Synopses & Reviews
Our sun is one star among 50 billion in the galaxy. Our galaxy is only one among 50 billion in the universe. With a vastness this incomprehensible, it is easy to feel like we are mere specks of sand on an endless shore. But our sun is special. Though roughly 150 million kilometers separate us, we could not be more connected. Literally, everything you see comes from the sun. The words you are reading now are really photons that left the sun about 8 minutes ago only to bounce off this page and into your eyes. We owe our very existence to our sun. It provides just enough heat to keep our fragile bodies from freezing to ice or burning to a crisp. Every bite of food we eat we owe to the sun, whose energy is converted into plants that provide sustenance for everything up the food chain.
We have understood the sun's importance for millennia. The earliest humans, awestruck by its blazing splendor, left drawings of the sun on cave walls. Nearly every civilization, no matter where it sprang up on the planet, has revered the sun. Myths about the sun were the basis of the earliest deities of ancient Sumerian, Hindu, Egyptian, Chinese, and Meso-American cultures. Before Apollo, the ancient Greeks worshiped the sun-god Helios. Before Zeus, the ancient Romans worshiped Sol.
Throughout our history, the sun has been central to humanity's quest for meaning in the universe. But our history has been a brief moment in our sun's 4.5 billion year life. Only recently, through advances in science and technology, have we begun to understand our sun - where it came from, how it functions, how it affects our lives and how it eventually will destroy our planet.
Our Sun is a comprehensive, easy-to-understand guide to everything we know about our closest star. Illustrated with stunning pictures from NASA's newly-launched Solar Dynamics Observatory, Our Sun will reveal the science behind the sun, trace its impact on human history, and reveal its growing importance to our future way of life.
Review
"The Solar Dynamics Observatory is one of several recently deployed satellites studying the sun, and NASA plans several others. These satellites have greatly improved humans' knowledge of the sun, and Cooper (energy specialist, researcher, Vermont Law Sch. Inst. for Energy and the Environment) has done a brilliant job of synthesizing and gingerly explaining our current understanding of this star. Organized like a biography, the work covers the period from the big bang to the sun's birth and then predicts the sun's red giant phase, theorized to occur 5.4 billion years from now. Then the expanding sun will swallow Earth, shrink into a white dwarf, and gradually cool. Published in coffee-table format, with a shining selection of pictures and diagrams, this book addresses much more than just heliophysics, as several chapters focus on the sun's social, religious, and historical aspects. VERDICT Everything you need to know about the sun is in this stellar work, which will appeal to readers of all ages and levels." - Library Journal
Review
"Anyone will be able to pick up this book and learn something about the sun. Highly recommended" - Choice magazine
Synopsis
Our Sun reveals the science behind the sun, traces its impact on human history, and reveals its growing importance to our future way of life.
Synopsis
Featuring stunning photography, including dozens of photographs from NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory, Our Sun tells the fascinating story of our closest star, from its spectacular birth to its current middle age, from its dramatic expansion into a red giant about 5.4 billion years from now to its eventual death as a burned-out black dwarf.
Along the way, you’ll discover:
- What makes our Sun tick
- Our Sun’s key role in the evolution of life on Earth
- The nature of light and the development of vision
- The miracle (or for some, the curse) of photosynthesis
- Our Sun’s profound influence on human culture
- The development of heliophysics from ancient times to the present
- How solar activity affects the climate, modern electronics, and your body
- Why scientists are scouring the galaxy in a search for Earthlike planets
About the Author
Christopher Cooper is an expert in energy policy and is a Senior Research Fellow at Vermont Law School's Institute for Energy and the Environment. He has traveled the globe analyzing the most effective methods of harnessing the sun's energy -- from solar towers in South Korea to massive photovoltaic arrays in Mongolia's Gobi Desert. He has written extensively on solar power and the effects of solar activity on electrical systems, including designing a comprehensive plan to protect the North American electricity grid from impending solar storms. His work is published widely in academic journals and trade press from Energy Policy to The Electricity Journal. In 2005, he founded the New York-based Network for New Energy Choices, a non-profit organization devoted to expanding distributed generation and consumer choice in electricity markets. He graduated from Wake Forest University, where he studied politics and ancient religions, holds a master's degree in communication theory from the University of Miami, and earned a J.D. with a certificate in energy law from Vermont Law School (America's top-ranked energy and environmental law program, according to U.S. News and World Report).