From the Publisher
When we look into the night sky, thousands of stars twinkle
back at us. We see cool red stars, hot blue stars, big stars and small
stars. We find young stars and old stars, single stars and doubles. Some are
astonishingly bright, while others hardly shine at all. Consider some
examples from this book:
- Rapid rotators like the Black Widow, which spins 640 times per second,
and speedsters like Barnard's Star, which clips along at 90 kilometers per
second.
- Dazzling stars like Canopus, which shines 14,800 times more brightly
than the Sun, and black holes like Cygnus X-1, with gravity so strong that
no light at all escapes it.
- White dwarfs like EG 129, which has a magnetic field over a billion
times stronger than Earth's.
- Young stars like T Tauri, just forming and accreting mass, and older
stars like Eta Carinae that have exploded and are ejecting mass back into
the Universe.
- Tiny neutron stars like Geminga, just 30 kilometers across, and
enormous stars like VV Cephei, which is nearly as large as the entire orbit
of Saturn.
The variety is astounding, even a bit overwhelming. How can the nascent
stargazer begin to understand all the cosmos has to offer? In The Hundred
Greatest Stars, James B. Kaler paints intimate portraits of the 100
stars he likes best. With an infectious enthusiasm, Kaler tells us about his
favorites and, in the process, shows us how each star fits into the
development and evolution of the cosmos.
About the Author
James B. Kaler is Professor of Astronomy at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He has held both Fulbright and Guggenheim
Fellowships, and has been awarded medals for his work from the University of
Liège, Belgium, and the University of Mexico. Kaler is the author of dozens
of articles and ten books, including The Little Book of Stars
(Copernicus Books) and Extreme Stars: At the Edge of Creation
(Cambridge University Press). He also directs and maintains several
educational websites, including the highly regarded and award-winning "Stars
of the Week" site at the University of Illinois:
To the community of amateur astronomers' is the dedication at the beginning of the book, but the text is so well written that it will appeal as much to the beginner as to the more serious student. All in all, this is one of the most interesting and enjoyable books I have read for a long time.
astronomer and broadcaster -
Patrick Moore
To the community of amateur astronomers' is the dedication at the beginning of the book, but the text is so well written that it will appeal as much to the beginner as to the more serious student. All in all, this is one of the most interesting and enjoyable books I have read for a long time.
Booknews
Kaler (astronomy, U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) profiles an intriguing collection of some of his favorite starsfrom Acrux, the brightest star in the Southern Cross, to ZZ Ceti, for which an entire class of white dwarf stars is named. Both beginning and practiced astronomers will find much to be admired, including an excellent introduction to stellar evolution; a wide variety of lush images (including some of David Malin's glamour shots from the Anglo-Australian Observatory); and entries which deftly blend very technical (and current) data with descriptions that are not just accessible but also reflect a healthy amount of awe. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)