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111 Places in Space That You Must Not Miss [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, aukštis x plotis: 205x135 mm, weight: 470 g, 111 Illustrations, color
  • Serija: 111 Places
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Jul-2025
  • Leidėjas: Emons Verlag GmbH
  • ISBN-10: 374080601X
  • ISBN-13: 9783740806019
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, aukštis x plotis: 205x135 mm, weight: 470 g, 111 Illustrations, color
  • Serija: 111 Places
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Jul-2025
  • Leidėjas: Emons Verlag GmbH
  • ISBN-10: 374080601X
  • ISBN-13: 9783740806019
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • The ultimate insider's guide to Space
  • Features interesting and unusual places not found in traditional travel guides
  • Part of the international 111 Places/111 Shops series with over 250 titles and 1.5 million copies in print worldwide
  • Appeals to everyone on Earth who dreams of boarding a rocket to the stars, planets, exoplanets, nebulae, and beyond, including scientists, sci-fi aficionados, and Trekkies
  • Fully illustrated with 111 full-page photographs
Space is full of places you simply cannot miss! Our own solar system is full of wonders that dwarf anything here on Earth. On Mars, you can hike up a volcano 60,000 feet high, or explore a canyon so vast, it would stretch from New York to Los Angeles. Prefer a beach holiday? In the moons of Saturn, you can swim in warm saltwater oceans under a layer of ice, or explore black sand beaches around liquid methane lakes on Titan. For the more adventurous, fly close (but to too close) to a giant black hole in the middle of our galaxy that has swallowed millions of stars. Watch hundreds of newly-born stars light up clouds of gas trillions of miles across, or search for the origins of life - including yourself - in the debris of giant stars that exploded violently billions of years ago. Like any trip worth taking, a journey through the universe will show you wonders you never imagined, and leave you with more questions than when you started.
Apollo 12 | Solar System
You can look, but please dont touch | 10
Arrokoth | Solar System
Life in the dark beyond Neptune | 12
Caloris Basin | Solar System
The biggest impact crater on Mercury | 14
Ceres | Solar System
The inner Solar Systems only dwarf planet | 16
Charon | Solar System
Who pays the ferryman? | 18
The Cliffs of Hathor | Solar System
Close to the edge | 20
Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko | Solar System
The adventure of a lifetime | 22
Dimorphos | Solar System
Saving the world, one pile of rocks at a time | 24
Dust Devils of Mars | Solar System
Wandering graffiti artists | 26
Europa | Solar System
An icy world in motion | 28
The Face on Mars | Solar System
Much ado about nothing | 30
Far Side of the Moon | Solar System
Not your fathers prog rock album | 32
Ganymede | Solar System
Some moons are more equal than others | 34
Hubble Space Telescope | Solar System
Beauty is eternity gazing at itself in a mirror | 36
Hyperion | Solar System
A spongy, cosmic beehive | 38
International Space Station | Solar System
An accessible, if expensive, tourist destination | 40
Io | Solar System
A land of ice and fire | 42
Jupiter | Solar System
King of the planets | 44
Lutetia | Solar System
Heavy metal in the sky | 46
Maat Mons | Solar System
Is Venus still geologically active? | 48
Mars | Solar System
The planet of dreams or nightmares? | 50
Mercury | Solar System
The Solar Systems problem child | 52
Miranda | Solar System
A paradise for space geologists and daredevils | 54
Near Side of the Moon | Solar System
A cosmic treasure island? | 56
Neptune | Solar System
Still the most distant planet in the Solar System | 58
North Polar Hexagon | Solar System
Whos a pretty polygon then? | 60
Olympus Mons | Solar System
Atop the tallest volcano in the Solar System | 62
Oumuamua | Solar System
Our first known interstellar visitor | 64
The Pale Blue Dot | Solar System
If you lived here, youd be home now | 66
Phobos | Solar System
A natural space station orbiting the Red Planet | 68
Plumes of Enceladus | Solar System
Water, water, everywhere, nor any drop to drink | 70
Pluto | Solar System
The god of the dark Underworld | 72
Rings of Saturn | Solar System
Not all those who wander are lost | 74
The Sun | Solar System
The star in our back garden | 76
Sunspots | Solar System
Tracers of the Suns internal cycle | 78
Titan | Solar System
A smoggy moon with marvels below | 80
Triton | Solar System
A smörgåsbord of icy delights | 82
Uranus | Solar System
An enigmatic, sideways world | 84
Venus | Solar System
Our deadly planetary neighbor | 86
AG Carinae | Milky Way
Getting ready for its grand finale | 88
Alpha Centauri System | Milky Way
Our nearest stellar neighbor(s) | 90
Betelgeuse | Milky Way
