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Mineralogy, Natural Disasters - General & Miscellaneous, The Solar System - Astronomical Studies & Observations
Asteroids by Curtis Peebles — book cover

Asteroids

by Curtis Peebles
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Overview

Asteroids suggest images of a catastrophic impact with Earth, triggering infernos, tidal waves, famine, and death — but these scenarios have obscured the larger story of how asteroids have been discovered and studied. During the past two centuries, the quest for knowledge about asteroids has involved eminent scientists and amateur astronomers, patient research and sudden intuition, advanced technology and the simplest of telescopes, newspaper headlines and Cold War secrets. Today, researchers have named and identified the mineral composition of these objects. They range in size from 33 feet to 580 miles wide and most are found in a belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Covering all aspects of asteroid investigation, Curtis Peebles shows how ideas about the orbiting boulders have evolved. He describes how such phenomena as the Moon's craters and dinosaur extinction were gradually, and by some scientists grudgingly, accepted as the results of asteroid impacts. He tells how a band of icy asteroids rimming the solar system, first proposed as a theory in the 1940s, was ignored for more than forty years until renewed interest and technological breakthroughs confirmed the existence of the Kuiper Belt. Peebles also chronicles the discovery of Shoemaker-Levy 9, a comet with twenty-two nuclei that crashed into Jupiter in 1994, releasing many times the energy of the world's nuclear arsenal. Showing how asteroid research is increasingly collaborative, the book provides insights into the evolution of scientific ideas and the ebb and flow of scientific debate.

Synopsis

Asteroids suggest images of a catastrophic impact with Earth, triggering infernos, tidal waves, famine, and death — but these scenarios have obscured the larger story of how asteroids have been discovered and studied. During the past two centuries, the quest for knowledge about asteroids has involved eminent scientists and amateur astronomers, patient research and sudden intuition, advanced technology and the simplest of telescopes, newspaper headlines and Cold War secrets. Showing how asteroid research is increasingly collaborative, Peebles's Asteroids provides insights into the evolution of scientific ideas and the ebb and flow of scientific debate.

Astronomy

Asteroids: A History includes an astonishing number of facts about the discovery, the naming and fate of the stepchildren of the solar system.

About the Author, Curtis Peebles

Curtis Peebles has published ten books and more than forty articles. He is the author of Watch the Skies: A Chronicle of the Flying Saucer Myth (1994) and coauthor of Flying Without Wings (1999), both published by the Smithsonian Institution Press.

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Editorials

Astronomy

Asteroids: A History includes an astonishing numbero f facts about the discovery, the naming and the fate of the stepchildren of the solar system. . . . Peebles provides an informative discussion of the pivotal role played by technology in the discovery of smaller and smaller members of this chaotic family.

Booklist

In recounting controversies sparked by asteroid research, Peebles transports readers far beyond Jupiter and then back again, to a huge crater in northern Arizona. . . . Peopling his real-life chronicle with unpredictable personalities and punctuating it with feats of intellectual wizardry, Peebles leaves mere science fiction far behind.

Astronomy

Asteroids: A History includes an astonishing number of facts about the discovery, the naming and fate of the stepchildren of the solar system.

Booknews

Leaving the catastrophic scenarios to others, Peebles, a mainstay in the Smithsonian's stable of writers, traces the two-century history of thought and discovery about the celestial objects, which range from 33 feet to 580 miles wide, and mostly reside in a belt between Mars and Jupiter. He also discusses related topics, including the Kuiper Belt, a band of icy asteroids rimming the solar system that were proposed long ago and only recently found, and the Shoemaker-Levy 9 comet that crashed into Jupiter in 1994. He addresses general readers. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2000
Publisher
Smithsonian Institution Press
Pages
298
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781560983897

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