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17 Works 243 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Chris Kitchin is Emeritus Professor of Astronomy at the University of Hertfordshire in England, where for many years he was Director of the Observatory and Head of Physics and Astronomy.

Includes the names: C. R. Kitchin, Christopher R. Kitchin

Also includes: Kitchin (1)

Works by Chris Kitchin

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Common Knowledge

Legal name
Kitchin, Christopher Robert
Other names
Kitchin, C. R.
Kitchin, Christopher R.
Birthdate
1947-04-07
Gender
male
Nationality
UK
Occupations
astronomer
Organizations
Hatfield Polytechnic Observatory
University of Hertfordshire
BBC
Short biography
Chris Kitchin has written or contributed to over two dozen books, and has published more than 500 articles in the astronomical journals and magazines. He also appears regularly on television, including many appearances on BBC TV’s Sky at Night. His works for Springer includes, A Photo Guide to the Constellations: A Self-Teaching Guide to Finding Your Way Around the Heavens (1997), Solar Observing Techniques (2001), Illustrated Dictionary of Practical Astronomy (2002), and most recently Galaxies in Turmoil (2007). In his ‘day job’ Chris is Emeritus Professor of Astronomy at the University of Hertfordshire, where until ten years ago he was also Head of Physics and Astronomy, and Director of the University Observatory. Like many other astronomers Chris’s interest in the subject started early. At the age of fourteen, he constructed an 8-inch Newtonian after spending hundreds of hours grinding and polishing the main mirror from scratch. Despite using some of the largest telescopes in the world since then, Chris still enjoys just ‘gazing at the heavens’ - though nowadays it’s through a Zeiss Maksutov telescope. [from page xi of Exoplanets]

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Reviews

As a reference book, this is easily 5 stars. Like the maniac I am, however, I decided to read it straight through, and it has been a slog ... because this is dry stuff. Arid. Arrid Extra Dry.

That's probably the way it should be, so I really have no right to dock it a whole star. So I upgraded: 1/2 star. :)

I thought about finishing it and selling it, but seriously -- the volume of useful info here is staggering. What's that? You want to do some spectroscopic work? What kind of spectroscope? It's all here. The book is updated on a regular basis, so new technologies will be found only in the latest edition (which this is not -- this edition dates to 2008, which in tech terms is a really long time).… (more)
½
 
Flagged
tungsten_peerts | Feb 18, 2016 |
These days, any book on this subject is bound to be considerably outdated by the time it is published (since the number of known extrasolar planets is exponentially exploding -- see http://exoplanet.eu/), and the writing of this one ended in early 2011. But it is very professionally written and handsomely produced, with technical appendices and many color images. (The text should have undergone more or better copy-editing, however.)… (more)
 
Flagged
fpagan | Feb 22, 2014 |

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Works
17
Members
243
Popularity
#93,557
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
2
ISBNs
53

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