before repair)
The
way they tell it
All the stars have wings
The sky so full of wings
There is no sky
And just for a moment
You forget
The error and the crimped
Paths of light
And you see it
The immense migration
And you hear the rush
The beating
B.
A. Steves and A. J. Maciejewski
The
Restless Universe: Applications of Gravitational N-Body Dynamics
to Planetary, Stellar and Galactic Systems (Scottish Graduate Textbook
Series)
Institute
of Physics Publishing, 2001, ISBN: 0-7503-0-8222, $49.99 (paperback)
Contents:
Solar systems dynamics. Stellar kinematics and dynamics. Galatic
dynamics. Cosmology - Large scale structure dynamics. General dynamics
The
aim of The Restless Universe is to stimulate the cross-fertilization
of ideas, methods and applications between the different communities
who work in the gravitational N-body problem arena, across diverse
fields of astrophysics. The chapters and topics cover three broad
themes: the dynamics of the solar system, the dynamics of galaxies
and star clusters, and the large scale structure of the Universe.
Eric
Schlegel 
The
Restless Universe: Understanding X-ray Astronomy in the Age of Chandra
and Newton
Oxford University Press, 2002, ISBN: 0-19-514847-9, $30
Carl
Sagan once noted that there is only one generation that gets to
see things for the first time. We are in the midst of such a time
right now, standing on the threshold of discovery in the young and
remarkable field of X-ray astronomy. In The Restless Universe,
astronomer Eric Schlegel offers readers an informative survey of
this cutting-edge science.
Two
major space observatories launched in the last few years--NASA's
Chandra and the European Newton--are now orbiting the Earth, sending
back a gold mine of data on the X-ray universe. Schlegel, who has
worked on the Chandra project for seven years, describes the building
and launching of this space-based X-ray observatory. But the book
goes far beyond the story of Chandra. What Schlegel provides here
is the background a nonscientist would need to grasp the present
and follow the future of X-ray astronomy. He looks at the relatively
brief history of the field, the hardware used to detect X-rays,
the satellites--past, present, and future--that have been or will
be flown to collect the data, the way astronomers interpret this
data, and, perhaps most important, the insights we have already
learned as well as speculations about what we may soon discover.
And throughout the book, Schlegel conveys the excitement of looking
at the universe from the perspective brought by these new observatories
and the sharper view they deliver.
Robert
Godwin, Ed. 
Rocket
& Space Corporation Energia
Apogee Books, 2001, ISBN: 1-896522-81-5, $19.95
A small
metal sphere weighing slightly more than 83 kilograms was placed
into an elliptical orbit by the mighty R-7 rocket. The date was
4 October 1957 and the sphere was called Sputnik. Published for
the first time completely in English, this volume contains a pictorial
record encompassing the entire history of the Russian space program,
from its inception at the end of World Was II to the present day.
Includes rare pictures and diagrams of Sputnik, Yuri Gagarian Vostok
capsule, the world's first Space Stations, the lunar rocket N1,
interplanetary probes, and the Buran shuttle.
Marina
Benjamin 
Rocket
Dreams: How the Space Age Shaped Our Vision of a World Beyond
Free
Press, 2003, ISBN: 0-7432-3343-3, $24 (ISBN:
0-7432-5534-8, $14, paperback)
Beginning
in 1958, tens of millions of people were enraptured—first,
by the U.S.-Soviet race to the moon, and finally by Project Apollo.
It is now more than three since the last man walked on the moon...more
time than between the first moonwalk and the beginning of World
War II. Apollo did not, as had been promised by a generation of
visionaries, herald the beginning of the Space Age, but its end.
Or
did it? Project Apollo, like a cannonball, reached its apogee and
returned to earth, but the trajectory of that return was complex.
America's atmosphere—its economic, scientific, and cultural
atmosphere—made for a very complicated reentry that produced
many solutions to the trajectory problem. Rocket Dreams
is about those solutions...about the places where the space program
landed.
In
the vernacular, the third law of motion states that what goes up
must come down. Thus the tremendous motive force that energized
the space program didn't just vanish; it was conserved and transformed,
making bestsellers out of fantasy literature, spawning Gaia, and
giving symbolism to the environmental movement. Everything from
the pop cultural boom in ufology to the worldwide Search for Extra-Terrestrial
Intelligence (SETI) feeds on the energy given off by America's leap
toward space.
Rocket
Dreams tours this Apollo-scarred
landscape. It is also an introduction to some of the most
fascinating characters imaginable: Some long dead, like the crackpot
visionary Alfred Lawson, who saw in space flight a new stage of
human evolution ("Alti-Man"), or Robert Goddard, the father
of rocketry, whose workshop in Roswell stands only half a mile from
shops selling posters of alien visitors. Others are very much alive—like
Stewart Brand, creator of the Whole Earth Catalog and partner with
Gerard O'Neill in the drive to build free-floating space colonies,
and SETI astronomer Seth Shostak, who has spent decades listening
to the skies, hoping for the first contact with another intelligent
species.
