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Author Belbruno, Edward, 1951-

Title Fly me to the moon : an insider's guide to the new science of space travel / Edward Belbruno.

Publication Info. Princeton : Princeton University Press, 2013.

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Location Call No. Status
 Rocky Hill - Downloadable Materials  EBSCO Ebook    Downloadable
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Description 1 online resource (171 pages)
Contents Cover; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgments; Chapter 1 A Moment of Discovery; Chapter 2 An Uncertain Start; Chapter 3 Conventional Way to the Moon; A Fuel Hog; Chapter 4 A Question; Chapter 5 Chaos and Surfing the Gravitational Field; What Is Chaos?; Chapter 6 Using Art to Find Chaotic Regions; An Oil Painting Unveiling Dynamical Processes; Chapter 7 WSB-A Chaotic No-Man's-Land; Chapter 8 Getting to the WSB-Low Energy Transfers; Chapter 9 Rescue of a Lunar Mission; Skepticism, Politics, and a Bittersweet Success; Chapter 10 Significance of Hiten.
Chapter 11 Salvage of HGS-1, and a Christmas PresentChapter 12 Other Space Missions and Low Energy Transfers; LGAS Reincarnated: SMART 1; Europa Orbiter and Prometheus; A Lunar Transportation System; Chapter 13 Hopping Comets and Earth Collision; Potential Earth Collision; Lexell; Jupiter-Hopping Earth-Crossing Comets Present a Danger; Kuiper Belt Objects and Neptune Hopping; Ballistic Escape from the Earth-Moon System, and Asteroid Capture; Chapter 14 The Creation of the Moon by Another World; Chapter 15 Beyond the Moon and to the Stars; Pluto to Alpha Centauri.
Comets Moving between the Sun and Alpha CentauriChapter 16 A Paradigm Shift and the Future; Bibliography; Index.
Summary When a leaf falls on a windy day, it drifts and tumbles, tossed every which way on the breeze. This is chaos in action. In Fly Me to the Moon, Edward Belbruno shows how to harness the same principle for low-fuel space travel--or, as he puts it, ""surfing the gravitational field."" Belbruno devised one of the most exciting concepts now being used in space flight, that of swinging through the cosmos on the subtle fluctuations of the planets' gravitational pulls. His idea was met with skepticism until 1991, when he used it to get a stray Japanese satellite back on course to the Mo.
Note Print version record.
Subject Gravity assist (Astrodynamics) -- Popular works.
Celestial mechanics -- Popular works.
Chaotic behavior in systems -- Popular works.
Many-body problem -- Popular works.
Outer space -- Exploration -- Popular works.
Celestial mechanics -- Popular works.
Chaotic behavior in systems -- Popular works.
Gravity assist (Astrodynamics) -- Popular works.
Many-body problem -- Popular works.
Outer space -- Exploration -- Popular works.
SCIENCE -- Chaotic Behavior in Systems.
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING -- Engineering (General)
Celestial mechanics. (OCoLC)fst00850133
Chaotic behavior in systems. (OCoLC)fst00852171
Exploration of outer space. (OCoLC)fst01353078
Gravity assist (Astrodynamics) (OCoLC)fst01740132
Many-body problem. (OCoLC)fst01008543
Outer space. (OCoLC)fst01243437
Genre/Form Popular works. (OCoLC)fst01423846
Electronic books.
Other Form: Print version: Belbruno, Edward. Fly Me to the Moon : An Insider's Guide to the New Science of Space Travel. Princeton : Princeton University Press, ©2013 9780691128221
ISBN 9781400849192 (electronic bk.)
1400849195 (electronic bk.)
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