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David A.J. Seargent 
Weird Astronomy 
Tales of Unusual, Bizarre, and Other Hard to Explain Observations

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Weird Astronomy appeals to all who are interested in unusual celestial phenomena, whether they be amateur or professional astronomers or science buffs who just enjoy reading of odd coincidences, unexplained observations, and reports from space probes that ‘don’t quite fit.’ This book relates a variety of ‘unusual’ astronomical observations – unusual in the sense of refusing to fit easily into accepted thinking, or unusual in the observation having been made under difficult or extreme circumstances. Although some of the topics covered are instances of ‘bad astronomy, ‘ most are not. Some of the observations recorded here have actually turned out to be important scientific breakthroughs. Included are some amusing anecdotes (such as the incident involving ‘potassium flares’ in ordinary stars and the story of Abba 1, the solar system’s own flare star!), but the book’s purpose is not to ridicule those who report anomalous observations, nor is it to challenge scientific orthodoxy. It is more to demonstrate how what’s ‘weird’ often turns out to be far more significant than observations of what we expect to see.
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Tabla de materias

Preface.- Our Weird Moon.- Odd and Interesting Happenings Near the Sun.- Planetary Weirdness.- Weird Meteors.- Strange and Star-like Objects.- Moving Mysteries and Wandering Stars.- Facts, Fallacies, Unusual Observations and Other Miscellaneous Gleanings.- Appendix 1: The Danjon Scale of Lunar Eclipse Brightness.- Appendix 2: Lunar Eclipses 2011 – 2050.- Appendix III: Solar Eclipses 2011 – 2030.- Appendix IV: Transits of Mercury 2016 – 2100.- Index

Sobre el autor

David A.J. Seargent holds an MA and Ph D, both in Philosophy, from the University of Newcastle NSW, where he formerly worked as a tutor in Philosophy for the Department of Community Programmes/Workers’ Educational Association external education programme. He is also a keen amateur astronomer, and is known for his observations of comets, one of which he discovered in 1978. Together with his wife Meg, David lives at The Entrance, north of Sydney on the Central Coast of New South Wales, Australia. He is the author of two astronomy books: Comets: Vagabonds of Space (Doubleday, 1982), and The Greatest Comets in History: Broom Stars & Celestial Scimitars (Springer, 2008). Currently he is the author of a regular column in Australian Sky & Telescope magazine.
Idioma Inglés ● Formato PDF ● Páginas 304 ● ISBN 9781441964243 ● Tamaño de archivo 8.4 MB ● Editorial Springer New York ● Ciudad NY ● País US ● Publicado 2010 ● Descargable 24 meses ● Divisa EUR ● ID 2150230 ● Protección de copia DRM social

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