Venus in Sole Visa

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Science, Physics, Astronomy
Cover of the book Venus in Sole Visa by Ken Shulman, Ken Shulman
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Ken Shulman ISBN: 9781476030142
Publisher: Ken Shulman Publication: May 26, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Ken Shulman
ISBN: 9781476030142
Publisher: Ken Shulman
Publication: May 26, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

In 1761, with the world at war on five continents, 171 men from over a dozen countries were dispatched about the globe to observe a rare celestial event: the passage of the planet Venus between the Earth and Sun.

The mission was conceived by British Royal Astronomer Edmond Halley nearly half a century earlier. Halley, who knew he would not live to see the transit, believed that if the event could be timed by observers placed at different points on the globe, it would solve a riddle that had tantalized man since he first began looking at the skies above him: the size of the universe.

Organized by the Royal Academies of France and Great Britain, the 1761 expedition enlisted astronomers, adventurers, aristocrats, and clerics to travel to venues as diverse as Cape Town, Pondicherry, and Arctic Norway. Many of them braved searing heat, arctic storms, hostile villagers, stinging insects, and battles on land and sea to reach their destinations. The ship carrying surveyors Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon was fired upon by a French vessel a few leagues out of port. One French astronomer had his observatory shelled by the British, and was held for ransom in a Lisbon prison.

"Venus in Sole Visa" sets the 1761 expedition in historical context, retracing the evolution of astronomy and thought from the Kingdom of Akkad to ancient Greece to 18th century Europe to the first NASA probe landings on Mars. Spanning from the Bronze Age to the Space Age, "Venus in Sole Visa" tells the tale of a 4,000 year obsession: our need to know about the universe in which we live.

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

In 1761, with the world at war on five continents, 171 men from over a dozen countries were dispatched about the globe to observe a rare celestial event: the passage of the planet Venus between the Earth and Sun.

The mission was conceived by British Royal Astronomer Edmond Halley nearly half a century earlier. Halley, who knew he would not live to see the transit, believed that if the event could be timed by observers placed at different points on the globe, it would solve a riddle that had tantalized man since he first began looking at the skies above him: the size of the universe.

Organized by the Royal Academies of France and Great Britain, the 1761 expedition enlisted astronomers, adventurers, aristocrats, and clerics to travel to venues as diverse as Cape Town, Pondicherry, and Arctic Norway. Many of them braved searing heat, arctic storms, hostile villagers, stinging insects, and battles on land and sea to reach their destinations. The ship carrying surveyors Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon was fired upon by a French vessel a few leagues out of port. One French astronomer had his observatory shelled by the British, and was held for ransom in a Lisbon prison.

"Venus in Sole Visa" sets the 1761 expedition in historical context, retracing the evolution of astronomy and thought from the Kingdom of Akkad to ancient Greece to 18th century Europe to the first NASA probe landings on Mars. Spanning from the Bronze Age to the Space Age, "Venus in Sole Visa" tells the tale of a 4,000 year obsession: our need to know about the universe in which we live.

More books from Astronomy

Cover of the book NASA Astrophysics Missions: Reviews of Operating Missions - Hubble Space Telescope, Chandra X-ray Observatory, Fermi Gamma-ray Telescope, Kepler, Planck, Suzaku, Swift, Spitzer, XMM-Newton by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book Space Primer (AU-18): Comprehensive Spaceflight History and Guidebook, Doctrine, Orbital Mechanics, Military Space, Satellites, Rockets, NASA Programs, Threats, Designs, Operations, Intelligence by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book Kosmologie für Höhlenmenschen und andere Anfänger by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book NASA's Management of the Mars Science Laboratory Project (MSL): Inspector General Report on Technical and Financial Problems with Mars Exploration Program Rover by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book 99 New Discoveries in Astronomy by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book Research on Teaching Astronomy in the Planetarium by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book The Universal Book of Astronomy by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book Universe: The Solar System and Beyond by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book The 4 Percent Universe by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book TIM PEAKE and BRITAIN'S ROAD TO SPACE by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book 3rd International Symposium of Space Optical Instruments and Applications by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book El universo en una taza de café by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book Crop Circles, Hebrew & Mayan Prophesy by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book Highlighting the History of Astronomy in the Asia-Pacific Region by Ken Shulman
Cover of the book Von den Tiefen des Alls in den Mikrokosmos by Ken Shulman
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy