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Celestial Mechanics: The Waltz of the Planets [Mīkstie vāki]

4.58/5 (23 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 248 pages, height x width: 244x170 mm, weight: 562 g, 20 Illustrations, black and white; XXIV, 248 p. 20 illus., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Sērija : Springer Praxis Books
  • Izdošanas datums: 24-Jan-2007
  • Izdevniecība: Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
  • ISBN-10: 038730777X
  • ISBN-13: 9780387307770
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 37,98 €*
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 248 pages, height x width: 244x170 mm, weight: 562 g, 20 Illustrations, black and white; XXIV, 248 p. 20 illus., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Sērija : Springer Praxis Books
  • Izdošanas datums: 24-Jan-2007
  • Izdevniecība: Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
  • ISBN-10: 038730777X
  • ISBN-13: 9780387307770
The aim of the book is to demonstrate to a wider audience, as well as to a more skilled audience, the many fascinating aspects of modern celestial mechanics. It sets out to do this without the use of mathematics. After giving the reader the technical tools needed for a basic understanding of the underlying physical phenomena (using only elementary mathematics), facts and figures are provided on historical events, modern discoveries and future applications. Contents are divided into major topics where the three "souls" of modern celestial mechanics (dynamical systems, Solar System and stellar systems, spaceflight dynamics) play a major role. The common perception of Celestial Mechanics is that of a discipline which needs advanced mathematics and astronomy to be understood. Yet modern Celestial Mechanics has a rather different taste and a truly interdisciplinary nature.

The common perception of Celestial Mechanics is that of a discipline which needs advanced mathematics and astronomy to be understood. Yet modern Celestial Mechanics has a rather different taste and a truly interdisciplinary nature. The number of celestial objects known to mankind has dramatically increased, the long-awaited presence of extrasolar planets has been eventually detected around other stars, spaceflight dynamics has brought new applications encompassing rocked dynamics, the place-in-orbit of artificial satellites and interplanetary mission design. Solar System exploration has grown as a long term strategy for the construction of a permanent base on the Moon and a manned mission to Mars.The aim of the book is to show to the people at large, as well as to a more skilled audience, the many fascinating aspects of modern celestial mechanics. After giving to the reader the necessary technical tools needed for a basic understanding of the underlying physical phenomena (using only elementary mathematics), facts and figures are provided on historical events, modern discoveries and future applications. Contents are divided into major topics where the three "souls" of modern celestial mechanics (dynamical systems, Solar System & stellar systems, spaceflight dynamics) play a major role. As an example, spin-orbit resonances can be explained using fractional algebra and subsequently described in action as "cosmic spinning tops". Easily observable effects such as the existence of a "dark side of the Moon" (and of many other satellites) can be compared to the "complete synchronous rotation" achieved by a geostationary telecommunication satellite in order to be always in view of the receiving parabolas on the ground. On longer time scales, the consequences of spin-orbit interaction may dramatically change the evolution of a planet when chaos enters the scene and must be taken into account in searching habitable planets around other stars.

Recenzijas

From the reviews:









"Celletti (Universita di Roma Tor Vergata) and Perozzi (Telespazio Rome) present a complicated subject in an engaging manner that is accessible to general readers. The writing is clear and authoritative, and the diagrams and tables help the nonexpert reader to visualize the key ideas without having to wade through the mathematics usually found in a book on this subject. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers; lower- and upper-division undergraduates." (T. Barker, CHOICE, Vol. 44 (11), August, 2007)



"The celestial mechanics can be considered as the mathematical part of the astronomy, requiring a high level in mathematics and reserved to specialists . The Waltz of the Planets offer a different insight, providing very basic mathematical tools to the reader, sufficient to enable him or her to understand the main topics of celestial planetary dynamics. The purpose is to present this discipline as accessible, interesting and amusing . A book to recommand to students, astronomers and celestial mechanicians." (Anne Lemaītre, Physicalia Magazine, Vol. 30 (1), 2008)

Foreword ix
Authors' preface xvi
Acknowledgements xvii
List of illustrations
xix
Around and Around
1(24)
The importance of being Lucretius
1(3)
Eccentric Kepler
4(5)
Tyge the astrologer
9(2)
Giants' shoulders
11(2)
Perturbations
13(2)
Drawing orbits
15(3)
Neptune's karma
18(2)
Planets on a diet
20(1)
Gone with the tides
21(4)
Three Bodies and No Solution
25(18)
Celestial mechanics gets the blues
25(3)
Lagrange in equilibrium
28(3)
Periodic orbits
31(1)
Mapping chaos
32(3)
KAM and all that
35(3)
Inside the rings of Saturn
38(1)
A flash in the night
39(4)
Celestial Waltz
43(16)
Heavenly resonances
43(3)
Commensurable motions
46(2)
Greeks and Trojans
48(3)
Famous affairs
51(2)
The chance of chaos
53(1)
Colombo's egg
54(5)
Cosmic Spinning Tops
59(24)
Spin and orbit
59(3)
The dark side of the Moon
62(3)
Tidal friction
65(4)
Geostationary satellites
69(3)
A portrait of Mercury
72(1)
Tidy chaos
73(1)
The obliquity of the planets
74(2)
Raiders of the lost equinoxes
76(2)
Is the land of Atlantis really lost?
78(2)
Astronology
80(3)
Our Chaotic Solar System
83(24)
The ubiquity of chaos
83(3)
Propagating orbits
86(2)
Planets in numbers
88(3)
The stability of the Solar System
91(3)
Close encounters
94(3)
Raining comets
97(2)
The long journey of meteorites
99(4)
Jurassic asteroids
103(4)
Singularities, Collisions and Threatening Bodies
107(22)
From zero to infinity
107(3)
Collisions in the Solar System
110(2)
Astroblames
112(3)
Near-Earth asteroids
115(5)
Impact probability
120(3)
Don't panic!
123(3)
Mitigation
126(3)
Of Moon and Man
129(20)
The cycles of Selene
129(4)
Acts of the Gods
133(3)
Eclipsed by the Saros
136(1)
Lunar theories
137(3)
Holidays in Elatina
140(1)
Moonshadows
141(3)
Highways to the Moon
144(5)
Rock Around the Planets
149(24)
Space in flight
149(3)
Orbiting the Earth
152(3)
Space debris
155(3)
The accessibility of celestial bodies
158(5)
Going deep space
163(5)
Highways to the planets
168(1)
Last but not least
169(4)
Lords of the Rings
173(14)
Ringed worlds
173(5)
Forbidden regions
178(2)
Jovian halos
180(1)
Sightseeing Saturn
181(1)
Elliptic rings
182(1)
Arcs in the sky
183(2)
Once upon a ring
185(2)
At the EDGE of the Solar System
187(12)
Beyond Pluto
187(3)
Smiley and the others
190(3)
Big Brothers are watching us
193(1)
Chiron and the Centaurs
194(3)
Planet X
197(2)
On the Road to Exolife
199(16)
Beyond the Solar System
199(3)
Hunting for exoplanets
202(4)
A Galactic zoo
206(3)
Astrobiology
209(2)
Back to the future
211(4)
Appendix 1 Planetary data 215(2)
Appendix 2 Planetary satellite data 217(4)
Appendix 3 Space missions 221(6)
Appendix 4 Internet resources 227(4)
Glossary 231(6)
Bibliography 237(2)
Index 239