Robotic Exploration of the Solar System: Part 2: Hiatus and Renewal, 1983-1996: Springer Praxis Books
Autor Paolo Ulivi, David M. Harlanden Limba Engleză Paperback – 25 noi 2008
The books will cover missions from the 1950s until the present day, and some of the latest missions and their results will appear in a popular science book for the first time. The authors will also cover many unflown projects, providing an indication of the ideas that proved to be unfulfilled at the time but which may still be proven and useful in the future.
Just like Lunar Exploration, these books will use sources only recently made available on the Soviet space program, in addition to some obscure and rarely used references on the European space program.
The project will deliver three volumes totaling over 1000 pages that will provide comprehensive coverage of the topic with thousands of references to the professional literature that should make it the 'first port of call' for people seeking information on the topic.
| Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
|---|---|---|
| Paperback (4) | 299.30 lei 22-36 zile | |
| Springer – 25 noi 2008 | 299.30 lei 22-36 zile | |
| Springer – 23 oct 2007 | 401.55 lei 22-36 zile | |
| Springer – 16 sep 2014 | 362.40 lei 43-57 zile | |
| Springer – 14 aug 2012 | 473.14 lei 38-44 zile |
Din seria Springer Praxis Books
-
Preț: 332.02 lei -
Preț: 214.67 lei -
Preț: 185.53 lei -
Preț: 161.25 lei -
Preț: 326.76 lei -
Preț: 311.53 lei -
Preț: 254.25 lei -
Preț: 224.18 lei - 8%
Preț: 538.05 lei -
Preț: 182.55 lei -
Preț: 209.60 lei -
Preț: 300.31 lei -
Preț: 262.26 lei -
Preț: 207.93 lei - 8%
Preț: 439.06 lei -
Preț: 254.48 lei - 8%
Preț: 399.97 lei -
Preț: 274.14 lei -
Preț: 243.68 lei -
Preț: 293.97 lei -
Preț: 288.71 lei -
Preț: 218.93 lei -
Preț: 274.56 lei -
Preț: 284.47 lei -
Preț: 392.29 lei -
Preț: 260.36 lei -
Preț: 247.50 lei -
Preț: 336.50 lei -
Preț: 339.02 lei -
Preț: 260.16 lei -
Preț: 301.60 lei -
Preț: 249.41 lei - 8%
Preț: 424.50 lei -
Preț: 308.57 lei -
Preț: 313.02 lei - 18%
Preț: 1203.26 lei -
Preț: 185.29 lei -
Preț: 161.05 lei - 15%
Preț: 518.66 lei -
Preț: 144.60 lei -
Preț: 276.03 lei -
Preț: 203.69 lei -
Preț: 401.55 lei -
Preț: 288.71 lei -
Preț: 223.17 lei -
Preț: 273.91 lei -
Preț: 204.11 lei -
Preț: 153.54 lei -
Preț: 384.87 lei - 18%
Preț: 2224.14 lei
Preț: 299.30 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 449
Preț estimativ în valută:
52.96€ • 62.10$ • 46.51£
52.96€ • 62.10$ • 46.51£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 12-26 ianuarie 26
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780387789040
ISBN-10: 0387789049
Pagini: 535
Ilustrații: XIX, 535 p. 210 illus.
Dimensiuni: 240 x 170 x 28 mm
Greutate: 1.09 kg
Ediția:2009
Editura: Springer
Colecția Praxis
Seria Springer Praxis Books
Locul publicării:New York, NY, United States
ISBN-10: 0387789049
Pagini: 535
Ilustrații: XIX, 535 p. 210 illus.
Dimensiuni: 240 x 170 x 28 mm
Greutate: 1.09 kg
Ediția:2009
Editura: Springer
Colecția Praxis
Seria Springer Praxis Books
Locul publicării:New York, NY, United States
Public țintă
Popular/generalCuprins
The Decade of Halley.- The Era of Flagships.- Faster Cheaper Better.- Glossary.- Acronyms.- Various lists of facts and figures.- Sources.- Further reading.
