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Moore on Mercury : The Planet and the Missions / by Patrick Moore.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: London : Springer London, 2007Descripción: vii, 139 páginas recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9781846287602
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • QB1-991
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Lift-off -- Elusive Planet -- “Messenger of the Gods” -- Mercury in the Solar System -- Crossing the Sun -- Ghost Planet -- Through the Telescope -- Mapping Mercury -- Mariner 10 -- Cratered World -- Around Mercury -- Return to Mercury -- Life on Mercury? -- A Trip to Mercury -- Mercurian Base.
Resumen: Mercury is one of the more difficult objects for amateur astronomers to observe because of its close proximity to the Sun. For the same reason, it is also one of the most fascinating and strange planets. Mercury is not much larger that our Moon, but orbits the Sun at an average distance of only 58 million km, compared to the Earth’s 150 million km. On its sunlit side, Mercury’s surface temperature can exceed 450C while the night side freezes at –180C. Amateur astronomers can see Mercury and its ever-changing phases all year, and sometimes watch it transit the Sun – the next transit is in November 2006, followed by one in May 2016. In his inimitable, easy-going style, Patrick Moore describes Mercury, the professional astronomers who have observed it over the centuries, amateur observations, and the past, present and future space missions to this extraordinary world.
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Springer eBooks

Lift-off -- Elusive Planet -- “Messenger of the Gods” -- Mercury in the Solar System -- Crossing the Sun -- Ghost Planet -- Through the Telescope -- Mapping Mercury -- Mariner 10 -- Cratered World -- Around Mercury -- Return to Mercury -- Life on Mercury? -- A Trip to Mercury -- Mercurian Base.

Mercury is one of the more difficult objects for amateur astronomers to observe because of its close proximity to the Sun. For the same reason, it is also one of the most fascinating and strange planets. Mercury is not much larger that our Moon, but orbits the Sun at an average distance of only 58 million km, compared to the Earth’s 150 million km. On its sunlit side, Mercury’s surface temperature can exceed 450C while the night side freezes at –180C. Amateur astronomers can see Mercury and its ever-changing phases all year, and sometimes watch it transit the Sun – the next transit is in November 2006, followed by one in May 2016. In his inimitable, easy-going style, Patrick Moore describes Mercury, the professional astronomers who have observed it over the centuries, amateur observations, and the past, present and future space missions to this extraordinary world.

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