Karl
T. Pflock 
Roswell:
Inconvenient Facts and the Will to Believe
Prometheus Books, 2001, ISBN: 1-57392-894-1, $25
For
over 50 years, an incident near Roswell, New Mexico, has sparked
the imaginations of UFO enthusiasts. In this definitive study, a
longtime UFO researcher--who is convinced that some UFO reports
are real alien sightings--concludes that no alien craft or bodies
were ever found at Roswell. Using formerly classified records, witness
affidavits and the entire Pratt-Marcel interview transcript, he
shows that the U.S. government has absolutely no physical evidence
of aliens, shows how critical weather data completely refute key
claims of Roswell believers, and explains why the case now rises
and falls on the testimony of just one witness, who cleverly manipulated
leading investigators and continues to do so today.
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S
John
R. Ball & Charles H. Evans, Eds.
Safe
Passage: Astronaut Care for Exploration Missions
National Academy Press, 2001, ISBN: 0-309-07585-8, $80
Safe
Passage: Astronaut Care for Exploration Missions sets forth
a vision for space medicine as it applies to deep space voyage.
As missions increase in duration from months to years and extend
well beyond Earth's orbit, so will the attendant risks of working
in these extreme and isolated environmental conditions. Hazards
to astronaut health range from greater radiation exposure and loss
of bone and muscle density to intensified psychological stress from
living with others in a confined space. Going beyond the body of
biomedical research, the report examines existing space medicine
clinical and behavioral research and health care data and the policies
attendant to them. It describes why not enough is known today about
the dangers of prolonged travel to enable humans to venture into
deep space in a safe and sane manner. The report makes a number
of recommendations concerning NASA's structure for clinical and
behavioral research, on the need for a comprehensive astronaut health
care system and on an approach to communicating health and safety
risks to astronauts, their families, and the public.
Jon
Balchin 
Science:
100 Scientists Who Changed the World
Enchanted
Lion Books, 2003, ISBN: 1592700179, $18.95
Ranging
across the spectrum of scientific endeavor, from the cosmology of
Copernicus and Galileo, through the medical revolutions of Hippocrates
and Galen, it includes the fields of physics, biology, chemistry
and genetics. Biographical detail and clear descriptions of scientific
discoveries.
John
D. Barrow, et al., eds. 
Science
and Ultimate Reality: Quantum Theory, Cosmology and Complexity
Cambridge
University Press, 2004, ISBN: 0-521-83113-X, $55
This
preview of the future of physics comprises contributions from recognized
authorities inspired by the pioneering work of John Wheeler. Quantum
theory represents a unifying theme within the book, as it relates
to the topics of the nature of physical reality, cosmic inflation,
the arrow of time, models of the universe, superstrings, quantum
gravity and cosmology. Attempts to formulate a final unification
theory of physics are also considered, along with the existence
of hidden dimensions of space, hidden cosmic matter, and the strange
world of quantum technology. John Archibald Wheeler is one of the
most influential scientists of the twentieth century. His extraordinary
career has spanned momentous advances in physics, from the birth
of the nuclear age to the conception of the quantum computer. Famous
for coining the term "black hole," Professor Wheeler helped
lay the foundations for the rebirth of gravitation as a mainstream
branch of science, triggering the explosive growth in astrophysics
and cosmology that followed. His early contributions to physics
include the S matrix, the theory of nuclear rotation (with Edward
Teller), the theory of nuclear fission (with Niels Bohr), action-at-a-distance
electrodynamics (with Richard Feynman), positrons as backward-in-time
electrons, the universal Fermi interaction (with Jayme Tiomno),
muonic atoms, and the collective model of the nucleus. His inimitable
style of thinking, quirky wit, and love of the bizarre have inspired
generations of physicists.
Michael
G. Gibbs, Marni Berendsen, and Martin Storksdieck, eds 
Science
Educators Under the Stars: Amateur Astronomers Engaged in Education
and Public Outreach
Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 2007, 978-1-58381-315-7
paperback $10
The
first comprehensive treatise of the amateur astronomer's role in
communicating knowledge and passion about astronomy to the public.
The book reviews the topic from many angles: it characterizes the
nature of education and public engagement with astronomy that amateur
astronomers are currently doing; it features projects and organizations
that support and aid these practices; it discusses the potential
impact on the public and on astronomy and amateur astronomers; and
it embeds these pieces into a larger framework of astronomy education
as a whole. The book also provides a summary of research conducted
on amateur astronomers engaging in education and public outreach
along with presenting new research findings on women in astronomy.
