Santa Clara County Library Santa Clara County Library
BookmobileCampbell LibraryCupertino LibraryGilroy LibraryLos Altos LibraryMilpitas LibraryMorgan Hill LibrarySaratoga LibraryLiteracy
Home Page Catalog and My Account Electronic Library 24/7 What to Read Services and Library Information Kids Teens
   
Site Search

 
2009 International Year of Astronomy logo: The Universe - Yours to Discover
Begin your celebration of the International Year of Astronomy by checking out our resources on astronomy and scientists in the field!

Did You Know?

The year, 2009, is the International Year of Astronomy and the 400th anniversary of Galileo's observations of space using his telescope!

(from the International Year of Astronomy website)

Books

Don't Know Much About Space by Kenneth Davis book image
J 520
Davis
Don’t Know Much About Space by Kenneth C. Davis
Simple Stargazing by Anton Vamplew book image
J/ 520
Vamplew
Simple Stargazing by Anton Vamplew
Way the Universe Works by Kerrod book image
/ 520.78
Kerrod
2006
The Way the Universe Works by Robin Kerrod
Galileo for Kids by Panchyk book image
J 520.92
Galileo
Panchyk
Galileo for Kids: His Life and Ideas by Richard Panchyk
Beyond Jupiter: The Story of Planetary Astronomer Heidi Hammel by Bortz book image
J/ 520.92
Hammel 
Bortz  
Beyond Jupiter: The Story of Planetary Astronomer Heidi Hammel by Fred Bortz
  J 520.92
Hubble
Kupperberg
Hubble and the Big Bang by Paul Kupperberg
Carl Sagan by Ellen Butts and Joyce Schwartz book image
J/ 520.92
Sagan
Butts
Carl Sagan by Ellen R. Butts and Joyce R. Schwartz
  J 520.922
Wills
Astronomy: Looking at the Stars by Susan Wills
  J 522.2
Telescopes
Telescopes and Space Probes
The Hubble Space Telescope by Carruthers book image
J 522.2919
Carruthers
The Hubble Space Telescope by Margaret W. Carruthers
Exploring the Solar System by Carson book image
J 523.2
Carson
Exploring the Solar System: A History with 22 Activities by Mary Kay Carson
Eleven Planets: a new view of the solar system by Aguilar book image
J 523.2
Aguilar
11 Planets: A New View of the Solar System by David A. Aguilar
Other Worlds by Dickinson book image
J/ 523.4
Dickinson
Other Worlds by Terrence Dickinson
Faraway Worlds by Halpern book image
J 523.4
Halpern
Faraway Worlds: Planets Beyond Our Solar System by Paul Halpern
The Life and Death of Stars by Spangenburg book image
J 523.8
Spangenburg
The Life and Death of Stars by Ray Spangenburg
Are We Alone? Scientists Search for Life in Space book image
J/ 576.839
Skurzynski
Are We Alone? Scientists Search for Life in Space by Gloria Skurzynski
Amost Astronauts: 13 Women Who Dared to Dream book image
J 629.45
Stone
Almost Astronauts: 13 Women Who Dared to Dream by Tanya Lee Stone
Team Moon: How 400,000 People Landed Apollo 11 on the Moon by Thimmesh book image
J 629.454
Thimmesh
Team Moon: How 400,000 People Landed Apollo 11 on the Moon by Catherine Thimmesh
  J 681.4123
Roza
The Incredible Story of Telescopes by Greg Roza

 

And Here's a Magazine:

Sky and Telescope

More Astronomical Facts!

