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Meteorites and their Parent Planets 2nd Revised edition [Kietas viršelis]

(University of Tennessee, Knoxville)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 324 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x156x19 mm, weight: 630 g, 1 Tables, unspecified; 64 Halftones, unspecified; 86 Line drawings, unspecified
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Feb-1999
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0521583039
  • ISBN-13: 9780521583039
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 324 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x156x19 mm, weight: 630 g, 1 Tables, unspecified; 64 Halftones, unspecified; 86 Line drawings, unspecified
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Feb-1999
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0521583039
  • ISBN-13: 9780521583039
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Meteorites and Their Parent Planets provides an engrossing overview of a highly interdisciplinary field--the study of extraterrestrial materials. The second edition of this successful book has been thoroughly revised, and describes the nature of meteorites, where they come from, and how they get to Earth. Meteorites offer important insights into processes in stars and in interstellar regions, the birth of our solar system, the formation and evolution of planets and smaller bodies, and the origin of life. The first edition was immensely popular with meteorite collectors, scientists and science students in many fields, as well as amateur astronomers. In this second edition all of the illustrations have been updated and improved, many sections have been expanded and modified based on discoveries in the past decade, and a new final chapter on the importance of meteorites has been added. Everyone with an interest in meteorites will want a copy of this book.

Thoroughly revised second edition of a highly successful book describing all aspects of meteorites.

Recenzijos

'Meteorites and Their Parent Planets provides an engrossing overview of a highly interdisciplinary field - the study of extraterrestrial materials. The second edition of this successful book has been thoroughly revised, and describes the nature of meteorites, where they come from, and how they get to Earth Harry McSween's writing is accessible to scientists and non-scientists alike This book gives the reader a clear understanding of the fundamentals of a complex subject. The softback is good value and the book should be on the bookshelf of anyone interested in the origin and evolution of the Solar System.' R. L. S. Taylor, Spaceflight 'Harry McSween's writing is accessible to scientists and non-scientists alike the book should be on the bookshelf of anyone interested in the origin and evolution of the Solar System.' R. L. S. Taylor, Spaceflight ' an excellent intorduction to meteoritics for those Earth Scientists who have an interest in but not a specialist knowledge of the subject.' Allan Pring, Geological Magazine ' a very interesting read and is a welcome addition to my bookshelf generally the text is explanatory and written so that someone with a general interest can follow it quite easily. On the other hand, there seems to be sufficient technical backup to make the book a useful reference tool for those a little more experienced in the subject All in all a very good interesting book, particularly for pure geologists. It would, I think be of general interest to all Geoscientists.' Geoscientist 'The first edition provided one of the initial sparks to my interest in meteorites, and this new book is no less inspiring. This book is up to date, broad in focus, and confidently written by an author with a deep understanding of his subject. It is a must for the bookshelf of every planetary scientist, as well as being of interest to students and scientists from other disciplines. The easy writing style would also make it an enjoyable read for an interested amateur or bright teenager.' Sara Russell, The Observatory

Daugiau informacijos

Thoroughly revised second edition of a highly successful book describing all aspects of meteorites.
Preface to the Second Edition xi
1 Introduction to Meteorites
1(39)
From Veneration to Disbelief
1(3)
The Early Days of Meteoritics
4(3)
Properties of Meteorites
7(8)
A Fiery Passage
15(5)
Desert Meteorites, Frozen and Otherwise
20(6)
Target Earth
26(5)
Too Close for Comfort
31(2)
Meteorite Parent Bodies
33(3)
No One Knows Quite Enough
36(1)
Suggested Readings
36(4)
2 Chondrites
40(39)
Once upon a Time
40(6)
Cosmic Chemistry and Chondrite Classification
46(5)
Chondrite Recipes
51(7)
A Warm, Fuzzy View
58(6)
A Shocking Conclusion
64(3)
Micrometeorites
67(1)
Reading the Record in Chondrites
67(6)
Carbonaceous Matter
73(1)
A Key for Decoding Secrets
74(2)
Suggested Readings
76(3)
3 Chondrite Parent Bodies
79(39)
A Connection to the Asteroid Belt
79(4)
Cosmic Snowballs
83(2)
The Shape of Things to Come
85(3)
Close Encounters
88(3)
Another Way to Look at Asteroids
91(3)
S-Type Asteroids and Ordinary Chondrites
94(4)
C-Type Asteroids and Carbonaceous Chondrites
98(1)
D- and P-Type Asteroids, Centaurs, and Interplanetary Dust
99(1)
A Thermal Gradient and a Snow Line
100(2)
Warming an Onion
102(5)
Bump and Grind
107(2)
Chondritic Dirt
109(4)
Processes Affecting Comet Nuclei
113(1)
Junk or Treasure?
114(1)
Suggested Readings
115(3)
4 Achondrites
118(35)
More than You Wanted to Know about Magma
120(3)
A Geochemistry Lesson
123(4)
Howardite-Eucrite-Diogenite Achondrites
127(4)
Shergottite-Nakhlite-Chassignite Achondrites
131(6)
Lunar Meteorites
137(3)
Aubrites
140(2)
Acapulcoites and Lodranites
142(3)
Ureilites
145(2)
Other Achondrites
147(2)
A Personal Touch
149(1)
Suggested Readings
150(3)
5 Achondrite Parent Bodies
153(31)
Our Nearest Neighbor
153(9)
Properties of the Howardite-Eucrite-Diogenite Parent Body
162(2)
Looking for a Needle in a Haystack
164(3)
A Mobile Home for the Aubrites
167(1)
Whence Primitive Achondrites?
168(1)
Melted Asteroids
169(4)
On a Grander Scale
173(3)
The Red Planet
176(5)
Melted Clues
181(1)
Suggested Readings
182(2)
6 Iron and Stony-Iron Meteorites
184(31)
The Core of the Problem
184(2)
Metal-Loving Elements
186(3)
Crystallization of Irons
189(6)
Order Out of Chaos
195(5)
Solidification of Cores
200(2)
Irons in the Fire
202(3)
Silicate Inclusions in Irons
205(2)
As Old as Iron
207(1)
Added Complications
208(1)
Pallasites
208(2)
Mesosiderites
210(2)
Precious Metals
212(1)
Suggested Readings
213(2)
7 Iron and Stony-Iron Parent Bodies
215(18)
Core Sizes
215(4)
The Boundary between Core and Mantle
219(2)
A Huge Mesosiderite Asteroid?
221(1)
A Cornucopia of Cores
221(1)
Shiny Beads
222(4)
Asteroid Families
226(3)
Heavenly Irons
229(1)
Suggested Readings
230(3)
8 A Space Odyssey
233(21)
Asteroidal Traffic Accidents
233(2)
Impact Ages of Meteorites
235(1)
The Properties of Orbits
235(2)
Geography of the Asteroid Belt
237(2)
Escape Hatches
239(3)
The Planetary Prison
242(2)
Meteorites Exposed
244(4)
At the Finish Line
248(2)
Meteorite Journeys
250(1)
Suggested Readings
251(3)
9 The Importance of Meteorites: Some Examples
254(29)
How Elements and Molecules are Made
254(6)
Matter Older than the Solar System Itself
260(5)
Materials Formed in the Solar Nebula
265(4)
Formation and Differentiation of Planets
269(3)
Meteorites and Water
272(3)
Meteorites and Life
275(4)
A Final Note
279(1)
Suggested Readings
280(3)
Appendix of Minerals 283(4)
Glossary 287(12)
Index 299