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Everything Earth Science
Astronomy: A Self-Teaching Guide PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Everything Science   
Sep 06, 2004 at 03:36 PM

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By:  Dinah L. Mocht

Published by:  John Wiley & Sons Canada, February 2004

" A lively, up-to-date account of the basic principles of astronomy and exciting current field of research." – Science Digest

For a quarter of a century, Astronomy: A Self-Teaching Guide has been making students and amateur stargazers alike feel at home among the stars. From stars, planets and galaxies, to black holes, the Big Bang and life in space, this title has been making it easy for beginners to quickly grasp the basic concepts of astronomy for over 25 years. Updated with the lates discoveries in astronomy and astrophysics, this newest edition of Dinah Moché ’ s classic guide now includes many Web site addresses for spectacular images and news. And like all previous editions, it is packed with valuable tables, charts, star and moon maps and features simple activities that reinforce readers’ grasp of basic concepts at their own pace, as well as objectives, reviews, and self-tests to monitor their progress.

Dinah L. Moché , PhD (Rye, NY), is an award-winning author, educator, and lecturer. Her books have sold over nine million copies in seven languages.

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Apollo 13 PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Everything Science   
Sep 06, 2004 at 11:36 AM

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By: Robert Godwin

Published by:  Apogee Books, March 2000

In this expose, the plain truth about Apollo 13's epic voyage around the moon is revealed by Robert Godwin. Apollo 13: The NASA Mission Reports is a compilation of the formal documentation about this famous ill-fated mission. The true story of the command module Odyssey eerily parallels the myth by Homer. On April 11, 1970, astronauts Jim Lovell, Jack Sigert and Fred Haise nearly lost their lives when a faulty circuit in one of the ship's oxygen tanks threatened to destroy Apollo 13. Originally considered a catastrophe, this mission is now considered to be one of the great American stories about genius and courage.

missions to the moon
Recce2    August 1st, 2002 - 4:24 AM
I'm wondering why there are no modern day missions to the moon.  There were quite a few in the 60's and 70's but after that none.  It should be easier today to get there.
Re: missions to the moon
Orstio    August 1st, 2002 - 4:32 AM
It's easy enough, but there's no motivation for it.  Until the moon becomes a feasible resource for something, there is really no point in returning to the barren rock.
Apollo 13
rob schwarz    August 1st, 2002 - 11:44 AM
Watch the movie, nobody cared about the third trip to the moon until there was a catastrophe. Imagine how few cared about Apollo 14, 15, and 16 when it was more of the same. People become jaded, been there done that.

If the follow-up project had been to go to Mars interest might have been maintained but Apollo-Soyuz and Skylab, no matter how impressive were not E ticket rides that excited the masses.

Look at the sci-fi movies to see the trends of peoples thoughts. In the 50's and early 60's you had gung ho explorers in sleek metal rocket ships racing off to do good things. In the late 60's and 70's you had Soylant Green, Omega Man, Mad Max (2001 is the big exceptions). People turned inward.
Re: Apollo 13
Peter    August 2nd, 2002 - 6:59 AM
Who knows, it seems like interest in our pale neighbour is one the rise again. Next year (not certain about that) Smart-1 will pay it a visit... And other space agencies are building projects too. All unmanned, but who knows, if the data from the landers is interesting enough, they might decide to make some more history?

Peter
post-Apollo........
spacecat27    August 2nd, 2002 - 12:00 PM
Well, there was another thread here on the slow pace of space exploration- and I guess I got it deleted by naming particular politicians as being pro or anti space...... (sorry Orstio, didn't think talking about folks either long dead or long out of office would offend.)

But allow me to repeat this much without naming names:

I do not believe in the popular rumor that Apollo was scaled back and then terminated because the public lost interest.... it was the news media and the politicians who lost interest.

The news media- because it wasn't "new" anymore, and politicians because other than preserving a few jobs in one congressional district or another- being pro-space was no longer politically advantageous once we had beat the Russians to the moon.

I have found that the American public overall, continues to have an interest.  Here's why- since Apollo 17, Star Trek and Star Wars movies and merchandising have generated billions and billions in revenue- probably enough to fund a visit or two to Mars!   Kennedy Space Center averages 10,000 visitors per day.... often there are more tourists there than actual workers!  A recent poll by Popular Science magazine found a majority of Americans would support expanded space exploration- even if it meant a tax increase!
Re: post-Apollo........
Orstio    August 2nd, 2002 - 1:20 PM
No need to be sorry, SpaceCat, the thread was moved to Hoaxes and Conspiracies for the subject matter.  Read through it there and you will understand why it was moved.
So you think
rob schwarz    August 2nd, 2002 - 2:20 PM
That a bunch of people would have watched a space mission and the news decided it was boring and so they ignored all that potential ad revenue? Not likely in my opinion. The news goes where the story is, even if they find it distasteful.

