From: FieldScott@a...
Date: Mon, 21 Oct 1996 12:53:16 -0400
Subject: Another Book Review: The Starflight Handbook
Here's the other book I mentioned that I thought some people might find interesting: "The Starflight Handbook: A Pioneer's Guide to Interstellar Travel" by Eugene F. Mallove and Gregory L. Matloff, published 1989 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN: 0-471-61912-4 I bought this book just before my last big move, and never got to read it. I'm doing so now, and really finding it informative. It's basically a one-volume survey of possible technologies for interstellar travel. The book is written for non-scientists; most of the technical data is in sidebars, to be skipped or studied as you prefer. (If you skip the sidebars, then the only math you need is being able to read scientific notation -- and there's a refresher course on powers of ten in an appendix for those who have forgotten even that!) The bulk of the book focuses on possible propulsion systems, including various types of rockets, nuclear pulse, beamed energy, solar sails, fusion ramjets, ion scoops and others. It also discusses nearby star systems, navigation, scientific payloads, suspended animation and the like. I suspect a lot of hard-science types might find this book pretty elementary, but for "poets & lovers" like me, it's a great overview of what possible technologies exist today.