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Academic & Professional Books  Reference  Physical Sciences  Astrobiology

Exoplanets Hidden Worlds and the Quest for Extraterrestrial Life

By: Donald W Goldsmith(Author)
254 pages, 16 b/w photos and b/w illustrations, 2 tables
NHBS
A solid and accessible introduction to astronomy's quest for distant planets and the awe-inspiring results that have been collected so far.
Exoplanets
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  • Exoplanets ISBN: 9780674976900 Hardback Sep 2018 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 6 days
    £20.95
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Price: £20.95
About this book Contents Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

Astronomers have recently discovered thousands of planets that orbit stars throughout our Milky Way galaxy. With his characteristic wit and style, Donald Goldsmith presents the science of exoplanets and the search for extraterrestrial life in a way that Earthlings with little background in astronomy or astrophysics can understand and enjoy.

Much of what has captured the imagination of planetary scientists and the public is the unexpected strangeness of these distant worlds, which bear little resemblance to the planets in our solar system. The sizes, masses, and orbits of exoplanets detected so far raise new questions about how planets form and evolve. Still more tantalizing are the efforts to determine which exoplanets might support life. Astronomers are steadily improving their means of examining these planets' atmospheres and surfaces, with the help of advanced spacecraft sent into orbits a million miles from Earth. These instruments will provide better observations of planetary systems in orbit around the dim red stars that throng the Milky Way. Previously spurned as too faint to support life, these cool stars turn out to possess myriad planets nestled close enough to maintain Earthlike temperatures.

The quest to find other worlds brims with possibility. Exoplanets shows how astronomers have broadened our planetary horizons, and suggests what may come next, including the ultimate discovery: life beyond our home planet.

Contents

Prologue

1. The Long Search for Other Solar Systems
2. Cosmic Distances
3. Early Quests for Exoplanets
4. The Breakthrough: Measuring Radial Velocity Precisely
5. Finding Exoplanets by Their Transits
6. Directly Observing Exoplanets
7. Detecting Planets with Einstein’s Lens
8. Two Minor Methods for Finding Exoplanets
9. A Gallery of Strange New Planets
10. What Have We Learned?
11. How Planets Form with Their Stars
12. Habitable Planets and the Search for Life
13. Future Approaches to Hunting Exoplanets
14. Proxima Calls: Can We Visit?

Notes
Further Reading
Acknowledgments
Index

Customer Reviews (1)

  • A solid and accessible introduction
    By Leon (NHBS Catalogue Editor) 15 Apr 2019 Written for Hardback


    Humans have been gazing at the stars since times immemorial. Once we understood what stars were, and that our planet together with others circled one such star, it was only a small step to think that there must be other planets outside of our Solar System. But only in the last 25 years have we been able to start finding these so-called exoplanets. Astronomer Donald Goldsmith here promises, and delivers, an introduction that even an astronomy novice such as myself could understand and thoroughly enjoy.

    I first touched on exoplanets in my review of astrobiologist Charles Cockell’s book The Equations of Life, who provided a very brief introduction to them as a little aside. Their existence and the remote possibility of finding worlds inhabited by other lifeforms has captured the public imagination. Just in the last two years there have been at least three other popular science book on the topic (The Planet Factory, Exoplanets: Diamond Worlds, Super Earths, Pulsar Planets, and the New Search for Life Beyond Our Solar System, and One of Ten Billion Earths). So where do you start? Though I haven’t read these books yet, what I can tell you is that Goldsmith here provides an inclusive overview.

    After familiarising the reader with the vast distances involved and the units astronomers use, including Astronomical Units, light years and parsecs (yes, the one George Lucas famously got wrong), the first half of the book dives into the how. Given that even the nearest stars are very far away, and planets emit no light, how, indeed, do you find them?

    Two indirect methods have been particularly successful and are explained here in-depth by Goldsmith: radial velocity measurements and transit observations.

    The former relies on the fact that as a planet circles a star, it exerts a small gravitational tug on the star, causing both the star and the planet to turn around a shared centre of mass that is not exactly at the centre of the star, but somewhere towards its edge or even outside of it. In effect, the star wobbles, and this wobble can be observed in changes in the wavelength of the light that reaches us. Remember the Doppler effect? How a siren sounds higher in tone when an ambulance approaches you, and lower in tone when it moves away from you? It is the same for light. The differences are minute, but with sensitive enough equipment these shifts in wavelength can be measured.

    The second method, pioneered by NASA’s now retired Kepler space telescope, is perhaps easier to grasp: a planet moving in front of its star causes a temporary blip in the intensity of the star's light. If these observed blips are regular enough you have a candidate exoplanet. Of course, this only works when a planet's orbit passes in front of a star from our vantage point, but there are plenty of stars out there for which this is true.

