I was at a local used book store (Half-Price Books, they have a couple of stores here in the Twin Cities) the other day, and ran across the National Geographic Society book, "Mars: Uncovering the Secrets of the Red Planet," by Paul Raeburn and Matt Golombek. Paid $15 for it.
Overall, a quite good book -- but it just sort of jars, now, when I read a book on Mars that stops short of the MER landings. Like there are a bunch of missing chapters. But Raeburn basically interviewed Golombek extensively and put the book together from the interview tapes. It has a lot of nice details on MPF.
One nice thing about the book -- in a plastic pocket on the inside back cover, were not one but two pristine, never-used sets of anaglyph glasses. Granted, they're just front frames with no ear pieces, you have to hold them up in front of your eyes while using them. But they'll be very useful in viewing on-line anaglyphs.
-the other Doug
Trying to turn this topic into a 'new book releases' thread
Here's a low-cost new annual:
http://www.praxis-publishing.co.uk/view.asp?id=245&search=home
More disappointing IMHO is the reissued "Patrick Moore on Mars", which has Pathfinder on the cover and not a single MER image. They're charging £15 for this book which was published on 10 Aug 2006. I wonder does Patrick even know it was reissued in such a dated form?
Just put some extra books at my Mars-literature blog ![]()
http://mars-literature.skynetblogs.be/
Another new book waiting to be picked up ![]()
http://www.thespacereview.com/article/786/1
Upcoming Cassini-Huygens titles:
http://www.springer.com/west/home/astronomy/space+exploration?SGWID=4-142302-22-77145379-0&teaserId=195289&CENTER_ID=289499
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Captains-Log-Voyage-Spacecraft-Cassini/dp/0691124647/sr=8-1/qid=1171133139/ref=sr_1_1/203-1695902-3850358?ie=UTF8&s=books
Received my " Encyclopedia of the Solar System - 2nd Edition " this morning and it's a jewel... Hardcover book ( 28 X 22 centimeters with 966 pages ) completely updated with MER photos (going to October 2006), Cassini-Huygens images of Saturn and Titan's surface, chapters by Alan Stern, Athena Coustenis, Carolyn Porco, James Burke, Matthew Golombek, Michael Carr, ...
Excellent, a 10 out of 10 and You won't need to buy another encyclopedia untill the 2015 Pluto encounter ![]()
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Encyclopedia-Solar-System-Lucy-Ann-McFadden/dp/0120885891/sr=8-1/qid=1171475102/ref=pd_ka_1/203-8002371-3401537?ie=UTF8&s=books
Robotic Exploration of the Solar System - Part 1
by well-known authors ![]()
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Robotic-Exploration-Solar-System-Springer-Praxis/dp/0387493263/ref=sr_1_2/203-7086356-1702331?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1178382306&sr=8-2
hmmm....if the golden age of solar system exploration stops at 1982...what is it we have now???
For those interested in Astrobiology there's a new book out there: Life in the Universe: A Beginner's Guide, by Lewis Dartnell.
Really interesting piece of work spawning from the ingredients necessary for life, to exoplanetary hunt and planets orbiting red dwarfs (quite actual...), a lot of information in a quite comprehensive writing...
Editors were kind enough to send me a copy so you can read a http://spaceurope.blogspot.com/2007/05/life-in-universe-book-review.html (I've never made one before...) about it at spacEurope.
I'm re-reading it!
Here's a new professional-level book that sounds pretty exciting:
"Planetary Landers and Entry Probes" (Cambridge University Press, 2007) (368 pages)
Authors: Andrew Ball, James Garry, Ralph Lorenz, Viktor Kerzhanovich
Table Of Contents: Part I. Engineering Issues Specific to Entry Probes, Landers or Penetrators: 1. Mission goals and system engineering; 2. Accomodation, launch, cruise and arrival from orbit or interplanetary trajectory; 3. Entering atmospheres; 4. Descent through an atmosphere; 5. Descent to an airless body; 6. Planetary balloons, aircraft, submarines and cryobots; 7. Arrival at a surface; 8. Thermal control of landers and entry probes; 9. Power systems; 10. Communication and tracking of entry probes; 11. Radiation environment; 12. Surface activities: arms, drills, moles and mobility; 13. Structures; 14. Contamination of spacecraft and planets; Part II.Previous Atmosphere/Surface Vehicles and Their Payloads: 15. Destructive impact probes; 16. Atmospheric entry probes; 17. Pod landers; 18. Legged landers; 19. Payload delivery penetrators; 20. Small body surface missions; Part III. 'Case Studies': 21. Surveyor landers; 22. Galileo probe; 23. Huygens; 24. Mars Pathfinder and Sojourner; 25. Deep Space 2 Mars microprobes; 26. Rosetta lander Philae; 27. Mars exploration rovers: Spirit and Opportunity; Appendix: Some key parameters for bodies in the Solar System; List of acronyms; Bibliography; References; Index.
