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Looking for Earths: The Race to Find New Solar Systems

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The ultimate insider's account of astronomy's fantastic voyage in search of brave new worlds in faraway galaxies

"Highly recommended." -Science and Technology

"Full of humor, heartbreak, and a deep understanding of the ardor and luck that compose years of research. . . . The reader becomes not merely a receiver of Boss's vision, but a fellow explorer." -Astronomy

"A rewarding account." -Scientific American

Are we alone in the universe . . . or are there other planets generating and sustaining life? The question may be as old as civilization, but in the twilight of a century marked by countless frustrated quests to find other solar systems, several teams of pioneering astronomers have at last discovered a rich crop of mammoth, Jupiter-sized gas planets -the first compelling evidence that there may indeed be life in other galaxies.

In Looking for Earths, a prominent planetary scientist takes us along on this thrilling hunt for new life, revealing the behind-the-scenes stories of scientific determination, frustration, and triumph. Ushering us to the mountaintop observatories that house the world's most powerful telescopes, and into the tension-filled scientific meetings where new results are announced and old results overturned, Alan Boss brings the process of exploration vividly alive. Experience the roller-coaster ride as intricate observations of minuscule stellar wobbles raise hopes that at last a true planet has been found, only to be almost immediately shattered by more powerful observations. Boss also introduces the principal players whose dreams defied all odds and made the first major discovery possible.

Like no other book, Looking for Earths captures the lively tension between theory and observation that defines cutting-edge astronomical discovery, along with the heated battles that will determine the direction of big-ticket American astronomy for years to come.

"You will find no better introduction to one of the truly revolutionary developments in modern astronomy."-Natural History

264 pages, Hardcover

First published September 22, 1998

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Alan Boss

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Profile Image for dejah_thoris.
1,355 reviews23 followers
August 29, 2013
A solid introduction to the history of finding other planetary systems. Drags a bit at the beginning but once it gets into the 1990s it heats up. I kind of wish there had been a second edition, however, as the publication date of 1998 probably omits more current findings. (I could be wrong on this point though as NASA has been effectively scrapped and these particular projects may have lost funding long before that point.) Not the easiest read, but it is presented like a journal once it reaches the modern era though all the acronyms can get confusing at times. Fortunately, there's also a glossary if you forget one midway through reading.
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