This book is a highly comprehensive biography of Johannes Kepler (1571-1630), a German astronomer who is considered one of history's greatest scientific minds. It was written by Professor Max Caspar the world's foremost Kepler scholar. "Kepler, himself was a great mathematician and one of the fathers of modern astronomy. He is best known for his discovery of the three laws of planetary motion i.e. (1) planets move in elliptical orbits with the Sun as a focus, (2) a planet covers the same area of space in the same amount of time no matter where it is in its orbit, and (3) a planet's orbital period is proportional to the size of its orbit (it's semi-major axis)."
There was a "Kepler Telescope" that was launched by NASA in 2009. It "spent nine years in deep space collecting data that revealed our night sky to be filled with billions of hidden planets (roughly one planet for every star) thus, there are more planets than even stars. The Telescope eventually ran out of fuel and now floats in an inert block of space."
There are eight planets in our solar system, i.e., Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. And. although difficult to comprehend, "there are approximately 200 billion trillion stars in the universe."
To be quite honest, this was a very difficult book to get through. Although very interesting, it contains a great deal of highly complex material by an author who possesses great academic knowledge.