Pioneers of Science
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:28th Jun '12
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
First published in 1893, this collection of lectures covers the landmark discoveries of astronomers from Aristotle to Kelvin.
Compiled for the general reader and first published in 1893, this illustrated collection of lectures is a whistle-stop history of astronomical discoveries from the ancient world to the modern era. It includes concise explanations of theory in non-technical terms, biographical notes on significant astronomers, and more than a hundred illustrations.Knowing there was no money in science, Vincenzo Galilei wanted his son to become a cloth-dealer. While the young Galileo was disobeying his father and cultivating an unwholesome interest in geometry, Tycho Brahe was maintaining the impoverished Johannes Kepler and his entire family. Not long after this, a certain Cambridge mathematician noticed a strange phenomenon that became known as 'the precession of the equinoxes', before formulating his law of gravity. In this fascinating collection of lectures, first published in 1893, the eminent Professor of Physics Oliver Lodge (1851–1940) takes the reader on a tour of the history of astronomy. Including biographical notes on landmark astronomers, more than a hundred illustrations, and simple explanations of important concepts, this engaging book's range from the geocentric theory of the universe to the discovery of Neptune and the calculation of tides. It remains highly accessible to the general reader today.
ISBN: 9781108052511
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 24mm
Weight: 540g
426 pages