Image for The Moon : Considered as a Planet, a World, and a Satellite

The Moon : Considered as a Planet, a World, and a Satellite

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - Astronomy series
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The movement of the moon in space had been well documented by the second half of the nineteenth century.

In this monograph, which first appeared in 1874, James Nasmyth (1808-90) and James Carpenter (1840-99) pay closer attention to the lunar surface, notably illustrating their work with photographs of accurate plaster models.

At this time, many questions about the moon's properties were still open.

Could the moon support life? Did it have an atmosphere? How had its craters been formed? Marshalling the latest available evidence, Nasmyth and Carpenter provide their answers in a text accompanied by explanatory diagrams.

Also included are theories on planetary formation, a discussion of lunar volcanism, and a vivid imagining of a day on the moon's surface, describing everything from low lunar gravity to the sudden, monthly sunrise.

The work remains an instructive resource, reflecting the state of contemporary astronomical knowledge.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108065309 / 9781108065306
Paperback / softback
523.3
05/09/2013
United Kingdom
256 pages, 1 Plates, color; 23 Plates, black and white; 46 Line drawings, unspecified
210 x 297 mm, 620 grams
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