Area Exploration: A Historical past in 100 Objects

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A NASA science educator showcases essential objects in area historical past from Galileo’s telescope to the Curiosity rover: “Will fascinate readers of any age.” —Publishers Weekly (starred overview)

This e-book examines 100 objects that ceaselessly altered what we all know and the way we take into consideration the cosmos. From an historic Mayan codex to Sputnik to Skylab and into the twenty-first century, some objects are iconic and a few obscure—however all are totally essential. The Nebra sky disk (1600 BCE) options the primary reasonable depiction of the solar, moon, and stars.The Lunar Laser Ranging RetroReflector lastly confirmed us how far we’re from the moon in 1969.In 1986, it was the standard, rubber O-ring that doomed the area shuttle Challenger.The Occasion Horizon Telescope gave us our first glimpse of a black gap in 2019. These 100 objects showcase the workhorse instruments and game-changing applied sciences which have altered the course of area historical past—and the small steps and large leaps we’ve made in our quest to discover the farthest reaches of the universe.

“Addictive . . . This numerous assortment of STEM milestones gives science, expertise, and area fanatics a lot to ponder—and even debate.” —Booklist

From the Writer

spacespace

spacespace

spacespace

spacespace

spacespace

The Area Swimsuit

Apollo 11 Moon Rocks

Credit score: Wikipedia/Mitch Ames. Distributed beneath the CC BY-SA 4.0 worldwide license.

Curiosity Rover

Luna 3: Our first glimpse of the Moon

ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07NMHFJN4
Writer ‏ : ‎ The Experiment; Illustrated version (November 1, 2019)
Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 1, 2019
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File dimension ‏ : ‎ 158034 KB
Textual content-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Display screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
Phrase Smart ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Print size ‏ : ‎ 227 pages

3 reviews for Area Exploration: A Historical past in 100 Objects

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  1. D. Dunstock

    Fun Space History!
    I really enjoyed Space Exploration: A History in 100 Objects. As an individual who finds astronomy and history fascinating, Sten Odenwald does an amazing job combining these two subjects to paint a picture of how humans have interacted with space throughout time. By documenting a chronology of the types of tools that were used throughout time, Odenwald shows the reader an eclectic compilation of the various objects the helped humans achieve their eventual journey beyond the earth’s atmosphere, as well as the tools that helped incite interest along the way. Many of the objects detailed in this book were ones I had never heard about! Thus, I learned a lot of new information that was fascinating and further honed my interests in space and human history. This book won’t just discuss rockets and robots, there are several artifacts from early human history that, when studied, detail early humanities interest in space. In addition, the pictures in this book are beautiful and significantly aid to the read. While the descriptions of the objects are well-written and easy-to-understand, having a visual aid is extremely helpful.Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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  2. Steve G

    Surprising, fascinating and fun
    I loved this book. It has science and history and does well at both. To me, Sten Odenwald did not pick the most obvious items. Instead many that were picked were background items and some of these were surprising. Odenwald has a good sense of humor that crops up from time to time. His descriptions are crisp but there is enough there to understand why the object is important, if not enough to understand how it works. The photos are excellent. I recommend this book for anyone interested in astronomy. I also think it would be a great gift book.Disclosure: I received a complimentary copy of this book via Netgalley for review purposes.

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  3. Richard Gollin

    The good, the bad and the ugly.
    You should certainly have this book for its history of the development of astronomy and mathematics which facilitated space exploration. I certainly still have my father’s slide rule with which he did all his engineering calculations…So the first problem is as to which objects make the cut. Mr Odenwald , by the way, is an excellent science educator and writer so the book is always entertaining.I personally would have left out the 3 Native American objects; the star charts are at least 1000 years behind the Babylonians and Greeks and the celestial’ sun dagger’ was several millennia behind Stonehenge or the Orkneys. But the choice is always half the fun of these 100 object books. The one on fossils simply gets round this restriction by including thousands!Leaving aside nitpicking over selection (was the Hasselblad really neccessary?), there are two major problems with the book and both concern the modern space race.Firstly, I know the author works in the US space industry, but he shows gross disrespect to the Russians. Working in a ghastly and dreadful political country, they still pioneered the space race – to their surprise and the total dismay of those of us in the west who knew they could not even feed and clothe their population.Odenwald says Sputnik won the space race for the Russians “For a few months”.Now this is factually extremely false. Make that 3 or 4 years! 1st satellites, first animals , men and women in space, ditto two and (spacious!) 3 men space craft. And all under the direction of a man the Russians themselves had to rescue from the Gulag and who came out with just his tin drinking mug. The book has no index but even if it had there is no entry for Korolev, his launchers and his rapidly developed satellites and capsules. Also by definition they had space suits way before the US.The camps fatally damaged his health and maybe his early death and the regime’s failure to understand the prestige of the program led to them losing the space race… Except that all US visitors to the International Space Station go and return on Russian rockets…Then on the US side there is just one small reference to the part played by Germans in the US program and by the Germans connection to Nazi war crimes.You can never meet an American who wasn’t charmed by Von Braun. That’s what he did. Despite the Dr Strangelove accent! They hid and classified his record, allowed him to lie by saying he hardly ever visited Dora where V2s were made and 28,000 people died, the largest non Jewish death camp. The US army even financed a movie about him , hinting that he helped the allies. The movie flopped as cinema goers took to altering the title of I Aim for the Stars. What the army could not cover up was that his brother and production manager Rudolf had both been at Dora for many months. The US had much more success in covering up the wartime career of space suit and space medicine pioneer Strughold. Libraries and awards were named after him until it leaked out that he had experimented on and murdered children from Auschwitz during the war.I do not mean to belittle the US space efforts; every thing from the Moon our to Pluto, Hubble and communications satellites has been fantastic. But maybe there are better books to take you there.Incidentally, unlike the other two reviewers, I bought this book and can review it independently!

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    Area Exploration: A Historical past in 100 Objects
    Area Exploration: A Historical past in 100 Objects

    $11.99

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