I agree there has been a revival but at the time Star Trek was one of the only shows and it got a great demographic (they didn't know that at the time) but it was cancelled in 1969, the year we went to the moon the first time, because there were not enough people watching it. Revived interest did not appear until Star Wars in 1977, by then the Apollo program was over, the US had changed direction in space, and it would have cost a lot of money to revive.
Re: So you think
vishniac    August 2nd, 2002 - 3:05 PM
There's still that statistic about more Americans attending planetariums and museums that all live sport events together each year.
I'm not arguing that the interest is there
rob schwarz    August 2nd, 2002 - 3:30 PM
But using sci-fi movie totals as proof is silly since children do not pay taxes but pay to see movies over and over any stats using movies are silly. NASA needs to cut the crap and start some exciting projects again. They need to point out how small their budget is compared to some of the other bloated budgets in the Federal trough.
Re: I'm not arguing that the interest is there
skyjim    August 2nd, 2002 - 4:25 PM
Rob - Right on!

I get tired about hearing about all that money that NASA is spending "out there" from boobs who have no idea what percentage of the federal budget goes nto spaceflight.  I sometimes point out to them that the money isn't spent "out there", but right here at home!

Jim
Indeed!
spacecat27    August 2nd, 2002 - 6:44 PM
Every day it seems, I argue with people who go off on the 'that money could be put to better use on earth' tangent..... and I stongly point out- it IS spent on earth!  Even at the height of Apollo, people who were drawing decent paychecks from the program weren't hoarding their money- they spent it on homes, automobiles, appliances, their kid's college tuitions... and all the goods and services that make up a stong economy.
  NASA now gets less than 1% of the Federal Budget!  People say 'well, if we weren't spending all this money on space we could feed all these starving families...'  I say- just how many more starving families to you want to feed?  The Departments of Health & Human Services, and Housing and Urban Development together (if the figures haven't changed considerably in the past few years) spend NASA's entire budget about every 4.5 days!
   
 In terms of boosting the economy, and boosting the average IQ of the population- I'd say tax dollars spent on space provide the best overall return.

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The Challenger Launch Decision PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Everything Science   
Sep 06, 2004 at 11:19 AM

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By: Diane Vaughan

Published by:  University of Chicago Press, January 1995

List of Figures and TablesPreface1: The Eve of the Launch 2: Learning Culture, Revising History 3: Risk, Work Group Culture, and the Normalization of Deviance 4: The Normalization of Deviance, 1981-1984 5: The Normalization of Deviance, 1985 6: The Culture of Production 7: Structural Secrecy 8: The Eve of the Launch Revisited 9: Conformity and Tragedy 10: Lessons Learned Appendix A. Cost/Safety Trade-Offs? Scrapping the Escape Rockets and the SRB Contract Award Decision Appendix B. Supporting Charts and Documents Appendix C. On Theory Elaboration, Organizations, and Historical EthnographyAcknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index

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Space Architecture PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Everything Science   
Sep 06, 2004 at 10:49 AM

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By: John Zukowsky

Published by:  Axel Menges, June 1999

This beautifully illustrated book is a tribute to the feat of aerospace design that was NASA’s Skylab, housed in Washington, D.C. between 1967 and 1973. John Frassanito and other NASA associates were the masterminds behind this awe-inspiring construction. Art Institute of Chicago architecture curator John Zukowsky tells their story in Space Architecture. This special pictorial features 140 colour illustrations and a CD-ROM of computer animation featuring selected NASA projects.

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Astronomy Today PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Everything Science   
Sep 06, 2004 at 10:30 AM

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By: Eric Chaisson

Published by: Prentice Hall, August 2001

Chaisson/McMillan’s writing style and pedagogically driven art program are recognized as being scientifically accurate yet accessible to nonscience majors. The integrated media program contains the market’s only Ebook. It provides readers with innovative and interactive tools to learn and test their understanding of astronomy concepts. Topics covered include Astronomy and the Universe, Our Planetay System, Stars and Stellar Evolution, Galaxies and Cosmology, and more. For one or twosemester introductory astronomy course.

 

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