41
by Handy, Richard, Moody, David B., Perez, Jeremy, Rix, Erika
Published 2007
Springer New York
... experience. It means spending time at the eyepiece to really look at what you can see, training your eye...

42
by Cheng, Jingquan
Published 2009
Springer New York
...-ray and gamma ray imaging. The principles behind these technologies are also discussed with an eye...

43
Published 1975
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Table of Contents: ... Receivers -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 The Human Eye -- 3.3 The Photographic Emulsion -- 3.4 The Photoelectric...

44
Published 2002
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Table of Contents: ...From the Contents: As Eyes See Young Stars Assemle: Star and Planet Formation in the VLT Era...

45
by Moore, Patrick
Published 2010
Springer New York
Table of Contents: ...Eye on the Universe -- The Turbulent Sun -- Comet Crash -- The Search for Life Elsewhere -- Mapping...

46
by Coe, Steven
Published 2007
Springer London
Table of Contents: ... - Planetary Nebulae - Supernova Remnants - Extragalactic nebulae? PART 2- 3. Instruments - naked eye...

47
by Mobberley, Martin
Published 2009
Springer New York
... away, you can witness them using the naked eye, binoculars, or telescopes. The book covers cataclysmic...

48
by Inglis, Mike
Published 2013
Springer New York
... eye. It is organized by constellation and will enable practical observers to locate the approximate...

49
by Mobberley, Martin
Published 1999
Springer London
Table of Contents: ... -- Satellite Trails -- Medium-Format Cameras -- Fish-Eye Lenses -- Developing and Printing -- Developing Tanks...

50
by Kitchin, C. R., Forrest, Robert W.
Published 1998
Springer London
Table of Contents: ... Introduction -- 4.2 Naked-eye Work and Binoculars -- 4.3 The Moon through the Telescope -- 4.4 An Optimum...

51
by Karkoschka, Erich
Published 2007
Springer New York
... sky with unaided eyes, with binoculars, or with small telescopes, and also for those who just wish...

52
by Kelley, David H., Milone, Eugene F.
Published 2005
Springer New York
... and proceed to essential aspects of naked-eye astronomy, followed by an examination of specific cultures...

53
by Kamp, P.
Published 1986
Springer Netherlands
...If you want to understand the invisible, look careful at the visible. The Talmud A 'bird's eye...

54
by Ford, Dominic
Published 2014
Springer New York
...To the naked eye, the most evident defining feature of the planets is their motion across the night...

55
by Gangopadhyay, Gautam, Kundu, Anirban
Published 2024
Springer Nature Singapore
... of the neutrinos and the new eye to look at the universe, namely the gravitational waves. The book stops...

56
by Kronk, Gary W.
Published 2014
Springer New York
... eye, and have been the object of fascination throughout human history. In “Meteor Showers...

57
by Celletti, Alessandra, Perozzi, Ettore
Published 2007
Springer New York
... the intricate and perplexing behaviour of the planets. Sun and Moon. As naked eye astronomy became aided...

58
by Brekke, Pal
Published 2012
Springer New York
..., and is the source of all food, energy, and fossil fuels on Earth. For us humans, the Sun as seen with the naked eye...

59
by Norton, O. Richard, Chitwood, Lawrence
Published 2008
Springer London
... eye – along with the information in this book – to recognize them. Just as amateur astronomers...

60
by Seargent, David A.J.
Published 2011
Springer New York
... to the naked eye but still well known to telescope users for centuries. But what if you look up and see...