Deep Space

Beyond the Solar System to the Edge of the Universe and the Beginning of Time

Regular Price $22.99

Regular Price $29.99 CAD

Regular Price $22.99

Regular Price $29.99 CAD

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On Sale

Jul 16, 2024

Page Count

224 Pages

ISBN-13

9780762487233

Description

Join award-winning astronomy writer Govert Schilling on a journey through space and time to the most far-reaching corners of the universe in this stunning photographic voyage into deep space.

This one-of-a-kind trip begins inside our own solar system with a brief tour of the sun, the planets and their moons, asteroids, comets, and dwarf planets. We then accelerate into deep space and, with Schilling as our guide, we explore the birth of stars in the Orion and Carina Nebulae; the death of stars, from red giants to catastrophic supernova explosions; and galaxies and galaxy clusters beyond our own including spiral galaxies, elliptical galaxies, and lenticular galaxies. We learn about supermassive black holes, which astronomers now believe exist at the center of every galaxy including our own, and exoplanets, billions of which are believed to be orbiting stars in the Milky Way and beyond. The book concludes at the edge of the cosmological horizon with a look at dark matter, dark energy, and theories of extraterrestrial life and the Multiverse.

With hundreds of photographs, including new images from the James Webb Space Telescope, and custom illustrations throughout, as well as a star atlas that shows the full celestial sky, Deep Space is the perfect book for astronomy buffs, students, and anyone fascinated with the mystery and beauty of the cosmos.

Praise

"A stunning and essential coffee-table book... This impressive book is filled with hundreds of gorgeous full-color photographs on glossy black paper that emulate looking into deep space...There are also eye-opening facts about the vast expanse of the universe.
Targeted at amateur astronomers, the book takes advantage of today’s advanced astronomy research that provides exciting new information from the sensitive eyes of modern large telescopes, both in space and on the ground."  —Library Journal, starred review
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