All this and detailed illustrations. I've seen prices ranging from about $130 to $150.
Just picked up two books:
A History of the Kennedy Space Center by Kenneth Lipartito and Orville R. Butler
and
Into the Black: JPL and the American Space Program, 1976-2004 by Peter J. Westwick
Just want to point out 2 superb books:
Encyclopedia of the Solar System: 2nd edition
(McFadden Weismann Johnson - ISBN 978-0-12-088589-3) (Academic Press - Elsevier) Updated to New Horizons!
The illustrated Atlas of the Universe
(Garlick Tirion - ISBN 9-781-740-893770) (Fog City Press)
http://www.uapress.arizona.edu/BOOKS/bid238.htm is the book I'm waiting for to be updated.
Amazon.co.uk just shipped my copie of Paolo Ulivi's "Robotic Exploration of the Solar System".
First impression is great, some rare Mariner Mars era photos, good glossary and appendix on celestial mechanics primer (transfer orbits and gravity slingshots).
Paolo, just read Your Foreword + Author's Preface + Acknowledgements ... In the latter You even mentioned UnmannedSpaceflight.com
Meanwhile, at the 50th anniversary of the first space mission, I received my copie of:
Touching Space - The Story of Project Manhigh
A must-have book for spaceflight buffs, about the USAF Balloon projects with Pre-astronauts such as David Simons, Clifton McClure, Joe Kittinger and the crew of the StratoLab High V gondola (Malcolm Ross & Victor Prather).
Softcover by Gregory P Kennedy with 134 glossy pages and lots of B&W and color photos. (ISBN 978-0-7643-2788-9)
Anyone has this already: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Planetary-Landers-Entry-Probes-Andrew/dp/0521820022/ref=sr_1_1/203-2979631-8515906?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1194116456&sr=8-1
O.K. as ther was no reply I've bought it myself ![]()
Planetary Landers and Entry Probes is an excellent book with 340 glossy pages filled with technical drawings of unmanned spacecraft and the Apollo Lunar Module.
Chapters include: Engineering issues specific to entry probes, landers or penetrators (1), Previous atmosphere/surface vehicles and their payloads (2), Case studies (3) and an extensive bibliography on engineering, planetary science and historical books on the subject. The technical drawings are excellent. These include the complete spacecraft and specific drawings of the landers or penetrators of: Surveyor, Martian aerobot, Venera series, Vega, Pioneer Venus, Galileo and Jupiter probe, Cassini-Huygens and Titan probe, Ranger, Luna series, Russian Mars series, Mars Pathfinder and Sojourner, Beagle 2, Mars Exploration Rovers, Lunokhod, Apollo LM and manned Soviet LK lander, Viking landers, Mars Polar Lander, Phoenix, Deep Space 2 Mars microprobes, Lunar-A penetrators, Phobos DAS, Rosetta lander Philae, MINERVA on Hayabusa, ...
Excellent!
I have been researching that book. From what I can tell it has lots of simple line drawings.
If you have that book, can you tell me ...how many color photos or black and white photos it has of any of the Veneras or Pioneer Venus Probes?
Anything different than what we can find on the web everywhere over and over?
Thanks
steve
Not too many photos in this excellent book full of technical line drawings.
(Black&White photos include Mylar Balloon, DS2 Microprobe Mars Polar Lander)
For Soviet Russian spacecraft, consider:
Russian Planetary Exploration: History, Development, Legacy and Prospects (Brian Harvey)
And
Soviet and Russian Lunar Exploration (Brian Harvey)
Philip
This looks promising:
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