Planetology

More than Just a Surface Study

Due out on November 18, 2009
Due out on November 18, 2009

I got a nice surprise in the mail a week or so back — a beautiful  review copy of a magnificent book called Planetology: Unlocking the Secrets of the Solar System. It’s from the friendly folks at National Geographic and is written by planetary scientists Tom Jones and Ellen Stofan.  Somebody at NatGeo must have known what a fan I am of planetary science because this is the book I would have written if I were tasked to bring the beauty and excitement about planetary studies to a broad audience. (And, hey, just in case anybody from NatGeo sees this, I’m available to write books and documentaries!)

Planetology really is a nice collection of images coupled with very clear science writing. I’m in awe at the work that Jones and Stofan put in on it.

I paged through the book first, just drinking in the great images. Then, I went back and started reading. Now mind you, I took a few semesters of geology back in college and in graduate school I studied some planetary science. And, as most of my readers know, I’ve written about planetary science in my own books (Hubble Vision, and Visions of the Cosmos) and was co-editor of a well-known (and widely used) planetary science book, The New Solar System. So, I wasn’t coming to this book without some background.  In planetary science and geology classes we learned about the processes that shape worlds: volcanism, tectonism, impacts, and weathering.  Volcanism I’ll discuss below; tectonism is the faulting or folding (the deformation) of the top layers of a planet; impacts are just what they sound like — the craters gouged out when debris slams into a surface; and weathering is another term for erosion (which can happen when water runs across a surface, wind scours a surface, or in some severe cases, when acid rain erodes a surface).

I’m happy to see that this book takes a really inviting approach to presenting those processes and what they do to planetary surfaces. It does this by comparing and contrasting Earth’s scenes with how the same processes work elsewhere in the solar system. And sometimes, what we learn “out there” teaches us a valuable lesson about how it works right here at home on Earth. Planetary science is funny that way…

A lava flow on the Big Island of Hawaii (Copyright 2007, Mark and Carolyn Collins Petersen)
A lava flow on the Big Island of Hawai'i (Copyright 2007, Mark and Carolyn Collins Petersen)

Let’s take volcanism as an example. The book steps through how volcanism works on Earth, complete with some really cool pix of volcanos and the obligatory, but (to me) chilling images of what volcanism did to humans in Pompeii in 79 A.D.

Since I’m a volcano junkie, that section really spoke to me. But, the authors take the reader one step further and show how volcanism works on other worlds — the heart of comparative planetology.

This is where it gets really interesting, because volcanism doesn’t just heat up rocks on other worlds. It also heats up ice!  Which means that we get a great look at volcanism on Earth, Mars, Venus and Io, but we also get to see the cryovolcanoes of Europa and Triton and Enceladus and other frozen worlds of the outer solar system.

Ice volcanoes spew out material from Enceladus (as seen by the Cassini spacecraft).
Ice volcanoes spew out material from Enceladus (as seen by the Cassini spacecraft).

For people who thought that volcanoes only spewed out lava, finding out that they can spew molten, sluggish ice or blast out ice geysers is quite a wake-up call!

Volcanism is just one part of the very intricate story told in this book about the processes that shape Earth and the other planets and moons of the solar system.

I’ve been through this book twice, and I’m about to head through it again. While it’s not a textbook (and it doesn’t need to be) it is a leisurely look at comparative planetology told in terms that we can all enjoy — no matter what our level of science education. Planetology is coming onto bookshelves starting November 18 (I have a link to it in my online store if you want to pre-order it) and I think it would make a great gift for somebody (or even yourself).

Check it out!  (And a tip of the hat to National Geographic for sharing a pre-release copy!)

Take Your Time

Do It Right

Hubble Space Telescope on orbit
Hubble Space Telescope on orbit

So, the folks planning the final servicing mission to Hubble Space Telescope have announced that they will have to push back that mission because spare flight unit for the data handling system won’t be ready in time for the suggested February mission.  Clearly they have to bring the unit up to date (modernize it) and that will take some time and testing to do.  It cheers me somewhat to know that they won’t rush the spare to space, and I just hope that the Side B fix will hold until they can get up there to refit the telescope for its final few years of service.

Hubble’s a pretty complex set of machinery.  It’s worth it to take the time to make sure things are right. After all, once the astronauts leave it behind after the mission, it’ll have to last a good  number of years until JWST is up and running.

The good news for now is that the systems are up and running, instruments are being recalibrated after the Side B switchover, and science data is flowing.

Hubble is a machine close to my heart. I (along with Jack Brandt of the University of New Mexico), wrote Hubble Vision: Astronomy with the Hubble Space Telescope first published in 1995. Things moved along pretty quickly with the telescope, so in 1998 we wrote a second edition, called Hubble Vision: Further Adventures with the Hubble Space Telescope. In addition, I’ve written a couple of planetarium shows about the telescope — the second one is now a fulldome video called Hubble Vision. I’ll probably write a third documentary sometime soon to bring HST fans up todate in fulldome form.

All this was stimulated by my experiences in graduate school working as a  small part of one of the instrument teams.  I knew the telescope was turning out science, even after the spherical aberration was discovered. I wanted to tell its story and so Jack and I set out to do that in our books. The shows have been popular and I can see myself doing another one someday.  There’s just something fascinating about the telescope and the visions of the universe it has given us.

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By the way, if you’re a U.S. citizen reading this, please remember to vote on Tuesday. If you can take advantage of early voting, please do. It’s your right to vote, no matter WHO you favor. Please vote.

Exploring Science and the Cosmos

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