Published in July 2006
by CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Address : The Edinburgh
Building, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 2RU, UK
Telephone : 01223
312393
Fax : 01223 315052
Internet : www.cambridge.org
ISBN : 0-521-67123-x - 316 pages – paperback
This introduction to the night sky is for amateur
astronomers who desire a deeper understanding of the principles and
observations of naked-eye astronomy. It covers topics such as terrestrial and
astronomical coordinate systems, stars and constellations, the relative motions
of the sky, sun, moon and earth leading to an understanding of the seasons,
phases of the moon, and eclipses. Topics are discussed and compared for
observers located in both the northern and southern hemispheres. Written in a
conversational style, only addition and subtraction are needed to understand
the basic principles and a more advanced mathematical treatment is available in
the appendices. Each chapter contains a set of review questions and simple
exercises to reinforce the reader's understanding of the material. The last
chapter is a set of self-contained observation projects to get readers started
with making observations about the concepts they have learned. William Charles
Millar, currently Professor of Astronomy at Grand Rapids Community College in
Michigan, has been teaching the subject for almost twenty years and is very
involved with local amateur astronomy groups. Millar also belongs to The
Planetary Society and the Astronomical Society of the Pacific and has traveled
to Europe and South America to observe solar eclipses. Millar holds a Masters
degree in Physics from Western Michigan University.

|
© ACG vzw Publikatie- en InformatieDienst - F.Dubois |
|