Ernest
Volkman 
Science
Goes to War: The Search for the Ultimate Weapon from Greek Fire
to Star Wars
John Wiley & Sons, 2002, ISBN: 0-471-41007-1, $24.95
"It
was a thing blameworthy, shameful and barbarous, worthy of severe
punishment before God and Man, to wish to bring to perfection an
art damageable to ones neighbors and destructive to the human
race." This anguished statement from the 15th century
Italian mathematician known as Tartaglia, who created the science
of ballistics, might have come from any one of thousands of brilliant
scientists who, throughout history, have applied their genius to
the art of war. Every advance in weaponry from the bronze sword
to the stealth bomber has been the product of science, and it is
likely that without the pressure of war, science as we know it would
not exist.
Science
Goes to War examines the moral dilemmas, knotty technological
problems, and pragmatic necessities that have punctuated the inseparable
histories of science and warfare. This comprehensive volume recounts
the 4,000 year quest for the ultimate weapon and reveals how this
eternal arms race has both exploited and contributed to "pure" science.
Ivan
Amato, ed. 
Science
Pathways of Discovery
John Wiley & Sons, 2002, 0-471-05660-X, $27.95
Originally
published as a year-long series in Science magazine, these
twelve essays provide both historical and personal perspectives
on the landmark innovations of the past five centuries and their
connections to our understanding of the universe. From black holes
to the Internet, from the invention of concrete to the cloning of
sheep, the book traces the varied pathways of scientific investigation.
Highlights include: Stephen Jay Gould on the so-called science wars;
David Stevenson on the discovery of extra-solar planets; Eric Lander
and Robert Weinberg on the sequencing of the human genome; and Martin
Rees on the history and possible future of the universe.
Bruce
Jakosky 
Science,
Society, and the Search for Life in the Universe
The University of Arizona Press, 2006, ISBN: 0-8165-2613-3, $17.95
(paperback)
Are
we alone in the universe? As humans, are we unique or are we part
of a greater cosmic existence? What is life's future on Earth and
beyond? How does life begin and develop? These are age-old questions
that have inspired wonder and controversy ever since the first people
looked up into the sky. With today's technology, however, we are
closer than ever to finding the answers. Astrobiology is the relatively
new, but fast growing scientific discipline that involves trying
to understand the origin, evolution, and distribution of life within
the universe. It is also one of the few scientific disciplines that
attracts the public's intense curiosity and attention. In this broadly
accessible introduction to the field, Bruce Jakosky looks at the
search for life in the universe not only from a scientific perspective,
but also from a distinctly social one. He addresses topics including
the contradiction between the public's fascination and the meager
dialogue that exists between those within the scientific community
and those outside of it, and what has become some of the most impassioned
political wrangling ever seen in government science funding.
Douglas
Gough 
The
Scientific Legacy of Fred Hoyle
Cambridge
University Press, 2005, ISBN: 0-521-82448-6, $75
Fred
Hoyle was a remarkable scientist, and made an immense contribution
to many important problems in astronomy. Several of his obituaries
commented that he had made more influence on the course of astrophysics
and cosmology in the second half of the twentieth century than any
other person. This book is based on a memorial meeting that was
held in Cambridge, where Hoyle was based for three decades, and
contains chapters by many of Hoyle’s scientific collaborators. Each
chapter reviews an aspect of Fred Hoyle’s work; many of the subjects
he tackled are still areas of hot debate and active research. With
contributions by leading astronomers, the book concentrates on Hoyle’s
scientific legacy, and examines the influence his research has had
on others and on advances in astronomy and cosmology.
Hugh
G. Gauch, Jr. 
Scientific
Method in Practice
Cambridge
University Press, 2002, ISBN: 0-521-01708-4, $44 (paperback)
This
book is the first synthesis of the practice and the philosophy of
the scientific method. It offers scientists a deeper understanding
of the underpinnings of the scientific method, thereby leading to
more productive research and experimentation. It also provides a
greater perspective on the rationality of the scientific approach
and its role in society. Topics relevant to a variety of disciplines
are treated, and clarifying figures, case studies, and chapter summaries
enhance the pedagogy.
Donald
Goldsmith and Tobias Owen
Search
for Life in the Universe, 3/e
University Science Books, 2001, ISBN: 1-891389-16-5, $60
Long
recognized as the premier text for courses dealing with astrobiology,
this completely revised and updated Third Edition engages students
by presenting a great, unsolved mystery: How likely is life beyond
Earth, and how can we find it if it exists? The text covers the
fundamentals of astronomy, astrophysics, and planetary science,
including the discovery of more than 55 planets around other stars,
and also provides an overview of biology, geology, evolution, and
the possibilities of interstellar travel and communication. Includes
24 color insert pages and illustrations by Jon Lomberg.
