Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About the Universe

Regular price €17.99
A01=Andrew Newsam
A01=Professor Andrew Newsam
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asteroid
astronomy
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best new astronomy
best new popular science
best new science
Big Bang
black hole
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complexity
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cosmos
dark matter
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diagram
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Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About the Universe
future
galaxy
guide
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Language_English
learning
life
Liverpool John Moores University
milky way
mind-expanding
natural world
nature
observatory
origin
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planet
popular science
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Professor Andrew Newsam
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science
sky
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solar system
star
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sun
telescope
universe

Product details

  • ISBN 9781783962600
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Sep 2020
  • Publisher: Elliott & Thompson Limited
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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The universe is a beautiful, awe-inspiring place – from glowing nebulae to the sweeping majesty of the Milky Way, from complex cloud patterns on Jupiter to the rippling curtains of aurorae. But many of us struggle to grasp the complex ideas and science behind it all, or to see how it relates to our everyday lives.; In Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About the Universe, Professor Andrew Newsam draws on his vast expertise to show us what’s going on beyond the limits of our planet, from our solar system to distant galaxies – and what this tells us about our own place in this vast expanse.; Will our explorations of our neighbouring planets reveal life or a new place to settle? What happens inside black holes? Is dark matter real? Would a solar flare have a devastating effect on our planet? Could we do anything to prevent being wiped out by an approaching asteroid? What can observations of stars reveal about our origins – and our future?; A brilliantly vivid and enlightening guide to the incredible phenomena of outer space – and to ourselves.
Andrew Newsam is Professor of Astronomy Education and Engagement at Liverpool John Moores University. After studying cosmology at Glasgow University, and working as an observational astronomer at the University of Southampton, he joined LJMU in 1998 to help set up the educational arm of the Liverpool Telescope, which later became the National Schools’ Observatory, one of the largest astronomy education projects in the world. As well as astronomical research and education he is a keen science communicator, giving talks to many thousands of schoolchildren, amateur astronomers and the general public throughout the UK and beyond, as well as working with artists of all kinds on new ways – from show gardens to street theatre – to bring the delights of astronomy to as many people as possible.; Published in association with Liverpool John Moores University