“The Pioneer Detectives” by Konstantin Kakaes

Konstantin Kakaes announces a new book about the Pioneer Anomaly and the investigation into its cause:

The Pioneer Detectives

I’ve just published a short book. I’m very excited about it, and wanted to share the news with you.

The Pioneer Detectives is on sale now on amazon.com for a mere $2.99, less than a cup of fancy coffee. It’s also out in Britain for just £2 (and a half-shilling).

The book is short and fun—the length of a novella—but also, in the words of Amazon’s reviewer, “powerful and sad”. If you’ve got any curiosity about how NASA works behind the scenes or why scientists believe what they do, I think you’ll enjoy the book. Many others already are—I’m happy to say it’s the #1 best-selling Kindle Single in “The Sciences” and the #2 best-selling astronomy book on Amazon.

The book tells the story of the “Pioneer Anomaly”—a force slowing down the spacecraft Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11 while they left the solar system as humanity’s first emissaries into the galaxy. I hope you’ll forgive the mass e-mail, both if it’s been quite a while since we’ve talked, and if we’ve been in touch recently and you’re already aware of the book.

A new resource guide for exoplanets

Prof. Andrew Fraknoi of the Foothill College Astronomy Department sends this announcement about a new resource guide for the study of exoplanets:

A new annotated guide to written, web, and audio-visual resources for teaching about planets orbiting other stars is now available.  Materials in the guide to this rapidly-changing branch of astronomy include video and audio files of lectures and interviews with leading scientists in the field, phone and tablet apps, a citizen-science web site, popular-level books and articles, and more.

Published by the NASA Astrophysics Education and Outreach Forum and the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, the guide can be found as a PDF file at:

http://www.astrosociety.org/education/astronomy-resource-guides/the-search-for-planets-around-other-stars/