Barbara
B. Poppe with Kristen P. Jorden 
Sentinels
of the Sun: Forecasting Space Weather
Big
Earth Publishing, 2006, ISBN: 1-55566-379-6, $22.50
The
Halloween Storms of late 2003, one of the largest series of solar
storms in history, caused power failures, the rerouting of airline
flights, satellite and space-station problems, and the failure of
multimillion-dollar instruments on the Mars Odyssey orbiter and
the ADEOS-2 spacecraft. The dramatic activity underscored the limitations
of our understanding of the Sun. The analogy between space weather
and terrestrial weather can be misleading–though both involve
storms, forecasts, and warnings, space weather isn't rain and lightning,
sunburn or flooding. Although the Sun drives all of these meteorological
phenomena on Earth, it also drives the more subtle system of solar
flares with their bursts of high-energy particles, X-rays, magnetic
fields, and tremendous solar winds. Sentinels of the Sun takes a
look at space weather and the Space Environment Center, an agency
devoted to the study of the Sun that has brought this science to
the forefront of space physics and solar forecasting.
Jim
Longuski 
The
Seven Secrets of How to Think Like a Rocket Scientist
Copernicus Books, 2007, ISBN: 0-387-30876-8, $25
This
book translates "thinking like a rocket scientist" into
every day thinking so it can be used by anyone. It's short and snappy
and written by a rocket scientist. The book illustrates the methods
(the 7 secrets) with anecdotes, quotations and biographical sketches
of famous scientists, personal stories and insights, and occasionally
some space history. The author reveals that rocket science is just
common sense applied to the extraordinarily uncommon environment
of outer space and that rocket scientists are people, too. It is
intended for "armchair" scientists, and for those interested
in popular psychology, space history, and science fiction films.
James
W. Moseley & Kal T. Pflock 
Shockingly
Close to the Truth: Confessions of a Grave-Robbing Ufologist
Prometheus Books, 2002, ISBN: 1-57392-991-3, $25
Shockingly
Close to the Truth! is a comprehensive tell-all history of ufology
from two men who have been at the center of this cultlike movement
for close to a century. James W. Moseley conveys the fun he has
had over the years pursuing tall tales and purported evidence of
visitors from outer space. As the creator of the newsletter Saucer
Smear the source on the follies, foibles, fads, and feuds
of ufology Moseley has the inside scoop on the amazing world
of serious UFO sleuths and "saucer fiends." His co-author, Karl
T. Pflock, has been tracking reports of unidentified flying objects
for close to half a century.
David
H. Levy 
Shoemaker
by Levy: The Man Who Made an Impact
Princeton University Press, 2000, ISBN: 0 691 00225 8, $24.95
In
the early 1980s David Levywriter, amateur astronomer and Society
board memberjoined Eugene Shoemaker and his wife, Carolyn,
to search for comets from an observation post on Palomar Mountain
in Southern California. Their collaboration would lead to the 1993
discovery of Shoemaker-Levy 9, with its several nuclei, five tails,
and two sheets of debris spread out in its orbit plane. A year later,
Levy would be by the Shoemakers' side again when their comet collided
with Jupiter. Not only did this collision revolutionize our understanding
of the history of the solar system, but it also offered a spectacular
confirmation of one scientist's life work. As a close friend and
colleague of Shoemaker (who died in 1997 at the age of 69), Levy
offers a uniquely insightful account of his life and the way it
has shaped our thinking about the universe.
Bill
Bryson 
A
Short History of Nearly Everything
Broadway Books (Random House), 2003, ISBN: 0-7679-0817-1, $27.50
In
chapters like "How to Build a Universe" and "Muster Mark's Quarks,"
Bryson reveals what he learned from the world's foremost experts
in the fields of archaeology, paleontology, physics, biology, astronomy,
math, chemistry and other demanding disciplines. After countless
hours spent in their offices, labs, and field camps, he had absorbed
more than enough information for a "wry-yet-lyrical" history of
this intriguing place we call home. From the Big Bang theory to
the rise of man, it's a look at how curious thinkers of the past
and present have come to understand Earth and its place in a vast
universe.v
Gavin
Weightman 
Signor
Marconi's Magic Box: The Most remarkable Invention of the 19th Century
& the Amateur Inventor Whose Genius Sparked a Revolution
Da
Capo Press, 2003, ISBN: 0-306-81275-4, $25
The
world at the turn of the twentieth century was in the throes of
"Marconi-mania" — brought on by an incredible invention
that no one could quite explain, and by a dapper and eccentric figure
(who would one day win the newly minted Nobel Prize) at the center
of it all. At a time when the telephone, telegraph, and electricity
made the whole world wonder just what science would think of next,
the startling answer had in 1896 in the form of two mysterious wooden
boxes containing a device one Guglielmo Marconi had rigged up to
transmit messages "through the ether." It was the birth
of the radio, and no scientist in or America, not even Marconi himself,
could at first explain how it worked...it just did. And no one knew
how far these radio waves could travel, until 1903, when a message
from President Theodore Roosevelt to the king of England flashed
from Cape Cod to Cornwall clear across the Atlantic. Here is a rich
portrait of the man and his era-and a captivating tale of science
and scientists, business and businessmen. There are stories of British
blowhards, American con artists-and Marconi himself: a character
par excellence, who eventually winds up a virtual prisoner of his
worldwide fame and fortune.
