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New Worlds in the Cosmos: The Discovery of Exoplanets
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New Worlds in the Cosmos: The Discovery of Exoplanets | Hardcover

by Michel Mayor (Author), Pierre-Yves Frei (Author), Boud Roukema (Translator)

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Binding:  Hardcover
Publisher:  Cambridge University Press
Page Count:  260 Pages
Publication Date:  October 20, 2003
Sales Rank:  1,118,004st


EDITORIAL REVIEWS


Product Description
With the discovery in 1995 of the first planet orbiting another star, we now realize that planets are not unique to our own Solar System. For centuries, humanity has wondered whether we are alone in the Universe. We are now finally one step closer to knowing the answer. The quest for exoplanets is an exciting one because it holds the possibility that one day we might find life elsewhere in the Universe, born in the light of another sun. Written from the perspective of one of the pioneers of this scientific adventure, this exciting account describes the development of the modern observing technique that has enabled astronomers to find so many planets orbiting around other stars. It reveals the wealth of new planets that have now been discovered outside our Solar System, and the meaning of this finding as it concerns other life in the Universe. Michel Mayor is Director of the Observatory of Geneva, Switzerland. In 1995, together with Didier Queloz, he discovered the first extrasolar planet (51 Peg b) around a main sequence star, and has discovered many more since. His work earned him the prestigious Balzan Prize in 2000, for Instrumentation and Techniques in Astronomy and Astrophysics. Pierre-Yves Frei is a science journalist with the Swiss newspaper, Lausanne Hebdo. In 1998 he was awarded the Media Prize of the Swiss Natural Sciences Academy for science popularization. Boud Roukema is the translator.


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.0 based on 1 review)

The Quest to find Worlds Outside our Solar System by Stephen Pletko (London, Ontario, Canada) 4 Stars
October 17, 2005
+++++ This book, by distinguished astronomer Dr. Michel Mayor and science journalist Pierre-Yves Frei is about extrasolar planets or simply exoplanets that are planets located outside our solar system. Mayor was the co-discoverer in 1995 of the first exoplanet (named 51 Pegasus b or HD 217014 b). This is the book to get if you want to understand everything about exoplanets. Considering the subject matter, I found this book surprisingly easy to read. (That is, you don't have to be a science geek to read and understand it.) There are ten chapters. Below I will give the titles and state briefly what I consider are some of the main topics of each chapter. I will give a sample sentence in quotation marks from a few of these chapters. (1) THE QUEST BEGINS. Stars in general, planets in general, more on 51 Pegasus b (or 51 Peg b). "Other worlds exist, there are thousands of them, an infinity of other worlds, just as [those of the past] had imagined." (2) INFINITY AND BEYOND. Aristotle and the finite universe; Epicurus and the infinite universe; Ptolemy; the worlds beyond the solar system of Giordano Bruno; Tycho Brahe, Kepler; Galileo; Newton; sky measurements; galaxies. "There was a time when no one would have bet on the existence of a planet further than [the sixth planet] Saturn. But in less than two hundred years, three new celestial objects were added to [our] solar system. Planet chasing is an ancient art." (3) NEW ARRIVALS IN THE SOLAR SYSTEM. The discoveries of the seventh, eighth, and ninth planets of our solar system with a mention of the hypothesized planets Vulcan and Planet X. (4) WHY STARS WOBBLE. Proper Motion, sun oscillation, rumors of exoplanets, classical astrometry. (Astrometry is a method for detecting exoplanets.) (5) NEUTRON PLANETS. Pulsars (that is, pulsating stars or rapidly rotating neutron stars), lives of stars, rumors about planets (pulsar planets), the PSR 1257+12 exoplanetary system. (6) BROWN DWARFS IN THE HEADLINES An examination of hypothetical brown dwarfs that are essentially failed stars. The least massive brown dwarfs should have the same mass as the exoplanets discovered so far. Are exoplanets being confused with small brown dwarfs? (7) SIRENS IN THE COSMOS. The era of spectrography (or spectroscopy which is the study of spectra), the first exoplanetary searches, the radial velocity method (another method for detecting exoplanets). (8) FOREIGN PLANETS DIFFERENT TO OUR HOMEGROWN ONES Planet formation, the very eccentric orbits of exoplanets, exoplanetary systems with multiple planets, metallic stars. (9) DESTINATION: EARTHS! First visible exoplanet, the transit method (another method for detecting exoplanets), microlensing (yet another method for detecting exoplanets), interferometry (a technique for creating very big telescopes), taking a photo of another earth. (10) FURTHER YET: LIFE What is life, emergence of life on earth, life in the solar system, habitable planets, SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence). "Will we find extraterrestrial life? Has another planet in the Universe succeeded in assembling the extraordinary...conditions that life seems to require in order to appear? This is the ultimate question that lies behind the quest for exoplanets." There is also an appendix called "Properties of the exoplanets." Here you'll find the names of just over 100 exoplanets discovered up to October 2002. The properties given for each is mass (in our planet's Jupiter masses), orbital period (in Earth days), and eccentricity. (Orbital period is the time in Earth days the planet takes to complete an orbit. Eccentricity describes the shapes of elliptical orbits where the closer this value is to 1.0, the longer and thinner the orbit.) This appendix is fascinating. However, I couldn't understand why the authors did not give the properties (named above) for planet Earth so as to be used for comparison. Sure most people know that the Earth's period is about 365 days. But how many people know what its mass is in Jupiter masses or what its eccentricity is? (The Earth's orbit is almost a circle so its eccentricity is very low: about 0.016. The Earth's mass in Jupiter masses is about 0.003.) Another valuable feature of this book is that it has a good, brief glossary. I found this invaluable for clarifying key terms. A feature of this book's bibliography is that it has the names of 10 interesting internet sites. This gem of a book has more than 25 very informative illustrations throughout. As well, there is a set of color plates in the form of 15 photographs found near the middle of the book. Finally, the only problem I had with this book is that there is no index. I couldn't understand this since the rest of the book is so well laid out. (Even the illustrations are indexed in the table of contents.) As you can see from my summary of the 10 chapters, this book offers a wealth of information. Thus I thought the lack of an index was a major oversight. In conclusion, this is a unique book that explains a new and interesting science: the quest for exoplanets. If you want to find out more about exoplanets, then this is the definitive book to read!! (first published 2003; list of figures; preface; acknowledgements; 10 chapters; main narrative 235 pages; appendix; glossary; bibliography) +++++

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