The Huygens craft, released by Cassini, parachuted through the clouds of Saturn's largest moon, Titan, in January 2005. David Harland tells the exciting story of the this craft's journey to the surface of one of the most enigmatic bodies on the Solar System, the only moon to have a dense atmosphere and possibly lakes of liquid gas at -190ºC on its surface. Titan is considered to be an early Earth in deep freeze, possibly with the building blocks of life in its atmosphere. There will undoubtedly be enormous interest in the first results and images of Titan's surface, and this book is the first incisive summary of this groundbreaking material.
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"Noted space historian Harland has updated his book, Mission to Saturn ... writing a fascinating, detailed, and well-developed history of Saturn ... . Written for the intelligent layperson, there is a wealth of detail about the mission, presented in text and extensive sets of figures and photographs, including 16 in spectacular color. There is a 15-page index, four pages of suggested reading, eight pages of facts and figures, two pages of acronyms and 28 pages of notes. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels of readers." (W. E. Howard, Choice, Vol. 45 (1), 2007)
"Cassini at Saturn is essentially a revised version of Harland's earlier book of the same name written before Cassini actually got to Saturn ... . As a reference book it is highly detailed ... . The book has plenty of black and white illustrations ... . As a reference, this book is very useful." (Keith Cooper, Astronomy Now, December, 2007)
"This work is essentially a new, enlarged edition of Harland's earlier book on Cassini, Mission to Saturn ... . this present volume includes a selection of colour images, including spectacular views of Titan from the Huygens probe. This book is an excellent primer on Saturn and the history of humanity's fascination with this spectacular world. It's also a very thorough account of the Cassini mission to date - and the mission is far from over." (David Maclennan, Liftoff, Issue 242, 2007)
"Data from Cassini-Huygens will be analysed and interpreted for years to come - the wait for the definitive results will be a long one, so David Harland has decided to jump right in - and it was a good decision! His book is meticulously researched ... . an excellent and thorough treatment which I am sure I'll use as a reference for a long time to come. It's a 'must' for planetary and space scientists and is even quite reasonably priced!" (John Zarnecki, The Observatory, Vol. 128 (1203), 2008)