Anton
Vamplew 
Simple
Stargazing: A First-time Skywatcher's Guide
HarperCollins
(in collaboration with the Smithsonian Institution), 2006, ISBN:
0-06-084994-0, $16.95
The
book begins with a getting-started section and then moves through
the northern and southern hemispheres. Full-color illustrations
and clear, informative text. Sources for further reading and a glossary
of terms.
Richard
Wolfson 
Simply
Einstein: Relativity Demystified
W. W. Norton & Company, 2002, ISBN: 0-393-05154-4, $24.95
Physicist
Richard Wolfson explores the ideas at the heart of relativity and
shows how they lead to such seeming absurdities as time travel,
curved space, black holes, and new meaning for the idea of past
and future. Drawing from years of teaching modern physics to nonscientists,
Wolfson explains in a lively, conversational style the simple principles
underlying Einstein's theory. Relativity, Wolfson shows, gave us
a new view of space and time, opening the door to questions about
their flexible nature: Is the universe finite or infinite? Will
it expand forever or eventually collapse in a "big crunch"?
Is time travel possible? What goes on inside a black hole? How does
gravity really work? These questions at the forefront of twenty-first-century
physics are all rooted in the profound and sweeping vision of Albert
Einstein's early twentieth-century theory. Wolfson leads his readers
on an intellectual journey that culminates in a universe made almost
unimaginably rich by the principles that Einstein first discovered.
Paul
Kurtz, Ed. 
Skeptical
Odysseys: Personal Accounts by the Worlds Leading Paranormal
Inquirers
Prometheus Books, 2001, ISBN: 1-57392-884-4, $27
Issued
on the 25th anniversary of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation
of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP) this book brings together personal
statements by the leading skeptics of the world. CSICOP, the first
major organization of skeptics on the contemporary scene, is worldwide
in scope and all of the articles are original and written especially
for this collection. Contributors include Martin Gardner, Jean-Claude
Pecker, Neil deGrasse Tyson, and Bill Nye.
Steven
J. Dick 
Sky
and Ocean Joined: The U.S. Naval Observatory 1830-2000
Cambridge
University Press, 2003, 0-521-81599-1, $130
As
one of the oldest scientific institutions in the United States,
the U.S. Naval Observatory has a rich and colorful history. It
was initially founded as the Depot of Charts and Instruments in
1830, and in 1944 it became the first national observatory of the
United States, analogous to the famous observatories at Greenwich
and Paris. It remained the only U.S. national observatory until
the 1950s.
This
volume is, first and foremost, a story of the relations between
space, time and navigation, from the rise of the chronometer in
the U.S. to the Global Positioning System of satellites, for which
the Naval Observatory provides the time to a billionth of a second
per day. It is a story of the history of technology, in the form
of telescopes, lenses, detectors, calculators, clocks and computers
over 170 years. It describes how one scientific institution under
government and military patronage has contributed, through all the
vagaries of history, to almost two centuries of unparalleled progress
in astronomy.
Neil
de Grasse Tyson
The
Sky Is Not the Limit
Prometheus
Books, 2004, ISBN: 1-59102-188-X, $18 (paperback edition)
From
Chapter 1: "It was a dark and starry night...I felt as though
I could see forever. Too numerous to count, the stars of the autumn
sky, and the constellations they trace, were rising slowly in the
east while the waxing crescent moon was descending into the western
horizon....Forty-five minutes of my suspended disbelief swiftly
passed when the house lights came back on in the planetarium sky
theater....I had been called. The study of the universe would be
my career, and no force on Earth would stop me. I was just nine
years old, but I now had an answer for that perennially annoying
question all adults ask: 'What do you want to be when you grow up?'
although I could barely pronounce the word, I would tell them, 'I
want to be an astrophysicist.'" The Sky Is Not the Limit,
now available in paperback with a new preface and other additions,
is the story of Neil de Grasse Tyson's lifelong fascination with
the night sky that eventually led him to become the director of
the Hayden Planetarium.
Norman
Davidson, Foreword by E. C. Krupp 
Sky
Phenomena: A Guide to Naked-Eye Observation of the Stars
Lindisfarne Books, 2005, ISBN: 1-58420-026-X, $25 (paperback)
Sky
Phenomena leads readers from the stars as seen from Earth,
through the Sun, Moon, and various planets to the Copernican revolution,
to comets and meteors, and to the sky of the Southern Hemisphere.
The
text includes mythological and historical aspects of the subject
and has numerous exercises for the student. The final chapter is
a unique collection of poetry related to the stars from ancient
India to modern times. Appendices include future astronomical events,
technical data, materials and publications, and a comprehensive
glossary of astronomical terms.
