<span>A NASA science educator showcases important objects in space history from Galileo’s telescope to the Curiosity rover: “Will fascinate readers of any age.” —</span><span>Publishers Weekly</span><span> (starred review)</span><span><br><br> This book examines 100 objects that forever altered what
Space Exploration—A History in 100 Objects
✍ Scribed by Sten Odenwald, John Mather (foreword)
- Publisher
- The Experiment
- Year
- 2019
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 228
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This is no ordinary space book.
Within the pages of this eclectic pop-history, scientist and educator Sten Odenwald at NASA examines 100 objects that forever altered what we know and how we think about the cosmos. From Sputnik to Skylab and Galileo’s telescope to the Curiosity rover, some objects are iconic and some obscure—but all are utterly important.
The Nebra sky disk (1600 BCE) features the first realistic depiction of the Sun, Moon, and stars.
The Lunar Laser Ranging RetroReflector finally showed us how far we are from the Moon in 1969.
In 1986, it was the humble, rubber O-ring that doomed the space shuttle Challenger.
The Event Horizon Telescope gave us our first glimpse of a black hole in 2019.
These 100 objects, as Odenwald puts it, showcase “the workhorse tools and game-changing technologies that have altered the course of space history . . . the tools and devices that, taken together, represent the major scientific discoveries—and celebrate the human ingenuity—of space technology, showing the ways physics and engineering have brought about our greatest leaps in understanding the way our universe works. . . . They make it clear that we have made giant strides in our quest to search ever more deeply into the farthest reaches of the universe—and behind each new discovery is an object that expands our appreciation of space as well as the boundless imagination and resourcefulness we carry within us.”
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Contents
Foreword by John Mather
Introduction
1. The Blombos Ochre Drawing
2. The Abri Blanchard Bone Plaque
3. The Egyptian Star Clock
4. The Nebra Sky Disk
5. The Venus Tablet of Ammisaduqa
6. The Star Charts of Senenmut
7. The Merkhet
8. The Nimrud Lens
9. The Greek Armillary Sphere
10. The Diopter
11. Antikythera Mechanism
12. Hipparchus's Star Atlas
13. The Astrolabe
14. The Dunhuang Star Atlas
15. Al-Khwārizmī’s Algebra Textbook
16. The Dresden Codex
17. The Chaco Canyon Sun Dagger
18. Giovanni de’ Dondi’s Astrarium
19. The Big Horn Medicine Wheel
20. The Ensisheim Stone
21. De Revolutionibus
22. Tycho’s Mural Quadrant
23. Galileo’s Telescope
24. The Slide Rule
25. The Eyepiece Micrometer
26. The Clock Drive
27. The Meridian Circle
28. The Skidi Pawnee Star Chart
29. Smoked-Glass Sun Viewing
30. The Gyroscope
31. The Electric Battery
32. Pilâtre de Rozier and d’Arlandes’s Balloon
33. William Herschel’s Forty-Foot Telescope
34. The Spectroscope
35. The Daguerreotype Camera
36. The Solar Panel
37. The Leviathan of Parsonstown
38. Crookes Tube
39. The Triode Vacuum Tube
40. The Ion Rocket Engine
41. The Hooker Telescope
42. Robert Goddard’s Rocket
43. The Van de Graaff Generator
44. The Coronagraph
45. Jansky’s Merry-Go-Round Radio Telescope
46. The V-2 Rocket
47. ENIAC
48. Colossus Mark 2
49. The Radio Interferometer
50. The Heat Shield
51. The Integrated Circuit
52. The Atomic Clock
53. Space Fasteners
54. The Hydrogen Line Radio Telescope
55. The X-Ray Imaging Telescope
56. The Hydrogen Bomb
57. The Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator
58. The Nuclear Rocket Engine
59. Sputnik
60. Vanguard 1
61. Luna 3
62. The Endless Loop Magnetic Tape Recorder
63. The Laser
64. Space Food
65. The Space Suit
66. Syncom 2 (and 3)
67. The Vidicon Camera
68. The Space Blanket
69. The Handheld Maneuvering Unit
70. Apollo 1 Block I Hatch
71. The Interface Message Processor
72. The Hasselblad Camera
73. Apollo 11 Moon Rocks
74. The CCD Imager
75. The Lunar Laser Ranging RetroReflector
76. The Apollo Lunar Television Camera
77. The Homestake Gold Mine Neutrino Detector
78. Lunokhod 1
79. The Skylab Exercise Bike
80. The Laser Geodynamics Satellite (LAGEOS)
81. Smoot’s Differential Microwave Radiometer
82. The Viking Remote-Controlled Sampling Arm
83. The“Rubber Mirror”
84. The Multi-Fiber Spectrograph
85. The Venera Landers
86. The Compromised Challenger O-Rings
87. COSTAR
88. CMOS Sensors
89. The Allan Hills Meteorite
90. Sojourner
91. Gravity Probe B
92. LIDAR
93. The Large Hadron Collider
94. The Kepler Space Telescope
95. Curiosity Rover
96. Mangalyaan—the Mars Orbiter Mission
97. A 3-D Printed Ratchet Wrench
98. The LIGO Gravitational-Wave Interferometer
99. The Tesla Roadster
100. The Event Horizon Telescope
Resources and Photo Credits
Acknowledgments
About the Author
✦ Subjects
Science; Astronomy; Technology & Engineering; Aeronautics & Astronautics; Cosmology
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