Under Alien Skies
Philip Plait
W.W. Norton & Co., $30
Why is the sky blue? I remember asking my parents that question as a kid. When the sun’s rays hit the blanket of air that encircles the Earth, they told me, blue light scatters more than other colors. Despite my fascination with the cosmos, I never thought to ask what the sky would look like on other worlds.
Luckily, astronomer and science writer Philip Plait has. His new book, Under Alien Skies, is a bewitching cosmic ride through the solar system and beyond, transporting readers aboard futuristic starships to discover what the sky might look like above faraway landscapes.
Plait is the perfect captain on this expedition, vividly bringing these alien worlds to life while deftly weaving in the science to support the scenery. He even includes explanations of the space suits you’d need to stand and gaze at the skies on the moon, Mars, Pluto and other orbs.
In some cases, it’s not too hard to imagine the views. Thanks to rovers, we’ve seen actual images of Mars’ sky (SN: 8/13/22, p. 20). It’s typically the color of rust, because the Red Planet’s atmosphere is chock-full of dust that tends to scatter red light the most. Pluto’s sky is vastly different. It’s so far away from the sun that, even at midday, the sky is utterly black and the stars are visible.
Contrary to what some articles on the internet say, the sun would not look like any other star in the sky. Standing on Pluto, the sun would appear one-fiftieth its size from Earth’s viewpoint. But it would blaze as a “painfully bright” dot, Plait writes, about 160 times as bright as the moon looks to us, and it would have a faint, deep-blue halo because Pluto’s thin air scatters short, blue wavelengths of light.
One of my favorite stops on Plait’s tour is the comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, a two-lobed object shaped like a big rubber ducky. He lands readers on the larger lobe. Looking up toward the sky means…
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