  • Despite Jupiter’s enormous size, it spins faster than any other planet.  A day on Jupiter is about ten hours long.
  • Venus’s clouds aren’t made of water vapor, like Earth’s. Instead they’re made of poisonous sulfuric acid.
  • Like Mercury, Venus’s day is longer than its year. The unique thing about Venus is that it rotates backward compared to the other planets. On Venus, the Sun rises in the west. No one knows why this is so.
  • Unlike the solid layers of Earth, the layers of the Sun are made of swirling gases. Its surface looks like boiling tomato soup.
  • The light of a full moon has long been associated with evil and disaster. The word lunatic comes from the Latin name for the Moon, luna, because people believed that the rays of the Moon when full caused insanity.
  • Astronauts’ footprints will stay in the Moon’s fine dust for millions of years, since the Moon has no wind or rain to erase them.

(Quoted facts from Kenneth C. Davis' book, Don't Know Much About Space)

Image of Mars sand, larger and finer grains, taken by Mars Rover Opportunity
 

DVDs

DVD 523.2
Privileged
The Privileged Planet: The Search for Purpose in the Universe
J/ DVD 576.839
Astrobiology
Astrobiology (Eyes of Nye series)

Martian Soil Magnified

Near the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity's landing site, Meridiani Planum, there are "coarse grains sprinkled over a fine layer of sand. The image was captured by the rover's microscopic imager on the 10th day, or sol, of its mission and roughly approximates the color a human eye would see."*

DVD 576.839
Life
Life Beyond Earth
DVD 629.455
Voyage
Voyage to the Planets and Beyond
 
 
 

Go Observe, Learn, and Stargaze!

The Crab Nebula

"The Crab Nebula is a six-light-year-wide expanding remnant of a star's supernova explosion. Japanese and Chinese astronomers recorded this violent event nearly 1,000 years ago in 1054, as did, almost certainly, Native Americans.

This composite image was assembled from 24 individual exposures taken with the NASA Hubble Space Telescope’s Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 in October 1999, January 2000, and December 2000. It is one of the largest images taken by Hubble and is the highest resolution image ever made of the entire Crab Nebula."*

Photo of the Crab Nebula taken by the Hubble

Into Cyberspace at Warp Speed!

Are you an astronomical brainiac?

Get beyond the Milky Way and test your knowledge of space trivia by playing the Way Out Trivia Game on the Hubble Site!

 

Launching Wisdom

But it does move.

(Quote of Galileo, when he learned that the earth does move around the sun (1632),
from The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations of Oxford Reference Online)

 

It is difficult to say what is impossible, for the dream of yesterday is the hope of today and the reality of tomorrow.

(Quote of Robert Goddard (1882-1945),
US physicist & pioneer rocket engineer,
from Quotationspage.com)

 

Being a successful scientist takes a lot more than intelligence. It takes courage, hard work, dedication, the ability to be inspired and a passion for what you are doing. If you have these qualities, don't let anyone tell you no. Trust yourself and others will learn to trust you. And finally, consider seriously all of the advice you receive, but in the end you must follow your heart to be happy.

(Quote of Kim Weaver, NASA Astrophysicist, from the Women of NASA Web site)

 

The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing. One cannot help but be in awe when he contemplates the mysteries of eternity, of life, of the marvelous structure of reality.

(Quote of Albert Einstein (1879-1955),
US Physicist, from Quotationspage.com)

* Credits:

International Year of Astronomy logo used with permission by the United States Chair of the International Year of Astronomy organization and the International Astronomical Union. For more info: http://astronomy2009.us/home/ and www.astronomy2009.org

Martian Soil Magnified and facts, courtesy of NASA, JPL, and USGS. For more info:
http://sse.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/display.cfm?IM_ID=1243

Crab Nebula and facts, courtesy of NASA, ESA, and J. Hester and A. Loll of Arizona State University. For more info:
http://hubblesite.org/newscenter/archive/releases/star/pulsar/2005/37/

 

 

To find more resources, including some for younger readers,
please see our other lists about space:
To the Moon and Beyond! and Launch Into Space!
Santa Clara County Library
Children's Services
July, 2009

 

 

 

Santa Clara County Library, 14600 Winchester Blvd., Los Gatos CA 95032-1817
Last Revised: May 27, 2010
email: webmaster@library.sccgov.org
(c)2010 SCC Library