Joseph
M. Boyce 
The
Smithsonian Book of Mars
Smithsonian Institution Press, November 2002, ISBN: 1-58834-074-0,
$34.95
From
1985 to 2000 Joseph Boyce provided scientific leadership to NASA
as its Mars exploration program scientist. Beginning with Mariner
4 in 1965 and continuing through the 2001 Mars Odyssey probe, each
spacecraft sent to Mars yielded fascinating new discoveries (how
did those "canals" come to be?) and occasionally overturned
earlier findings — especially when trying to answer NASA's
ultimate question, "Are we alone?" The search for life
on Mars seemed to be over after the 1976 Viking mission, but in
1997 scientists announced that they had found possible traces of
ancient life in the ALH84001 Martian Meteorite, sparking furious
debates in scientific journals. That controversy is precisely why
Boyce finds Mars so endlessly fascinating — you just never
know.
Joseph
M. Boyce served as NASA's program scientist on fourteen flight programs.
In recognition of his scientific contributions to space exploration,
the asteroid 1978 VQ5 was named Boyce in his honor.
Nigel
Hey 
Solar
System
Weidenfeld
& Nicolson, distributed by Sterling Publishing, 2002, ISBN:
0-304-35994-7, $24.95
New
information from robot probes and telescopes has exploded old ideas
about our celestial Neighborhood -- and these recently verified
facts are now illustrated in amazing photos. Look at rainfalls of
diamonds on Neptune; dust storms stirred by 6000-mph winds on Jupiter;
or Saturn's 30 moons. View everyday occurrences on Venus that would
be life-ending catastrophes on earth, and close-ups of long-ago
river systems on Mars. Each planet appears in realistic paintings,
with introductions by leading scientists.
Giovanni
Caprara 
The
Solar System
Firefly
Books, 2003, ISBN: 1-55297-679-3, $24.95
This
comprehensive reference explains the origin of stars and the sun
and extensively covers each planet. Illustrated with spectacular
photographs and meticulous color diagrams. Key sections cover: The
solar system and the sun; Inner Planets: Mercury, Venus, Earth and
Mars; Outer Planets: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto;
and Minor Bodies: comets, asteroids and meteorites. A detailed directory
of web sites direct readers to relevant sources of information.
Peter
Grego 
Solar
System Observer's Guide
Firefly Books Ltd., 2006, ISBN: 1-55407-132-1, $17.95
A practical
introduction to our "corner" of the universe. Aimed at
users of binoculars and small to medium telescopes, Solar System
Observer's Guide describes how to observe not only the planets
but also the moon, sun, comets, meteors, asteroids, and all other
celestial objects found within our Solar System. Each chapter is
devoted to a different object and explains how and when to find
the object, how to observe it, what to expect to see, and how to
record observations. Photographs, sketches, and digital images by
both amateur and professional astronomers illustrate the book's
pages. Suitable for use in the northern and southern hemispheres.
Serge
Brunier
Solar
System Voyage 
Cambridge University Press, 2003, ISBN: 0521807247, $40
In
the last few decades, the exploration of our solar system has revealed
fascinating details about the worlds that lie beyond our Earth.
This lavishly illustrated book invites the reader on a journey through
the solar system. After locating our planetary system in the Universe,
Brunier describes the Sun and its planets, the large satellites,
asteroids, and comets. Photographs and information taken from the
latest space missions allow readers to experience the lunar plains
scarred by asteroid impacts; the frozen deserts of Mars and Europa;
the continuously erupting volcanoes of Io and the giant geysers
of Triton; the rings of Saturn and the clouds of Venus and Titan;
and the powerful crash of the comet Shoemaker-Levy into Jupiter.
Serge Brunier is chief editor of the journal "Ciel et Espace"
and a photojournalist. His previous books include Space Odyssey (Cambridge, 2002), Glorious Eclipses with Jean-Pierre Luminet (Cambridge, 2000), and Majestic
Universe (Cambridge, 1999).
Valerie
Wyatt and Matthew Fernandes
Space:
Frequently Asked Questions
Kids
Can Press, 2002, ISBN: 1550749730, $6.95, Paperback.
How
did the universe form? What would it be like to walk on the moon?
Is there life on other planets? Find the answers to these questions
and many more in this creative and amusingly illustrated kids' guide
to the universe. Featuring the popular Frequently Asked Questions
(FAQ) format often used on the Internet, along with out-of-this-world
activities and a great many amazing facts, this book provides curious
kids with all the information they need to fill in the blanks about
space.
Giancarlo
Genta and Michael Rycroft 
Space,
The Final Frontier?
Cambridge University Press, 2003, ISBN: 0-521-81403-0, $29
What
future possibilities for space travel are the most likely to succeed?
What are the greatest challenges and advantages of space travel
for humankind? What are the potential moral and ethical implications
of our space explorations? Space, the Final Frontier?
imaginatively illustrates the possibilities that the exploration
and subsequent exploitation of space opens up for humankind.
