Solar System Astrophysics von Eugene F. Milone | Planetary Atmospheres and the Outer Solar System | ISBN 9781461490890

Solar System Astrophysics

Planetary Atmospheres and the Outer Solar System

von Eugene F. Milone und William J.F. Wilson
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinEugene F. Milone
Autor / AutorinWilliam J.F. Wilson
Buchcover Solar System Astrophysics | Eugene F. Milone | EAN 9781461490890 | ISBN 1-4614-9089-8 | ISBN 978-1-4614-9089-0

From the book reviews:

“This second edition … provides ‘new insights’ on the topic and contains additional material on the sun, moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, and other areas. … The writing is lucid and the discussions are easy to follow. This valuable addition to college libraries will also be welcome on the bookshelf of anyone with an interest in the solar system. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.” (A. Spero, Choice, Vol. 52 (1), September, 2014)

Solar System Astrophysics

Planetary Atmospheres and the Outer Solar System

von Eugene F. Milone und William J.F. Wilson
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinEugene F. Milone
Autor / AutorinWilliam J.F. Wilson

The second edition of Solar System Astrophysics: Planetary Atmospheres and the Outer Solar System provides a timely update of our knowledge of planetary atmospheres and of the bodies of the outer solar system and their analogs in other planetary systems. This volume begins with an expanded treatment of the physics, chemistry, and meteorology of the atmospheres of the Earth, Venus, and Mars, moving on to their magnetospheres and then to a full discussion of the gas and ice giants and their properties. From here, attention switches to the small bodies of the solar system, beginning with the natural satellites. The comets, meteors, meteorites, and asteroids are discussed in order, and the volume concludes with the origin and evolution of our solar system. Finally, a fully revised section on extrasolar planetary systems puts the development of our system in a wider and increasingly well understood galactic context.

All of the material is presented within a framework of historical importance. This book and its sister volume, Solar System Astrophysics: Background Science and the Inner Solar system, are pedagogically well written, providing clearly illustrated explanations, for example, of such topics as the numerical integration of the Adams-Williamson equation, the equations of state in planetary interiors and atmospheres, Maxwell’s equations as applied to planetary ionospheres and magnetospheres, and the physics and chemistry of the Habitable Zone in planetary systems.

Together, the volumes form a comprehensive text for any university course that aims to deal with all aspects of solar and extra-solar planetary systems. They will appeal separately to the intellectually curious who would like to know how just how far our knowledge of the solar system has progressed in recent years.