Star Trek: The Official Guide to Our
Universe
The True Science Behind the Starship
Voyages
by Andrew Fazekas
Foreword by William Shatner.
Published by National Geographic.
Illustrated edition.
Published 2016.
Hardcover.
Hardcover.
ISBN-10: 1426216521
ISBN-13: 978-1426216527
Description:
ISBN-13: 978-1426216527
This book reveals the science behind Star
Trek’s beloved fictions about the universe, inviting readers to gaze up at
the night sky and observe where the Starfleet has gone. Many of the galactic
destinations featured in Star Trek over the years – multiple
star systems, alien worlds, supernova explosions, emission nebulae, voracious
black holes – are scientifically valid, so much so that one can step out and
view them in the night sky. In this book astronomy educator Andrew Fazekas,
“The Night Sky Guy,” takes you on that journey, starting with specific Star
Trek voyages, explaining the science behind them, and guiding you in
observing and learning more about the real-universe corollaries of planets and
places in the Star Trek universe.
With a foreword from William Shatner and
stunningly illustrated with hundreds of full-color images – some artists’
interpretations and some real images generated by the most recent NASA missions
– plus stills of favorite Star Trek scenes and
characters, Star Trek The Official Guide to Our Universe uses Star
Trek to teach astronomy, taking every reader on a voyage of discovery.
From Altair to Vega, from red giants to white dwarfs, from our solar system to
exoplanets we are only beginning to imagine, the book visits dozens of
celestial objects, spotlighting some 20 in careful scientific detail and
offering easy-to-follow star-gazing instructions to find them in the night sky.
No warp-driven starship, not even a telescope
is required to go on these voyages: Most destinations are bright enough to be
seen with the naked eye. For Star Trek fans and budding
stargazers who are ready to launch their own space mission, this inventive book
blends science and fiction, making learning fun and making Star Trek’s
50th all the more worthy of celebration.
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