Giancarlo Genta and Michael Rycroft delve into the factors that
encourage space travel and speculate on the future of human expansion
into space, including: the value and importance of having humans
in space; the human exploration and colonization of our solar system;
robotic exploration of the outer planets, their satellites and asteroids;
the future possibility that humans may leave our solar system; the
prospects and implications of our meeting other intelligent beings
in space; the likelihood, consequences, and benefits of future space
technologies.
Serge
Brunier
Space
Odyssey: The First Forty Years of Space Exploration
Cambridge University Press, 2002, ISBN: 0521813565, $40, Hardback.
In
only forty years space exploration has become one of humanity's
preeminent achievements. Space Odyssey: The First Forty Years
of Space Exploration follows the greatest moments of this saga
and tells the tale of the four hundred men and women who have been
into space.
The
journey begins with the pioneers of life in space, those first humans
sent into Earth orbit and the legendary crews of the Apollo missions.
It continues abroad the Mir space station, where we are invited
to share the intimate life of its Russian, American, and French
inhabitants as they walk on the ceiling and sleep on the walls.
At the beginning of the twenty-first century, the adventure advances
with the International Space Station.
This
approximately 10"x14" edition is filled with beautiful
photographs, many taken by the astronauts themselves.
Steve
Kortenkamp 
Space
Probes
Capstone Press, 2007, ISBN: 978-1-4296-0063-7, $15.95
For
the very youngest readers. An overview of space probes past, present
and future.
Philip
S. Harrington 
The
Space Shuttle: A Photographic History
Browntrout
Publishers, 2003, ISBN: 0-7631-7063-1, $19.95
From
the Introduction: "...The Earth was created from a cloud of interstellar
gas and dust over four billion years ago. Everything we know, everything
we see, and everyone who has ever lived is made from material that
was first formed inside ancient stars billions of years ago. Perhaps
that is why our drive to explore space is so strong, for in a sense,
each of our astronauts is leading our way home." The Space Shuttle
captures the visual history of the 110 missions aboard six different
shuttles.
Robert
Godwin, Ed. 
Space
Shuttle: STS Flights 1-5 (The NASA Mission Reports)
Apogee Books, 2001, ISBN: 1-896522-69-6, $21.95
On
12 April 1961, a Russian missile had propelled 10, 395 pounds into
space using 1.1 million pounds of thrust. Gagarin flew 25,000 miles
in 108 minutes. Twenty years later, on the same day, two astronauts
climbed aboard the fully fueled and integrated Space Transportation
System. On this day 180,000 pounds would ride atop 7.7 million pounds
of thrust. However, this crew would be landing on a runway after
travelling over a million miles in a little over 54 hours. This
book explores the Space Shuttle through the test flight stage and
on to its first operational flight. Comprising rare NASA documents
and a CD-Rom with documentary footage of the first five Space Shuttle
Flights.
Michel
van Pelt 
Space
Tourism: Adventures in Earth Orbit and Beyond
Cambridge Planetary Series
Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN: 0-521-83603-4, $110
The
face of space travel is changing rapidly. A growing number of well-funded
and technologically savvy organizations are privately developing
and testing new kinds of space vehicles. Aside from the issues of
passenger safety and comfort, even relatively modest flights to
the edge of space will require a lot more investigation and testing–of
reusable spacecraft, of efficient and safe propulsion and guidance
systems, and of training and conditioning regimens for potential
space travelers. Still, the development of a viable space tourism
industry is already happening. The book includes a brief history
of human space flight, highlighting the challenges and opportunities
faced by astronauts and cosmonauts over the last forty years. From
the front lines of industry and government research centers, it
reports in technical detail on experiments in space flight that
are currently underway and also discusses the attitudes of governments
and key NGO organizations toward private space travel.
Jose
Wudka 
Space-Time,
Relativity, and Cosmology
Cambridge
University Press, 2006, 0-521-82280-7, $55
Provides
a historical introduction to modern relativistic cosmology and traces
its historical roots and evolution from antiquity to Einstein. The
topics are presented in a non-mathematical manner, with the emphasis
on the ideas that underlie each theory rather than their detailed
quantitative consequences. A significant part of the book focuses
on the Special and General theories of relativity. The tests and
experimental evidence supporting the theories are explained together
with their predictions and their confirmation. Other topics include
a discussion of modern relativistic cosmology, the consequences
of Hubble's observations leading to the Big Bang hypothesis, and
an overview of the most exciting research topics in relativistic
cosmology.
J.
