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Rock Legends: The Asteroids and Their Discoverers

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This book relates the history of asteroid discoveries and christenings, from those of the early pioneering giants of Hersehel and Piazzi to modern-day amateurs. Moving from history and anecdotal information to science, the book's structure is provided by the names of the asteroids, including one named after the author.

Names of celestial objects are a subjective human invention which serves only to help scientists remember what they are talking about. Thus the names of asteroids have a human significance for the discoverer, for other astronomers and for the wider community.

Free from a need to conform to scientific naming conventions, the names evidence hero-worship, sycophancy, avarice, vanity, whimsy, erudition and wit, revealing the human side of astronomers, especially where controversy has followed the christening, as has happened many times. Murdin draws from extensive historical records to explore the debate over these names, as when the choice of Maximiliana was overridden as being overly clunky, only to be reinstalled sixty years later on a new discovery. Each age reveals its own biases and preferences in the naming process.

Originally regarded as vermin of the skies, asteroids are minor planets, rocky scraps left over from the formation of the larger planets, or broken fragments of worlds that have collided. Their scientific classification as minor planets makes them seen unimportant, but over the past decades asteroids have been acknowledged as key players in the Solar System. This view of their starring role even alters the trajectories of spacecraft: NASA s policy for space missions en route to the outer planets is that they must divert to study passing asteroids whenever possible. Following the history of asteroid names reveals the evolving trajectory of their place in the study of the Solar System. Written for a general audience, it provides a complete tour of the fascinating world of asteroids.

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216 pages, Hardcover

Published July 27, 2016

18 people want to read

About the author

Paul Murdin

28 books12 followers

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Víctor Cid.
111 reviews2 followers
February 9, 2023
Un título rompedor, sin duda. En este libro, Paul Murdin nos detalla las historias y curiosidades de los descubrimientos de los cuerpos menores del sistema solar: planetoides, meteoros, cometas, asteroides... Un libro plagado de anécdotas, muy interesante.
El autor sabe mucho de la materia sin duda, y se le olvida que los profanos tenemos que tirar mucho de wikipedia para seguirle el ritmo. En ocasiones se me hizo bola, y tuve que saltarme páginas con alegría. En otras sin embargo, las historias te atrapan y te dedicas a releer.
En su día lo leí y me gustó. El libro no defrauda, aunque para mi nivel, quizá sea un poco exigente.
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