Here is a useful tidbit of information: if you’re
stargazing in the city, you can see about 300 stars, but in the
country, you can see about 3,500! With The New Astronomer, you can
learn how to become an avid stargazer with guidance from astronomer
Carole Stott, whether you’re in the city or the country. Beginning
with a brief explanation of the night sky, the author moves on to
introduce readers to equipment, from low-tech binoculars to a CCD
camera and its detector—a silicon chip about the size of a
postage stamp. Hi-tech or low-tech, a stargazer still needs a map,
and New Astronomer provides a planisphere, a simple, flat, circular
map of the stars. Once your equipment is in place, flip to the blue-edged
pages and you can start examining our solar system. Stott gives
quick facts for each planet, the Moon and the Sun; a locator map
good until 2010; and almost best of all, images of what the planets
look like to the naked eye, through binoculars, a telescope, and
a CCD image. Of course, there’s more to the solar system than
our close planetary neighbours. As a stargazer you can explore meteors,
comets, asteroids, and satellites. Stott takes readers even further.
Turn to the green-edged pages and travel the celestial sphere. Cut
a swath through the zodiac! Never wonder again how to find the North
Star (Polaris)! Bathe your eyes in a meteor shower!
(Originally published in the July/Aug
2001 issue of YES Mag.) |