Outer Space - Observation & Exploration, Astronautical Engineering - Space Probes, Astronauts & Space Flight, Astronomy, The Solar System - Astronomical Studies & Observations
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Overview
The Galileo spacecraft began its journey to Jupiter in October 1989. More than seven years later, it began its orbit around the largest planet in our solar system. With exciting accounts from the control room, Michael D. Cole relays the emotion that the engineers and scientists experienced when Galileo successfully entered Jupiter's orbit, right on target. For four years, Galileo sent incredible data about Jupiter and its moons to Earth. This high-interest title clearly explains the goals and accomplishments of the mission with exciting color photographs to enhance the story.Discusses the travel of the Galileo spacecraft from its launch to its orbit around Jupiter, explaining the goals and accomplishments of the mission.
Synopsis
-- Fills the need for high-interest biographies on astronauts, inspiring manned spaceflights, and planets.-- Answers the call for books in the space curriculum.
Editorials
School Library Journal
Gr 4-6-These utilitarian volumes may not ignite that sense of wonder that flashier surveys of space and space exploration do, but both offer solid groundings in their respective topics. Cole reports on the unmanned Galileo's wildly indirect course past Venus, the Moon, Earth (twice), through the asteroid belt, and into the Jovian system, pausing for thumbnail profiles of several scientists who worked on the mission and capturing a strong sense of their triumph at its successes. The scenario for our planned Moon base makes drier reading, largely because it is so abstract (e.g., "During the two-week lunar day, the crew will take turns exploring the area in two-person teams. The first two astronauts will slide into their space suits and venture outside through the habitat's airlock"), but the base's initial construction and purposes are clearly laid out. In both books, small, sharp color illustrations-mostly photos in Galileo, mostly artists' renderings in Moon Base-enhance the narrative, and in both the perfunctory indexes (major topics, such as the detailed account of the Moon base's solar power array, are missed) are balanced by full endnote citations, as well as lists of books and Web sites. Any collection serving assignment-driven readers will benefit from these up-to-date introductions.-John Peters, New York Public Library Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.Book Details
Published
February 1, 1999
Publisher
Enslow Publishers
Pages
48
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780766011199