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Captain Jonathan Hogart's first mission to Frequency One seems to be going well. New crew, new flash ship, and a new race of aliens to make first contact with. But the binary suns start affecting his team in strange ways, the friendly aliens turn out to be not so friendly, and now he finds himself glued to the ground awaiting possible separation if he doesn't hand over flash relocation technology. As the sticky situation gets more and more complicated, and the mushroom bugs reveal further surprises, the alien crew discover that it's not only planet brown and purple that they have to worry about. There is a much greater threat towards the center of the star system. One that none of them would ever have suspected. -- Stellar Flash: Alien Frequency is the first in a series of complete sci fi stories set predominantly in Frequency One. This is a fully contained adventure. Approximately 50,000 words. About the Stellar Flash series The science fiction and fantasy series follows the adventures of Captain Jonathan Hogart and his team of aliens as they travel to new frequencies and new planets in their interfrequency exploration ship, the Stellar Flash.
Describes how stars respond to microscopic physics in the advanced stages of their evolution with many numerical examples and illustrations.
Time travelling 2.5 million years into the Andromeda Galaxy's past to investigate why there's a record of them having been there, the Stellar Flash's alien crew's first contact is with a creature so powerful that it has taken control of the entire galaxy by thought alone. With most of the crew unconscious, and the ship's A.I. offline, Captain Jonathan Hogart is in a race against time to defeat the plant-planet, save the galaxy, and find a way to return to 2133. If the Floran space military don't get in the way. But another force is attempting to take control, to use the power of the creature from the past to take over the Milky Way Galaxy in the present. And, for this, Hogart has no defense. How is the creature controlling an entire galaxy? Who has the technology to transmit this power to the present? And will the Stellar Flash crew and the Space Station team be able to save both galaxies from the alien threat?
In the last throes of their lives, how do low- and high-mass stars interact with their immediate surroundings? How does the circumstellar medium affect the shape of a nebula? How are supernovae effected by a dense medium? And what do we understand of how stellar winds interact with their environments? These and many other exciting issues are addressed in these proceedings, from the 34th Herstmonceux conference, held in Cambridge. Highlights of developments in the field covered in this volume include the latest observational results that show how various types of stellar ejecta differ in shape, and a unified view of the physical processes involved; as well as the latest results on the media around supernovae 1987A and 1993J. This timely volume provides review articles that serve both as an excellent introduction for graduate students, and a handy reference for researchers; and up-to-date research papers for those who want to keep abreast of developments in the field.
"A review of astronomy" (varies).
This book explores why dust forms around stars, and how to model stellar dust formation and dust-forming environments consistently.
The most detailed guide to observing the deep sky in one volume, now available in paperback.
In Origins of Life Volume II, life and its origin are inspected from traditional and unexpected points of view. The book takes an interdisciplinary approach, discussing astrobiology; chemical evolution; and how the Universe accommodates life, molecular biology, and philosophy. It is an open-minded approach, fully referenced throughout, and each chapter includes a further reading section for anyone wishing to learn more about that perspective on the origins of life. First, everything started, with the Big Bang, from nothing. It appears now that everything was aiming toward our existence, some 13.75 × 109 years later, being capable of understanding it all. We did it using powerful tools: science, philosophy, and religion. Although we appreciate the contributions made by philosophy and religion, our contemplations and doubts are based on the plentiful scientific evidence provided. The reader will be guided from make-up of the "life stage" (Universe), tools and materials needed for the living matter to be formed in the small part of the Universe, which one could call Human Neighborhood, or the Local Universe. It contains galaxies, galaxy clusters, and voids, and the Milky Way and its satellites influencing each other during this time span. The book is easy to read, accompanied by numerous references; it could be of use to the expert in the field as well as for curious minds with a scientific, philosophical, or religious background.