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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Outstanding description of rare astronomical events,
By A Customer
This review is from: Mathematical Astronomy Morsels (Hardcover)
If you are interested in observational astronomy,
this book is for you. Its extensive listing and
description of the rarest alignments, conjuctions,
occulations, eclipses, transits, etc., are embodied under one cover. Written with clarity that grade 10 or higher can easily understand.
A must have library addition!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
More exposition on rarer events than Meeus' algorithms book,
This review is from: Mathematical Astronomy Morsels (Hardcover)
The author's book Astronomical Algorithms is all about the precise steps you take to perform certain calculations in astronomy that are rather common with little explanation on how the results were formulated.
This book takes a more conversational approach than that book, since the events being described are rare. It might be retitled "Odd occurrences in Astronomy and the Mathematics Behind Them". Don't get me wrong, there are precise algorithmic steps given here, there is just more conversation along the way. You can tell that the author has a real love of his subject matter. The following is the table of contents for the book: Notes on Dates and Time Reckoning THE MOON 1. The Instantaneous Lunar Orbit 2. The Extreme Values of the Distance of the Moon to the Earth 3. The Distribution of the Moon's Perigee and Apogree Distances 4. What is the Mean Value of the Earth-Moon Distance? 5. Extreme Declinations of the Moon 6. The Librations of the Moon 7. Months With Five Lunar Phases ECLIPSES AND OCCULTATIONS 8. The Number of Eclipses in a Year 9. Solar Eclipses: Some Periodicities 10. Curious and Interesting Facts About Solar Eclipses 11. Regions of Visibility of Solar Eclipses 12. When is the Northern Limit the Southern One? 13. The Frequency of Total and Annular Solar Eclipses for a Given Place 14. Total and Annular Solar Eclipses in Close Succession at a Given Place 15. Nearly-Zenithal Central Solar Eclipses 16. Curious and Interesting Facts About Lunar Eclipses 17. Total Penumbral Lunar Eclipses 18. The Half-Saros 19. Series of Occultations 20. Occultations of Bright Stars by the Moon 21. Series of Occultations of Saturn 22. Occultations of Bright Stars by the Eclipsed Moon 23. Occultations of Planets by the Eclipsed Moon 24. Occultations of Planets by the Eclipsed Sun 25. Occultations of Bright Stars by Planets PLANETARY MOTIONS 26. The Barycenter of the Solar System 27. On the Passages of Earth in Perihelion 28. Periheloids and Apheloids 29. A Periodicity of 179 Years? 30. Planetary Quadrants and Planetary Sectors 31. How Often are the Planets Aligned? 32. On `Remarkable' relations between the Mean Motions of the Planets 33. Ceres and Pallas, and Other Couples 34. Seneca, Orthos, and Quetzalcoatl 35. Defining Asteroids of the Apollo and Amor Types 36. The Periodic Comet Encke and Jupiter 37. The Orbital inclinations of the Four Galilean Satellites PLANETARY PHENOMENA 38. Planetary Motions: Approximate Periodicities 39. Opposition Loops 40. Opposition Places 41. Triple Conjunctions 42. Planetary Groupings 43. Periodicities in the Phenomena of the Satellites of Jupiter 44. Jupiter and Triple Shadow Phenomena 45. Jupiter Without Satellites ON THE CELESTIAL SPHERE 46. Heliacal Rising and Settings 47. The Positions of Uranus, Neptune, Pluto and Ceres at their Discovery Dates 48. Ecliptic and Galactic Equator 49. The Equinoctial and Solstitial Points and the Constellations 50. The Declination of Polaris 51. Alpha is Not Always the Brightest STATISTICS, ETC. 52. The Mean Frequency, Yes, but 53. Statistics: Danger! 54. Sunspots and the Weather 55. Solar Activity and the Brightness of Lunar Eclipses VARIATIONS 56. The Equation of Time 57. About the Equinoxes and the Solstices 58. The Weekday of Christmas Day 59. The Distribution of Easter Sundays 60. The Date of Easter - Some Interesting Data 61. Rounding Numbers 62. Predicting Sunspot Activity INDEX This book is more about amazing your friends and confounding your enemies with your knowledge of odd bits of astronomy than solving common problems. A very enjoyable read. |
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Mathematical Astronomy Morsels by J. Danby MA (Hardcover - June 1997)
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