Recenzii
From the reviews:
“Robotic Exploration of the Solar System Part 2 Hiatus and Renewal 1983-1989 is the second book in this comprehensive series describing planetary (and interplanetary) space missions. It’s a hefty 535 pages packed with information. … The book describes all the missions in great detail from earliest proposals to last signal. … The illustrations complement the text very well. … All in all an outstanding book … .” (Jim Davis, Amazon, March, 2011)
“In this thick, heavy tome, Mr. Harland and co-author Paolo Ulivi turn their exceptional narrative skills, technical knowledge and attention to detail to the story of American, Soviet and European unmanned planetary missions … . the presentation of the material is outstanding. … I never found this volume to be at all boring. About 250 illustrations perfectly complement the text … and all of them clearly and usefully captioned. If you want to know something about unmanned planetary exploration, this is the book for you.” (Terry Sunday, Amazon, August, 2011)
“This is the second volume of a three-book series chronicling solar system exploration from the dawn of the space age to the present. The authors describe not only the missions themselves but also their design, management, and instrumentation and the political backdrop to the selection and execution of these missions … . the book covers two of the big successes of the period in question, the Magellan and Galileo missions. … an excellent book and an excellent series.” (Liftoff, Issue 260, November-December, 2010)
“Robotic Exploration of the Solar System Part 2 Hiatus and Renewal 1983-1989 is the second book in this comprehensive series describing planetary (and interplanetary) space missions. It’s a hefty 535 pages packed with information. … The book describes all the missions in great detail from earliest proposals to last signal. … The illustrations complement the text very well. … All in all an outstanding book … .” (Jim Davis, Amazon, March, 2011)
“In this thick, heavy tome, Mr. Harland and co-author Paolo Ulivi turn their exceptional narrative skills, technical knowledge and attention to detail to the story of American, Soviet and European unmanned planetary missions … . the presentation of the material is outstanding. … I never found this volume to be at all boring. About 250 illustrations perfectly complement the text … and all of them clearly and usefully captioned. If you want to know something about unmanned planetary exploration, this is the book for you.” (Terry Sunday, Amazon, August, 2011)
“This is the second volume of a three-book series chronicling solar system exploration from the dawn of the space age to the present. The authors describe not only the missions themselves but also their design, management, and instrumentation and the political backdrop to the selection and execution of these missions … . the book covers two of the big successes of the period in question, the Magellan and Galileo missions. … an excellent book and an excellent series.” (Liftoff, Issue 260, November-December, 2010)
Caracteristici
The 3-volume series will provide comprehensive coverage with thousands of references to the professional literature that should make it the 'first port of call' for people seeking information on the topic Emphasises the technology of space probes Comprehensive coverage ranges from the earliest planetary probes to the most recent planetary flights and missions Provides multilingual references (including Chinese, Russian, Czech, French, Italian) Details many unflown and unfulfilled missions, which may still be proven and useful in the future Describes the technical rivalry between the US and Soviet Union in the development of launchers
Notă biografică
The Second World War left among its many and painful heritages a new technology, ballistic missiles, that was to change the world, providing a way to carry into space instruments, satellites and probes that revolutionized science and technology.
Prior to launching artificial satellites, both the then Soviet Union and the United States developed more powerful intercontinental missiles with a range of thousands of miles. In the 1950s, the Soviets designed the huge 8K71 "Semiorka" (little seven, after the military designator R 7), a single staged rocket equipped with four large boosters and able to carry an heavy thermonuclear warhead to the continental US. In the USA, competition between the different armed forces prevailed, and the Army developed the medium range Redstone and Jupiter missiles, whilst the Air Force developed the Thor and two different ICBMs, Atlas and Titan and the Navy developed the Polaris submarine launched missiles.
