Many
Skies
Price: $24.95
Subtitle: Alternative Histories of the
Sun, Moon, Planets, and Stars
Author: Arthur Upgren
Subject: Astronomy/Science
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-3512-3
Pages: 208 pp. 20 illus., 3 tables
Description:
Praise for Many Skies
"Arthur Upgren's marvelous look at our place in the universe
deals with profound questions. What if things didn't turn out exactly
as they did-would we still be here? By studying these questions, we
gain a much better appreciation of how lucky we are to enjoy life on
this precious planet Earth."-David H. Levy, co-discoverer of Comet
Shoemaker-Levy 9 that collided with Jupiter, and science editor of Parade
"Upgren will leave you wanting to invent an alternative
universe of your own. In mine, we live well outside the galactic plane,
making cosmology much easier to investigate."-Virginia Trimble,
president, Commission XII, International Astronomical Union
What if Earth had several moons or massive rings like Saturn?
What if the Sun were but one star in a double-star or triple-star
system? What if Earth were the only planet circling the Sun?
These and other imaginative scenarios are the subject of
Arthur Upgren's inventive book Many Skies: Alternative Histories of
the Sun, Moon, Planets, and Stars. Although the night sky as we
know it seems eternal and inevitable, Upgren reminds us that, just as
easily, it could have been very different.
Had the solar system happened to be in the midst of a star
cluster, we might have many more bright stars in the sky. Yet had it
been located beyond the edge of the Milky Way galaxy, we might have no
stars at all. If Venus or Mars had a moon as large as ours, we would be
able to view it easily with the unaided eye. Given these or other
alternative skies, what might Ptolemy or Copernicus have concluded
about the center of the solar system and the Sun?
This book not only examines the changes in science that these
alternative solar, stellar, and galactic arrangements would have
brought, it also explores the different theologies, astrologies, and
methods of tracking time that would have developed to reflect them. Our
perception of our surroundings, the number of gods we worship, the
symbols we use in art and literature, even the way we form nations and
empires are all closely tied to our particular (and accidental)
placement in the universe.
Many Skies, however, is not merely a fanciful play on
what might have been. Upgren also explores the actual ways that human
interferences such as light pollution are changing the night sky. Our
atmosphere, he warns, will appear very different if we have a belt of
debris circling the globe and blotting out the stars, as will happen if
advertisers one day pollute space with brilliant satellites displaying
their products.
From fanciful to foreboding, the scenarios in Many Skies
will both delight and inspire reflection, reminding us that ours is but
one of many worldviews based on our experience of a universe that is as
much a product of accident as it is of intention.
Arthur Upgren is an emeritus professor of astronomy at
Wesleyan University and a senior research scientist at Yale University.
He is also the author of several popular books on science and
astronomy, including Night Has a Thousand Eyes and The
Turtle and the Stars: Observations of an Earthbound Astronomer.
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Price: $24.95
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