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| View Larger Image | Extrasolar Planets and Astrobiology | Hardcoverby Caleb A. Scharf (Author)
| List Price: | $86.50 | | Price: | $69.20 | | You Save: | $17.30 (20%) | | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| | Binding: | Hardcover | | Publisher: | University Science Books | | Page Count: | 490 Pages | | Publication Date: | August 14, 2008 | | Sales Rank: | 475,832th |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description This book offers an advanced introduction to the increasingly robust fields of extrasolar planets and astrobiology. No other text currently available applies this level of mathematics and physics, while also providing an extensive grounding in key issues of chemistry, biology, and geophysics. With extensive references to the literature and chapter-ending exercises, this book can be used as the core text for teaching undergraduate or introductory graduate level courses. The text will also provide astrobiologists with an indispensable "User's Manual" when quick reference to key mathematical and physical techniques is needed. A continually updated online component, fully cross referenced with the text, is also available. Foreword by Geoff Marcy. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 4 reviews)
| Review of Extrasolar Planets and Astrobiology Caleb A. Sharf by J. T. McCawley 5 Stars May 23, 2009 This is a good open-minded, open-ended look at a topic that is now coming of age. Using a sound technical, multi-disiplined approach Scharf has managed to investigate this subject without drawing premature conclusions or venturing groundless hypotheses based on prejudicial thinking. It is a book that will make you think.
This book is quite readable for a college edjucated amature astronomer or other science/astronomy-savvy individual at home or as a college text that would not be out of place at MIT or CALTECH.
A little warning though, Scarf does like his math and physics(which are quite in order in this work) so if you are a little rusty in these subjects it may be good to bone up a little.
| | Best. Text. Ever. by AstroBio (New York, NY) 5 Stars November 24, 2008 The textbook is well sourced, well written, and incredibly well organized. As a astronomy and biology student wishing to understand the unification of these two rather different approaches to science, this is invaluable and MUCH appreciated.
Students sometimes don't realize that textbooks are not confusing because of their subject material, but usually very opaque because of their ORGANIZATION.
Scharf's organization of the material and presentation is nonpareil, and what's more, this is the only text currently available (I have read every one), that contains a physical, mathematically based derivation and demonstration of the sciences at work.
This is incredibly important as Astrobiology becomes a denser field with more and more concepts piling atop one another. Presenting the grounding of the subject in the basic sciences, not as abstract musings but as truly observationally based science, is perhaps the author's greatest success.
In the world of science textbooks, which I believe is all too often a graveyard where students' love of science goes to die, this text stands amongst the few which will not only encourage your understanding of its chosen topic, but will cause you to want to expand it.
| | An Excellent Resource by Astrofiend (New York, NY) 5 Stars September 13, 2008 I am an Astrophysics major who had the pleasure of taking the author's course on this subject. You will find this to be a detailed, thorough, and quantitative introduction to the field, as well as engaging and accessible. A must have for any student interested in extrasolar planets or astrobiology.
| | Excellent by astrograd (NY, NY USA) 5 Stars September 04, 2008 This is far and away the most comprehensive book on the market covering extra-solar planets. It is both rigorous and easy to follow, no small feat for such a new textbook about a young field. I highly recommend it to higher level undergraduates interested in learning more about everything from T Tauri stars and protoplanetary disks to extremeophiles. Keep in mind, this book is written by an astrophysicist, not a biologist.
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