"Paul Preuss - Venus Prime 4 - The Medusa Encounter" - читать интересную книгу автора (Preuss Paul) ARTHUR C. CLARKEтАЩS VENUS PRIME, VOLUME 4
Introduction by ARTHUR C. CLARKE O ne of the advantages of living on the Equator (well, only 800 kilometers from it) is that the Moon and planets pass vertically overhead, allowing one to see them with a clarity never possible in higher latitudes. This has prompted me to acquire a succession of ever-larger telescopes during the past forty years, beginning with the classic 3 1/2-inch Questar, then an 8-inch, and finally a 14-inch, Celestron. (Sorry about the obsolete units, but we seem stuck with them for small telescopes-even though centimeters make them sound much more impressive.) The Moon, with its incomparable and ever-changing scenery, is my favorite subject, and I never tire of showing it to unsuspecting visitors. As the 14-inch is fitted with a binocular eyepiece, they feel they are looking through the window of a spaceship, and not peering through the restricted field of a single lens. The difference has to be experienced to be appreciated, and invariably invokes a gasp of amazement. After the Moon, Saturn and Jupiter compete for second place as celestial attractions. Thanks to its glorious rings, Saturn is breathtaking and unique-but thereтАЩs little else to be seen, as the planet itself is The considerably larger disc of Jupiter is much more interesting; it usually displays prominent cloud belts lying parallel to the equator, and so many fugitive details that one could spend a lifetime trying to elucidate them. Indeed, men have done just this: for more than a century, Jupiter has been a happy hunting ground for armies of devoted amateur astronomers.* * I feel a particular sympathy for one of them, the British engineer P.B. Molesworth (1867-1908). Some years ago, I visited the relics of his observatory at Trincomalee, on the east coast of Sri Lanka. Despite his early death, MolesworthтАЩs spare-time astronomical work was so outstanding that his name has now been given to a splendid crater on Mars, 175 kilometers across. Yet no view through the telescope can do justice to a planet with more than a hundred times the surface area of our world. To imagine a somewhat farfetched тАЬthought experiment,тАЭ if one skinned the Earth and pinned its pelt like a trophy on the side of Jupiter, it would look about as large as India on a terrestrial globe. That subcontinent is no small piece of real estate; yet Jupiter is to Earth as Earth is to India. . . . file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/harry/Bureau...us%20Prime%204%20-%20The%20Medusa%20Encounter.html (1 of 200)23-12-2006 18:59:47 ARTHUR C. CLARKEтАЩS VENUS PRIME, VOLUME 4 Unfortunately for would-be colonists, even if they were prepared to tolerate the local two-and-a-half gravities, Jupiter has no solid surfaceтАФor even a liquid one. ItтАЩs all weather, at least for the first few thousand kilometers down toward the distant central core. (For details of which, see 2061: Odyssey |
|
|