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Wil Tirion

Autor(a) de The Cambridge Star Atlas

31+ Works 732 Membros 5 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Wil Tirion

Obras de Wil Tirion

The Cambridge Star Atlas (1996) 170 cópias
The Monthly Sky Guide (1987) — Ilustrador — 108 cópias
Bright Star Atlas (2001) 39 cópias
2017 Guide to the Night Sky (2016) 20 cópias
Cambridge Star Atlas 2000.0 (1991) 17 cópias
Atlas estelar Cambridge (2002) 3 cópias
Star Charts 2 cópias

Associated Works

Zoo in the Sky: A Book of Animal Constellations (1998) — Ilustrador, algumas edições451 cópias
Astronomy (Peterson First Guides) (1988) — Ilustrador — 439 cópias
The Astronomy Encyclopedia (1987) — Star Map Creator, algumas edições198 cópias
The Night Sky (Collins Gem Guide) (1985) — Ilustrador — 110 cópias
Peterson First Guide to the Solar System (1990) — Ilustrador — 80 cópias
Stars (Collins Gem) (2005) — Ilustrador, algumas edições57 cópias
Star Birth in the Orion Nebula / The Heavens - 1995 [map] (1995) — Star Chart Data — 7 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
1943-02-19
Sexo
male

Membros

Resenhas

One of the best deep-sky maps available. It is very portable as well. A classic in astronomy.
 
Marcado
Geekstress | Aug 17, 2021 |
Ο κλασικός οδηγός για τον νυχτερινό ουρανό.

Ενημερωμένη με τις θέσεις των πλανητών και τις επικείμενες εκλείψεις μέχρι το τέλος του έτους 2017, η ένατη έκδοση (τέταρτη στα ελληνικά) του διάσημου οδηγού των Ian Ridpath και Wil Tirion τίθεται στην υπηρεσία των ερασιτεχνών αστρονόμων κάθε επιπέδου.

Αυτό το βιβλίο περιέχει ένα κεφάλαιο για κάθε μήνα, στο οποίο περιγράφονται οι αστέρες, οι αστερισμοί, τα αστρικά σμήνη, τα νεφελώματα και οι γαλαξίες που ξεχωρίζουν. Οι 50 ευανάγνωστοι και εύχρηστοι χάρτες αποτελούν μια βασική εισαγωγή στον ουρανό του βόρειου ημισφαιρίου. Όλα τα αντικείμενα που περιγράφονται είναι θεατά με ένα ζευγάρι κιάλια ή με ένα μικρό τηλεσκόπιο, ενώ τα περισσότερα από αυτά είναι θεατά και με γυμνό μάτι.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
OFA | Dec 17, 2017 |
Beautifully rendered monthly sky maps and a clear map of the moon along with 20 star charts and 6 all-sky maps supported by useful lists and clear explanatory text. This is a useful reference for anyone exploring the night sky with binoculars or a small telescope.
½
 
Marcado
TheoClarke | 1 outra resenha | Jun 4, 2008 |
Review by Joe Benderavage, April 2006.
The Sky Atlas 2000.0 (second edition) by
Wil Tirion and Roger W. Sinnott, 1998,
Sky Publishing, Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge, Mass., is a set of 26
star charts in large fold-out format (22”
by 16”). It includes both celestial
hemispheres as well as detailed charts of
seven areas: both celestial poles; Virgo
galaxy cluster; Central Orion; Barnard’s
Star; Pleiades; and Proxima Centauri.
This is the second edition of a similar
work published in 1981, but with an
important difference. The stars are taken
from the Hipparcos and Tycho
Catalogues, the result of four years worth
of all-sky scans by the European Space
Agency's Hipparcos satellite. Published
in 1997, it replaced "all previous surveys
as a reliable census of the positions and
brightnesses of one million brightest
stars."
The stars in this edition have a visual
magnitude of 8.5 or brighter. The total
number of single, double, or variable
stars equals 81,312 in this atlas. Each
chart has a legend containing symbols for
deep-sky objects; galaxies are displayed
in the same perspective as they are seen
in the sky. Open clusters must have a
total magnitude of at least 8.5; “Globular
clusters, typically more condensed, are
plotted to magnitude 11. Galaxies are
shown to a cutoff of about magnitude 13
(in blue light) and planetary nebulae to 14
(in blue light).”
The four indices are for constellations,
Messier objects, named stars, and
“miscellaneous”. There is also a plastic
overlay and a chart key.
Some of the star charts bear an eerie
resemblance to sea charts that show
gradations in differing shades of blue that
approximate ocean depths, with darkest
blue reserved for the deepest parts. “The
Milky Way is portrayed with four shades
of blue that represent approximate
brightness levels. The deepest blues are
the brightest features of our galaxy, best
appreciated under country skies far away
from city lights.”
Galaxies stand out; they are delineated in
red. The Virgo cluster of galaxies spills
over into Coma Berenices and is very evident.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
RASC-KC | Jun 20, 2007 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
31
Also by
7
Membros
732
Popularidade
#34,695
Avaliação
4.1
Resenhas
5
ISBNs
65
Idiomas
6

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