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The Moon and How to Observe It: An Advanced Handbook for Students of the Moon in the 21st Century (Astronomers' Observing Guides)
 
 

The Moon and How to Observe It: An Advanced Handbook for Students of the Moon in the 21st Century (Astronomers' Observing Guides) [Kindle Edition]

Peter Grego
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

Print List Price: £19.99
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Review

From the reviews: "Books on the Moon tend to be either photographic or cartographic collections, observing guides or text books … . This book conveniently provides elements of all three … . Production quality is very good, with high quality semi-gloss paper, 134 figures, many in colour. … These are followed with a glossary, a list of resources including organisations, internet resources and bibliography … . If you are looking for a lunar guide with some nice clear maps … you would be hard pressed to find better." (Roger Feasey, Journal of Auckland Astronomical, July, 2005) "Grego provides a refreshingly clear explanation of how the Moon’s surface and interior reached their present state … . The section comparing the Earth’s moon to the moons of the other planets in the Solar System is particularly interesting, leaving the reader with many easily remembered facts … . The book was obviously produced with great care. … this thoroughly up-to-date book may prove to be well suited for the intermediate amateur astronomer seeking more specialized knowledge of a timely subject." (Brian Chapel, The Observatory, Vol. 126 (1193), 2006) "The Moon and How to Observe It is the latest of Springer-Verlag’s Astronomers’ Observing Guides. Described as ‘an advanced handbook for students of the Moon’, it is in fact suitable for amateur astronomers of all levels, beginner as well as advanced. … The book is illustrated by about 100 photographs and drawings, many of them by Grego himself. … a detailed and up-to-date guide, ideal for the amateur astronomer who wishes to observe the Moon or simply learn more about it." (Brendan K Ward, Astronomy and Space, June, 2006) "Refreshingly, Peter Grego’s book explores every aspect of the Moon … . It also includes recent theories on the possibilities of the existence of lunar ice in deep polar craters. … Outline drawings, photographs and descriptions illustrate the lunar surface … . This publication would be a good addition to the library of anyone interested in the Moon." (Alan Wells, BBC SkyatNight, February, 2006) "The current crop range from scholarly discourses on lunar geology to popular tours of lunar features. Grego has attempted to include all of this and more in his book … . Grego does an excellent job of describing the wide range of features that are visible in moderate telescopes and he includes several interesting projects that will encourage beginners. … this discussion of the visual treats available to naked eye, binocular and telescopic workers is very valuable. … I would recommend this book … ." (Nick James, Journal of the British Astronomical Association, Vol. 116 (2), 2006)

Product Description

This revolutionary new book is written for practical amateur astronomers who not only want to observe, but want to know the details of exactly what they are looking at. The Moon is the most commonly observed of all astronomical objects. This is the first book to deal equally with the Moon itself - its formation, geology, and history - as well as the practical aspects of observation.

The concept of the book - and of the series - is to present an up-to-date detailed description of the Moon, including its origins, history, and geology (part one); and then (part two) to consider how best to observe and record it successfully using commercially-available equipment.

The Moon and How to Observe It is a mine of information for all levels of amateur observers, from the beginner to the experienced

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 7471 KB
  • Print Length: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Springer; 1st Edition. edition (28 Sep 2005)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B000SPDCV6
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #307,318 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Not for the beginner 14 Nov 2009
By Ombos
Format:Paperback
This book contains a lot of 'Woffle' together with some excellent advice. If your looking for a nice read on a winter night its great. If your wanting to look at a map and locate areas of the moon its not so good IMHO. Don't buy it for a youngster unless they are taking an astrophysics degree.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Very helpfull 12 Sep 2009
By A. Ball
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
I enjoyed reading this book and it really helped me in my personal study of the Moon I have an 8 inch and a 4.5 inch telescope and like to look at the Moon and draw pictures of it I also like to photograph the Moon the book helps in many ways with these things I have been in touch with Peter and he got me into drawing what I see in the telescope at first it was hard but I kept at it and now I think Im not bad at the drawings plus the book will give you a good tour of the Moon and its fetures I read it a lot its a book you can go back to as I say a helpfull book...
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  4 reviews
Good for observing, missing some useful info 26 Oct 2009
By Bruce E Bowman - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
This book is a good, basic intro to observing the Moon. But it could have been so much better.

Part I gives an intro to the Moon's structure, origins and -- for lack of a better term -- geology. However, the writer is clearly out of his element here, particularly in the discussion of the Moon's origin. He uses technical terms that are inaccurate -- the one point where he talks about some particular lunar lavas being "ductile" sticks in my mind. A co-author -- or a good, knowledgeable editor -- would help here. The discussions of libration and eclipses are adequate.

Part II is where the book shines. A lot of time has obviously been spent at the eyepiece, viewing the Moon, and this section on observing really shows that. However, even here, we can get fairly pedantic; especially when the author credits himself for photographs, and continues to do so, over and over again.

The book is really lacking in two things:

1) There are no data tables of any kind. Any introduction to a lunar coordinate system in the text, accompanied by a listing of major features and their locations in an appendix, would be very helpful. Just a table of features and days past new when they are best viewed would be a big improvement.
2) As far as this book is concerned, the far side of the Moon does not exist. I do understand that this is supposed to be an observing guide, and we can't look at it from Earth. But the book includes discussions of the moons of other planets, comets and asteroids, and other topics far less relevant. The fact that the far side doesn't even appear in the Index will tell you something about how much this is glossed over.

As an amateur astronomer who is mainly a deep-sky observer, the Moon is mostly a target of my scorn. The Moon makes the sky too bright to see the faint objects that I normally look at. I bought this book because I thought it would give me a greater appreciation for something that is normally "just in the way." To some extent, it has helped; and for that I give it 4 stars. But if I had it to do over again, I would search for a better reference than this.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful
lacks coordinates 28 July 2008
By JBLP - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
I agree with previous reviewer. It is a nice book with a lot of nice photographs easy to read for a new comer. But the absence of coordinates for the described lunar features makes difficult the connection with a detailed lunar atlas such as found at lunar and Planetary Institute http://www.lpi.usra.edu/ or published by the National Geographic Society. Most photographs are oriented south up north down and other in the reverse direction. You have to find out.
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful
I'm Romantic about the Moon; but as an Amateur Astronomer I Love Moonless Nights!! Well; until I got this book ... 19 Aug 2009
By Busy Bee - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
No matter who you talk to, its always roughly a similar story, the first object to look at when you get your Telescope out of the box is the moon, its easy to find and quiet fascinating. Within few weeks or even days it becomes a nuisance when viewing other deep sky objects and planets; besides other light pollution and limitations. You look at the moon, you see craters and dark lava, all looks the same; one crater is like the other. It became more interesting when I got the Moon Maps and Moon Phase Maps and the Lunar 100 List to spice things up and most recently the LCROSS space mission and Apollo 11 40th anniversary which I witnessed at the age of 4 in 1969 to get me revive my interest in the moon. Then I purchased this book and the moon started taking on a whole new dimension. The Moon is fascinating and is full of history from its creation to the most recent events those natural and man made. I'm no longer looking at Craters, Faults, and Edges and Rimae the same any more but rather I see what I did not see before. This book is your Moon Polarizer Filter; it brings things into Focus and makes you appreciate that Shinny Object that was once "Theoretically" a part of our planet Earth. The lunar features have a story to tell and this book helps you understand their language.

Happy Moon Lighting!!!

[...]
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