    These two methods have led to the discovery of thousands of exoplanets. But Goldsmith would not be thorough if he did not also explain other methods such as direct observations using the infrared radiation emitted by planets, gravitational lensing (the bending of light’s path due to the proximity of massive objects – one of those counterintuitive phenomena Einstein predicted), orbital brightness modulation (where a star’s observed brightness fluctuates ever so slightly by light reflected off nearby orbiting planets), changes in light polarization (also due to reflection off a planet), and several other obscure methods, some of which have so far been unsuccessful. I found his explanations here clear, and they gave several of those “aha” moments. For example when he explains adaptive optics, an engineering solution employed in modern telescopes to correct for image distortion caused by Earth’s atmosphere (so that is why I keep seeing photos of telescopes shooting a laser beam into the sky).

    Throughout, Goldsmith is careful to point out the limitations and biases of current methodologies. Despite their success, the resolution of most methods is still so poor that we can only find planets (much) bigger than Earth. Technological improvements are continuing apace though, and new observatories, whether on Earth or in orbit, are finding smaller and smaller planets.

    What we have discovered and catalogued so far has very much surprised everyone. Goldsmith takes the reader through an eye-opening tour of the weird and wonderful planetary systems; giant planets racing around stars at a fraction of the distance between our Sun and Mercury, planets around binary stars, planets young and old, big and small, dense and fluffy... our Solar System is far from the only possible configuration. Goldsmith adds a very interesting chapter on how this affects our existing theories of star and planet formation.

    But it is not all hard facts. Goldsmith permits himself plenty of informed speculation towards the end of the book as he ponders which planets are likely to be friendly to life as we know it. For the moment, the exoplanet search is largely a cataloguing exercise and we have gathered only the most basic of estimates on sizes, masses, distances to stars, and orbital periods. Ongoing and planned projects such as ESA’s PLATO mission and NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope will hopefully change this and Goldsmith gives an informative overview of future missions and the technical challenges that need to be overcome to improve our detection methods. He happily veers into near science fiction when speculating about future missions that will send nanoprobes into interstellar space to pass by the nearest discovered exoplanets, and the hypothetical possibility of sending humans on interstellar missions.

    Goldsmith lightens up his writing with the occasional wry observation on the quirks of his profession, and quotes from fellow astronomers who he has interviewed. There are places where I would have liked a few more illustrations to explain certain principles, although the ones that have been included are useful and clear, having been carefully redrawn for this book.

    The strong suit of the book is its solid writing though: Goldsmith goes into plenty of technical detail but he never lost me. The book strikes the right balance between starting from first principles for readers without a background in astronomy or astrophysics in a way that is not patronising, while delivering plenty of technical details and caveats about what we know so far. Above all, he transmits the sheer awe that this fast-moving field inspires.
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Biography

Donald Goldsmith is an astronomer and President of Interstellar Media. He is the author of Origins: Fourteen Billion Years of Cosmic Evolution (with Neil deGrasse Tyson) and The Runaway Universe, and has received the American Institute of Physics Science Communication Award and the Annenberg lifetime award for astronomy popularization from the American Astronomical Society.

By: Donald W Goldsmith(Author)
254 pages, 16 b/w photos and b/w illustrations, 2 tables
NHBS
A solid and accessible introduction to astronomy's quest for distant planets and the awe-inspiring results that have been collected so far.
Media reviews

 "For centuries humans have speculated about worlds beyond our solar system and life beyond Earth. In just the last few decades astronomers have discovered that most stars have planets, and that many of these planets could be habitable. Goldsmith recounts this stunning transformation in our cosmic understanding in a book that is comprehensive yet concise, and that prepares readers for the breakthroughs to come, including – perhaps within our lifetime – the discovery of credible evidence that we are not alone."
– Richard Tresch Fienberg, Press Officer, American Astronomical Society

"How do alien, faraway worlds reveal their existence to Earthlings? Let Donald Goldsmith count the ways. As an experienced astronomer and a gifted storyteller, he is the perfect person to chronicle the ongoing hunt for planets of other stars. Notwithstanding the grandeur of his subject – an age-old human question now become an active quest – Goldsmith treats the search for other worlds with wisdom, wit, and an often thrilling choice of words."
– Dava Sobel, author of The Glass Universe

"Were you fortunate enough to have a favorite aunt, or a particularly great teacher, who could explain complicated ideas in a way that helped you understand them, and made you want to know more? That's the role Donald Goldsmith plays in his delightful new book. In the past few decades, scientists have discovered myriad worlds that are like and unlike those we are familiar with. Goldsmith brings the reader up close and personal, inviting us to explore many of these systems and their discoverers. He helps us understand what we know and what we have yet to uncover, how we came to be here, and what the chances are for life beyond Earth."
– Jill Tarter, Chair Emeritus for SETI Research, SETI Institute

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