On 5 March 1979, Voyager I snapped the Pele volcano erupting
on Io, Jupiter's fifth satellite. This is one of nearly 300 stunning
pictures in Beyond, a collection of images beamed back from space
over the past 40 years. The photographs come from early pioneers
such as the Mariner missions of the 1960s as well as high-tech
ventures like SOHO, which is still operating today. They capture
everything from rippling sand dunes defrosting in the Martian
spring to dumpy little asteroids like Eros, which was so carefully
scrutinised by the NEAR spacecraft in 2000. A serene image from
Voyager of the crescent of Neptune with its moon Triton in tow
is one of the best and rightly appears on the book's cover. Contrast
that with furious ultraviolet eruptions on the sun and violent
volcanoes on Jupiter's spotty moon, Io. It is baffling to think
that nature has built these diverse worlds from the same huge,
bland cloud of gas and dust.
The print quality of the book is excellent, and it is refreshingly
light on text, allowing the images to speak for themselves. Beyond
is a breathtaking reminder that our solar system is a beautiful
and strangely disturbing place.
--Hazel Muir, New Scientist (UK), December 2003
[http://www.newscientist.com/]
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