All the colors of the stars | 92
Boomerang Nebula | Milky Way
Baby, its cold outside | 94
Bubble Nebula | Milky Way
Grace under pressure | 96
Carinas Bok Globules | Milky Way
Islands in the storm | 98
Cats Eye Nebula | Milky Way
The beginning of the end for a star | 100
Cederblad 110 | Milky Way
Expect a frosty reception | 102
Cometary Globule 4 | Milky Way
Art imitating life? | 104
Cosmic Bat Nebula | Milky Way
Appearances can be deceptive | 106
Crab Nebula | Milky Way
A millennium-old stellar explosion | 108
CW Leonis | Milky Way
Ashes to ashes, dust to dust | 110
Cygnus X | Milky Way
The spot for students of star formation | 112
Elephants Trunk Nebula | Milky Way
Reaching for the stars | 114
Galactic Center | Milky Way
Into the heart of the beast | 116
HD209458b | Milky Way
The first known transiting exoplanet | 118
Herbig-Haro 212 | Milky Way
A cosmic double lightsaber | 120
Horsehead Nebula | Milky Way
A dusty equine near the hunters belt | 122
HR8799 | Milky Way
An extrasolar orrery | 124
Lagoon Nebula | Milky Way
Cloudy, with a chance of twisters | 126
LL Pegasi | Milky Way
Two stars locked in a dusty death spiral | 128
The Milky Way | Milky Way
Seeing the forest for the trees | 130
NGC1999 | Milky Way
When is a hole not a hole but actually is a hole? | 132
The OMC-1 Explosion | Milky Way
Cosmic shrapnel | 134
Omega Centauri | Milky Way
King of the globular clusters | 136
Orion Nebula | Milky Way
Massive star formation below the belt | 138
Pillars of Creation | Milky Way
Towering columns of gas, dust, and young stars | 140
The Pleiades | Milky Way
The star cluster with a thousand names | 142
Polaris | Milky Way
The North Star for now at least | 144
R Aquarii | Milky Way
A story of symbiosis between little and large | 146
Ring Nebula | Milky Way
When is a planet not a planet? | 148
RS Puppis | Milky Way
Rhythm of the stars | 150
Serpens Nebula | Milky Way
A hissing nest of star formation | 152
Sirius | Milky Way
Twinkle, twinkle, little star | 154
Taurus-Auriga Clouds | Milky Way
A low-density neighborhood for young stars | 156
Terzan 5 | Milky Way
Digging for ancient galactic fossils | 158
Vela Supernova Remnant | Milky Way
A cosmic memento mori | 160
Westerlund 1 | Milky Way
A giant lurking behind a dark veil | 162
Zeta Ophiuchi | Milky Way
Big star in a hurry | 164
Andromeda Galaxy | Deep Space
Our ever-closer neighbor | 166
The Antennae | Deep Space
Magnificent chaos as galaxies collide | 168
Arp 282 | Deep Space
Caught in the act | 170
Cartwheel Galaxy | Deep Space
Intergalactic hit and run | 172
Cigar Galaxy | Deep Space
Bursting with new stars | 174
The CMB | Deep Space
Left-over glow from the Big Bang | 176
ESO 137-001 | Deep Space
The pressures on this high-speed medusa | 178
ESO 306-17 | Deep Space
The dangers of overconsumption | 180
Fornax A | Deep Space
Dusty heart of a hybrid galaxy | 182
The Great Attractor | Deep Space
The inexorable pull of gravity | 184
Hannys Voorwerp | Deep Space
The power of crowdsourcing | 186
JADES Origins Deep Field | Deep Space
The first galaxies in the Universe | 188
MACS J0025.4-1222 | Deep Space
On the trail of the invisible | 190
Messier 74 | Deep Space
Design is how it works | 192
Messier 87 | Deep Space
King of its neighborhood | 194
Messier 106 | Deep Space
Surveying the Universe | 196
NGC474 | Deep Space
Shells on a galactic seashore | 198
NGC660 | Deep Space
Whats your inclination? | 200
NGC1365 | Deep Space
A galaxy walks into a bar | 202
NGC2276 | Deep Space
Some galaxies have all the luck | 204
NGC2775 | Deep Space
Pulling the wool over your eyes | 206
NGC4753 | Deep Space
Cosmic filigree and shadow | 208
NGC7331 | Deep Space
The Milky Ways almost twin | 210
Nubecula Major | Deep Space
Whats in a name? | 212
Perseus Cluster | Deep Space
A life surfing the cosmic web | 214
Pwehi | Deep Space
The dark heart of a supermassive black hole | 216
SMACS J0723.3-7327 | Deep Space
Cosmic lens with a presidential seal of approval | 218
Sombrero Galaxy | Deep Space
A strange, dusty ring around a central monster | 220
Spanish Dancer Galaxy | Deep Space
Im forever blowing bubbles | 222
Spindle Galaxy | Deep Space
O what a tangled web we weave | 224
Stephans Quintet | Deep Space
All is not what it seems in this group of galaxies | 226
Supernova 1987A | Deep Space
The most recent supernova in our neighborhood | 228
Tarantula Nebula | Deep Space
Shelobs cosmic cousin | 230
Mark McCaughrean is an astronomer who has lived, worked, and taught in the UK, the USA, Germany, and The Netherlands, studying the birth of stars and planets. As the former Senior Advisor for Science & Exploration at the European Space Agency, he has worked on many space missions including Rosetta and the James Webb Space Telescope. A photographer and a cyclist, he is also the co-founder of Space Rocks, which celebrates space exploration and the art, music, and culture it inspires through public events and more.