The potential of all of these rockets to boost spacecraft were huge, but while in the Soviet Union it was decided to modify an 8K71 to carry a scientific payload into space, the United States decided that the Navy would develop a tiny new rocket called Vanguard, specifically designed for the task. This decision was to have grave repercussions: on 4 October 1957 the Soviet Union launched its PS-1 satellite, better known as Sputnik, which rocked the USA. This was compounded a month later by the launch of the PS-2, carrying the dog Laika. Following the explosion of the first Vanguard on December 6, the US Army then had the task to restore the American confidence by successfully carrying Explorer 1 into space on 1 February 1958 using the modified Redstone rocket called Juno 1. During the same year, the superpowers started working on new versions of their missiles able to carry small payloads to the Moon and, potentially, to the near planets. The space race had begun.
Prior to launching artificial satellites, both the then Soviet Union and the United States developed more powerful intercontinental missiles with a range of thousands of miles. In the 1950s, the Soviets designed the huge 8K71 "Semiorka" (little seven, after the military designator R 7), a single staged rocket equipped with four large boosters and able to carry an heavy thermonuclear warhead to the continental US. In the USA, competition between the different armed forces prevailed, and the Army developed the medium range Redstone and Jupiter missiles, whilst the Air Force developed the Thor and two different ICBMs, Atlas and Titan and the Navy developed the Polaris submarine launched missiles.
The potential of all of these rockets to boost spacecraft were huge, but while in the Soviet Union it was decided to modify an 8K71 to carry a scientific payload into space, the United States decided that the Navy would develop a tiny new rocket called Vanguard, specifically designed for the task. This decision was to have grave repercussions: on 4 October 1957 the Soviet Union launched its PS-1 satellite, better known as Sputnik, which rocked the USA. This was compounded a month later by the launch of the PS-2, carrying the dog Laika. Following the explosion of the first Vanguard on December 6, the US Army then had the task to restore the American confidence by successfully carrying Explorer 1 into space on 1 February 1958 using the modified Redstone rocket called Juno 1. During the same year, the superpowers started working on new versions of their missiles able to carry small payloads to the Moon and, potentially, to the near planets. The space race had begun.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
In Robotic Exploration of the Solar System, Paolo Ulivi and David Harland provide a comprehensive account of the design and management of deep-space missions, the spacecraft involved – some flown, others not – their instruments, and their scientific results.
This fourth volume in the series covers the period 2004 to the present day and features:
- coverage of the Rosetta and Curiosity missions up to the end of 2013
- coverage of Mars missions since 2005, including the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, Phoenix and Fobos-Grunt, plus a description of plans for future robotic exploration of the Red Planet
- coverage of all planetary missions launched between 2004 and 2013, including the Deep Impact cometary mission, the MESSENGER Mercury orbiter, the New Horizons Pluto flyby and the Juno Jupiter orbiter
- the first complete description of the Chinese Chang’e 2 asteroid flyby mission ever published
- extensive coverage of future missions, including the European BepiColombo Mercury orbiter and international plans to revisit the most interesting moons of Jupiter and Saturn.
Descriere
Descriere de la o altă ediție sau format:
In Robotic Exploration of the Solar System, Paolo Ulivi and David Harland provide a comprehensive account of the design and management of deep-space missions, the spacecraft involved – some flown, others not – their instruments, and their scientific results.
This fourth volume in the series covers the period 2004 to the present day and features:
- coverage of the Rosetta and Curiosity missions up to the end of 2013
- coverage of Mars missions since 2005, including the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, Phoenix and Fobos-Grunt, plus a description of plans for future robotic exploration of the Red Planet
- coverage of all planetary missions launched between 2004 and 2013, including the Deep Impact cometary mission, the MESSENGER Mercury orbiter, the New Horizons Pluto flyby and the Juno Jupiter orbiter
- the first complete description of the Chinese Chang’e 2 asteroid flyby mission ever published
- extensive coverage of future missions, including the European BepiColombo Mercury orbiter and international plans to revisit the most interesting moons of Jupiter and Saturn.