S. Bell 
Speakable
and Unspeakable in Quantum Mechanics, 2/e
Cambridge
University Press, 2004, ISBN: 0521818621/0-521-52338-9, $75/$34.99
One
of the leading expositors and interpreters of modern quantum theory,
John Bell is particularly famous for his discovery of the crucial
difference between the predictions of conventional quantum mechanics
and the implications of local causality, a concept insisted on by
Einstein. Bell's work has played a major role in the development
of our current understanding of the profound nature of quantum concepts
and of the fundamental limitations they impose on the applicability
of the classical ideas of space, time, and locality. This book includes
all of John Bell's published and unpublished papers on the conceptual
and philosophical problems of quantum mechanics, including two papers
that appeared after the first edition was published. All the papers
have been reset, the references put in order, and minor corrections
made. Includes a short preface by the author for the first edition
and also an introduction by Alain Aspect that puts into context
John Bell's enormous contribution to the quantum philosophy debate.
Paul
Dickson 
Sputnik:
The Shock of the Century
Walker & Company, 2001, ISBN: 0-8027-1365-3, $28
On
October 4, 1957, as "Leave It to Beaver" premiered on
American television, the Soviet Union launched the space age. Sputnik,
all of 184 pounds with only a radio transmitter inside its highly
polished shell, became the first man-made object in space; while
it immediately shocked the world, its long-term impact was even
greater, for it profoundly changed the shape of the twentieth century.
Washington journalist Paul Dickson chronicles the dramatic events
and developments leading up to and emanating from Sputnik's launch.
Supported by original research and many recently declassified documents,
Sputnik offers a fascinating profile of the early American and Soviet
space programs and a strikingly revised picture of the politics
and personalities behind America's fledgling efforts to get into
space. Read an excerpt
from this book in the Mercury
E-zine.
Roger
E. Bilsteinv 
Stages
to Saturn: A Technological History of the Apollo/Saturn Launch Vehicles
University Press of Florida, 2003, ISBN: 0-8130-2691-1, $39.95
A classic
study of the development of the Saturn launch vehicle that took
Americans to the Moon in the 1960s and 1970s. The Saturn rocket
was developed as a means of accomplishing John F. Kennedy's 1961
commitment to reach the Moon before the end of the decade. Without
the Saturn V rocket, with its capability to send as payload the
Apollo Command and Lunar Modules—along with support equipment
and three astronauts—more than a quarter of a million miles
from Earth, Kennedy's goal would have been unrealizable. Stages
to Saturn not only tells the important story of the research and
development of the Saturn rockets and the people who designed them
but also recounts the stirring exploits of their operations from
orbital missions round the Earth testing Apollo equipment to their
journeys to the Moon and back.
William
Tyler Olcott 
Star
Lore: Myths, Legends & Facts
Dover Publications, 2004, ISBN: 0-486-43581-4, $21.95
Originally
published in 1911, the same year William Tyler Olcott helped found
the AAVSO, Star Lore recounts the origins and histories of
star groups, as well as the stories of individual constellations:
Pegasus, the winged horse; Ursa Major, the Greater Bear; the seven
daughters of Atlas known as the Pleiades; the signs of the Zodiac;
and minor constellations such as the ship Argo, the Giraffe, and
the Unicorn. Fifty-eight black-and-white images include classic
photographs of the actual stars as well as scenes from their related
myths as portrayed by Rubens, Watts and other artists. This edition
features a new Introduction by Fred Schaaf, an extensive Appendix
and Index.
Philip
Harrington 
Star
Ware: The Amateur Astronomer's Ultimate Guide to Choosing, Buying,
and Using Telescopes and Accessories, 3/e
Wiley, 2002, ISBN: 0-471-41806-4, $19.95 (paperback)
In
this revised and updated edition of Star Ware, the essential guide to buying astronomical equipment,
award-winning astronomy writer Philip Harrington analyzes and explores
today's astronomy market, offering point-by-point comparisons of
everything you need. Whether you're an experienced amateur astronomer
or just getting started, Star Ware, 3/e will prepare you to explore
the farthest reaches of space with:
Extensive,
expanded reviews of leading models and accessories, dozens of new
products, to help you buy smart; a clear, step-by-step guide to
all aspects of purchasing everything from telescopes and binoculars
to filters, mounts, lenses, cameras, film, star charts, guides and
references, and much more; eleven new do-it-yourself projects for
making unique astronomical equipment at home; easy tips on maintenance,
photography, and star-mapping to help you get the most out of your
telescope; lists of where to find everything astronomical, including
Internet sites and Web resources; distributors, dealers, and conventions;
and corporate listings for products and services.
Fred
Watson 
Stargazer:
The Life and Times of the Telescope
Da Capo Press, 2005, ISBN: 0-306-81432-3, $24.95
The
history of the telescope is a rich story of human ingenuity and
perseverance involving some of the most colorful figures of the
scientific world – Galileo, Johnnes Kepler, Isaac Newton,
William Herschel, George Ellery Hale, and Edwin Hubble. Stargazer,
written by one of the world's top astronomers, brings to life the
story of these brilliant, if sometimes quirky, scientists as they
turned their eyes and ideas beyond what anyone thought possible.
It lucidly and compellingly reveals the science and technology behind
the telescope and its enormous impact in unveiling the mysteries
of the universe.
Robin
Scagall |