Bonnie J BurattiWorlds Fantastic, Worlds Familiar
A Guided Tour of the Solar System
Bonnie J. Buratti is a Senior Research Scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology. With expertise on icy moons, comets and asteroids, she holds degrees from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Cornell University, New York. She is currently serving on the Cassini and New Horizons science teams, and is the US Project Scientist for Rosetta. She is a past Chair of the Division of Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society, and advises NASA. The author of over 200 scientific papers, Buratti was awarded the NASA Exceptional Achievement Medal and the International Astronomical Union named asteroid 90502 'Buratti' in recognition of her work.
Introduction
1. Mercury: the hottest little place
2. Venus: an even hotter place
3. Mars: the abode of life?
4. Asteroids and comets: sweat the small stuff
5. Galileo's treasures: worlds of fire and ice
6. Enceladus: an active iceball in space
7. Titan: an Earth in deep freeze?
8. Iapetus and its friends: the weirdest 'planets' in the Solar System
9. Pluto: the first view of the 'third zone'
10. Earths above: the search for exoplanets and life in the universe
Epilogue
Glossary
Acknowledgements
Index.