
Peter Bond
Author of DK Guide to Space
About the Author
Peter Bond is an expert on astronomy, space exploration, and planet Earth. A fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society and the British Interplanetary Society, he has written hundreds of articles and over 10 books on exploration of the solar system. He served as a press officer for the Royal show more Astronomical Society from 1995-2007 and as a consultant and writer for the European Space Agency. show less
Works by Peter Bond
The Continuing Story of The International Space Station (Springer Praxis Books / Space Exploration) (2002) 6 copies, 1 review
Guide til rummet 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
Physically, this is a very large book, which would be best for laying on your belly on the library floor, browsing through it. It contains full color photographs with identifying captions for every concept within the book. It begins with the smallest element in the universe, man looking at stars, then moves on to our solar system, and then beyond. This book provides comparison photos, maps, diagrams, and photos from space, and the large format means that each one is highly detailed. The show more descriptions and definitions are also detailed, providing a lot of information. Besides space travel and our solar system, this book contains information on other space objects like comets, asteroids, and black holes.
This book is extremely comprehensive. Kids will get a lot of information, but the language is not full of a lot of jargon, and the specialized language that is used is explained in detail. I like that it shows kids how vast the universe really is, and includes some breathtaking photos of the birth and death of stars. This is a great introduction to instruction about space, as it gives definitions and details about everything from instruments used to study space to types of spacecraft to different planets and their features. Again, each of these subjects comes with a lot of photographs so that students know exactly what they are reading about. This would be an awesome addition to any library!
For ages 8 and up. show less
This book is extremely comprehensive. Kids will get a lot of information, but the language is not full of a lot of jargon, and the specialized language that is used is explained in detail. I like that it shows kids how vast the universe really is, and includes some breathtaking photos of the birth and death of stars. This is a great introduction to instruction about space, as it gives definitions and details about everything from instruments used to study space to types of spacecraft to different planets and their features. Again, each of these subjects comes with a lot of photographs so that students know exactly what they are reading about. This would be an awesome addition to any library!
For ages 8 and up. show less
The Continuing Story of The International Space Station (Springer Praxis Books) (2002) by Peter Bond
Peter Bond describes the development and evolution of space stations, with particular emphasis on the International Space Station, beginning with the revolution that began in 1970, when Salyut 1, the world's first space station was sent into orbit by the Soviet Union. Defeated in the race to the Moon, the Soviets redirected their efforts towards the conquest of near-Earth space. In the next three decades, their increasingly large and sophisticated structures rewrote the history books as show more cosmonauts continued to push back all space endurance records. Only the U.S. Skylab, a technological cul-de-sac based on surplus Apollo hardware, interrupted this era of Soviet domination. By the mid-1990's, Russian physician Valeri Poliakov had lived continuously for 14 months on board the Mir space sta... show less
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 28
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 394
- Popularity
- #61,533
- Rating
- 4.7
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 46
- Languages
- 6
















