內容簡介
內容簡介 Retired astronomer Thomas Wm. Hamilton has written six books on astronomy. But science always changes. His most recent book, Moons of the Solar System, has just been revised to incorporate the newest research and information on these amazing bodies in the sky. The new title is Moons of the Solar System, Revised Second Edition: Incorporating the Latest Discoveries in Our Solar System as well as Suspected Exomoons.Having once worked on the Apollo Project, the author has long been fascinated in studying moons. From Galileo's discoveries in 1610, to the latest returns from the Cassini spacecraft in orbit around Saturn, four centuries of discoveries in the solar system are summarized, complete with the names of those responsible for finding them.The 185 known moons of the planets and dwarf planets in the solar system are described in great detail, from how they were discovered, and by whom, to information about their sizes and orbits.The strange and exotic origins of the moons' names make for astonishing stories. Moons of the Solar System also includes the possible dangers faced by human travel in space.About the Author: Thomas Wm. Hamilton taught astronomy for 32 years. He has devoted his efforts since retiring to writing about astronomy as well as three books of science fiction. The author lived most of his life in big cities including San Francisco and New York, "which are about as bad for viewing the sky as living in a cave. The year I spent in New Hampshire was the best time for getting personally acquainted with the night sky. The asteroid 4897 was named by the International Astronomical Union Tomhamilton for me."
作者介紹
作者介紹 Thomas Wm. Hamilton was born in San Francisco, where his family was so long settled that City Hall is on a street named for his great great grandfather. Following his father’s death he was raised in New York City by his mother and some of her family. He graduated valedictorian and Sergeant-Major from Eastern Military Academy, and attended Columbia College, working on the school radio station and majoring in German and Astronomy. This led after graduate school to an invitation to work on the Apollo Project in 1963, where he was involved in determining fuel usage, radar accuracy requirements, and orbital maneuvers around the Moon. Later he worked for a planetarium manufacturer for two years, and then taught college astronomy for 34 years while giving planetarium shows. In 2009 the International Astronomical Union named asteroid 4897 Tomhamilton for him. In 2010 he created a scholarship for students interested in a career in the planetarium field.