Looking up An illustrated guide to telescopes

Jacob Kramer, 1984-

Book - 2021

Looking Up is a celebration of telescopes - their shapes, sizes, and the science they enable. Open your eyes to the wonder of the skies. All over the world, people have built fantastic structures for looking up into the sky. These telescopes are not just scientific instruments -- they are monuments to curiosity and collaboration. In this book readers are introduced to the amazing spectrum of light, and the diverse shapes and methods used to study it.

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Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Instructional and educational works
Illustrated works
Published
London ; New York : Flying Eye Books 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Jacob Kramer, 1984- (author)
Other Authors
Stephanie F. Scholz, 1983- (illustrator)
Edition
First American edition
Item Description
Subtitle from cover.
Map on front lining papers.
Physical Description
54 pages : color illustrations, color map ; 32 cm
Audience
Ages 7-10.
Grades 2-5.
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9781912497683
  • Looking up
  • Sight
  • Lenses
  • The first telescope
  • Near and far, dim and bright
  • Reflecting and collecting
  • The Keck Observatory
  • Large distances
  • Invisible colors
  • Vista
  • James Webb Space Telescope
  • Invisible water light
  • Alma
  • Radio light
  • Giant dishes
  • Stretched colors
  • A hum in a horn
  • The longest light from long ago
  • A picture of nothing
  • Hubble Space Telescope
  • X-ray eyes
  • Gamma ray eyes
  • Little eyes.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A portrait gallery of telescopes large and small, earthbound or in space, both currently at work and planned for the near future. Kramer uses simple language and restrained, matter-of-fact tones that accentuate the wonder of what telescopes have revealed and are revealing about our universe. He begins by explaining that telescopes actually "look back in time" and are designed by and for people who "want to look at things that are farther than mountains, and see more colors than human eyes can see." The book goes on to describe the astronomical processes that produce each of those "colors," from infrared to gamma rays, and what they can tell us. Tech-minded readers will also learn how instruments from Galileo's simple tube to the specialized likes of NASA's Chandra space telescope work. Using a serigraphic style, Scholz mixes sweeping, starry vistas lit by grand images of planets, black holes, and other sky phenomena with big, blocky views of each type of telescope--all mingled with helpful diagrams, earthly flora and fauna, and groups of human sky watchers diverse in age and race. Though the recent collapse of the giant Arecibo radio telescope renders the admiring nod it receives here poignantly moot, young readers will come away with a basic understanding of how different sorts of telescopes enhance what the naked eye can tell us about the nature of the cosmic light show overhead. An eye-opening--and eye-widening--overview, memorably illustrated. (index) (Informational picture book. 7-10) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.