An Introduction to Astronomy - Take a Journey from Earth to the Moon, from the Sun to the Planets, to the Universe and Beyond

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Science, Physics, Cosmology, Astronomy, Astrophysics & Space Science
Cover of the book An Introduction to Astronomy - Take a Journey from Earth to the Moon, from the Sun to the Planets, to the Universe and Beyond by Forest Ray Moulton, Ph.D., Moulton
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Author: Forest Ray Moulton, Ph.D. ISBN: 1230000128126
Publisher: Moulton Publication: April 27, 2013
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Forest Ray Moulton, Ph.D.
ISBN: 1230000128126
Publisher: Moulton
Publication: April 27, 2013
Imprint:
Language: English

An Introduction to Astronomy by F.R. Moulton - The definitive text for learning about the amazing science of Astronomy.

The progress of mankind has been marked by a number of great intellectual movements. At one time the ideas of men were expanding with the knowledge which they were obtaining from the voyages of Columbus, Magellan, and the long list of hardy explorers who first visited the remote parts of the earth. At another, millions of men laid down their lives in order that they might obtain toleration in religious beliefs. At another, the struggle was for political freedom. It is to be noted with satisfaction that those movements which have involved the great mass of people, from the highest to the lowest, have led to results which have not been lost.

The present age is known as the age of science. Never before have so many men been actively engaged in the pursuit of science, and never before have its results contributed so enormously to the ordinary affairs of life. If all its present-day applications were suddenly and for a considerable time removed, the results would be disastrous. With the stopping of trains and steamboats the food supply in cities would soon fail, and there would be no fuel with which to heat the buildings. Water could no longer be pumped, and devastating fires might follow. If people escaped to the country, they would perish in large numbers because without modern machinery not enough food could be raised to supply the population. In fact, the more the subject is considered, the more clearly it is seen that at the present time the lives of civilized men are in a thousand ways directly dependent on the things produced by science.

Astronomy is a science. That is, it is one of those subjects, such as physics, chemistry, geology, and biology, which have made the present age in very many respects altogether different from any earlier one. Indeed, it is the oldest science and the parent of a number of the others, and, in many respects, it is the most perfect one. For these reasons it illustrates most simply and clearly the characteristics of science. Consequently, when one enters on the study of astronomy he not only begins an acquaintance with a subject which has always been noted for its lofty and unselfish ideals, but, at the same time, he becomes familiar with the characteristics of the scientific movement.

CHAPTER I
Science

CHAPTER II
The Earth
                 The Shape of the Earth
                 The Mass of the Earth and the Condition of its Interior
                 The Earth’s Atmosphere

CHAPTER III
The Motions Of The Earth
                  The Rotation of the Earth   
                  The Revolution of the Earth
              
CHAPTER IV
Reference Points and Lines

CHAPTER V
The Constellations

CHAPTER VI
Time

CHAPTER VII
The Moon

CHAPTER VIII
The Solar System
                 The Law of Gravitation
                  Orbits, Dimensions, and Masses of the Planets
                 
CHAPTER IX
The Planets
                  Mercury and Venus
                  Mars
                  Jupiter
                  Saturn
                  Uranus and Neptune

CHAPTER X
Comets And Meteors
                   Comets
                   Meteors

CHAPTER XI
The Sun
                  The Sun’s Heat
                  Spectrum Analysis
                  The Constitution of the Sun 
                   
CHAPTER XII
Evolution Of The Solar System
                  General Considerations on Evolution
                  Data of Problem of Evolution of Solar System
                  The Planetesimal Theory
                  Historical Cosmogonies
                 
CHAPTER XIII
The Sidereal Universe
                   The Apparent Distribution of the Stars
                   Distances and Motions of the Stars
                   The Stars
                   The Nebulæ

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

An Introduction to Astronomy by F.R. Moulton - The definitive text for learning about the amazing science of Astronomy.

The progress of mankind has been marked by a number of great intellectual movements. At one time the ideas of men were expanding with the knowledge which they were obtaining from the voyages of Columbus, Magellan, and the long list of hardy explorers who first visited the remote parts of the earth. At another, millions of men laid down their lives in order that they might obtain toleration in religious beliefs. At another, the struggle was for political freedom. It is to be noted with satisfaction that those movements which have involved the great mass of people, from the highest to the lowest, have led to results which have not been lost.

The present age is known as the age of science. Never before have so many men been actively engaged in the pursuit of science, and never before have its results contributed so enormously to the ordinary affairs of life. If all its present-day applications were suddenly and for a considerable time removed, the results would be disastrous. With the stopping of trains and steamboats the food supply in cities would soon fail, and there would be no fuel with which to heat the buildings. Water could no longer be pumped, and devastating fires might follow. If people escaped to the country, they would perish in large numbers because without modern machinery not enough food could be raised to supply the population. In fact, the more the subject is considered, the more clearly it is seen that at the present time the lives of civilized men are in a thousand ways directly dependent on the things produced by science.

Astronomy is a science. That is, it is one of those subjects, such as physics, chemistry, geology, and biology, which have made the present age in very many respects altogether different from any earlier one. Indeed, it is the oldest science and the parent of a number of the others, and, in many respects, it is the most perfect one. For these reasons it illustrates most simply and clearly the characteristics of science. Consequently, when one enters on the study of astronomy he not only begins an acquaintance with a subject which has always been noted for its lofty and unselfish ideals, but, at the same time, he becomes familiar with the characteristics of the scientific movement.

CHAPTER I
Science

CHAPTER II
The Earth
                 The Shape of the Earth
                 The Mass of the Earth and the Condition of its Interior
                 The Earth’s Atmosphere

CHAPTER III
The Motions Of The Earth
                  The Rotation of the Earth   
                  The Revolution of the Earth
              
CHAPTER IV
Reference Points and Lines

CHAPTER V
The Constellations

CHAPTER VI
Time

CHAPTER VII
The Moon

CHAPTER VIII
The Solar System
                 The Law of Gravitation
                  Orbits, Dimensions, and Masses of the Planets
                 
CHAPTER IX
The Planets
                  Mercury and Venus
                  Mars
                  Jupiter
                  Saturn
                  Uranus and Neptune

CHAPTER X
Comets And Meteors
                   Comets
                   Meteors

CHAPTER XI
The Sun
                  The Sun’s Heat
                  Spectrum Analysis
                  The Constitution of the Sun 
                   
CHAPTER XII
Evolution Of The Solar System
                  General Considerations on Evolution
                  Data of Problem of Evolution of Solar System
                  The Planetesimal Theory
                  Historical Cosmogonies
                 
CHAPTER XIII
The Sidereal Universe
                   The Apparent Distribution of the Stars
                   Distances and Motions of the Stars
                   The Stars
                   The Nebulæ

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