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                <text>Walter van Rensbergen</text>
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                <text>Wandeling door het zonnestelsel</text>
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                <text>&lt;dl&gt;&lt;dt&gt;
		Het zonnestelsel bestaat uit één zon, negen planeten, een zeventigtal manen, duizenden kleine planeten, miljoenen kometen, miljarden asteroïden.&lt;/dt&gt;
&lt;/dl&gt;&lt;p&gt;
	De wandeling begint aan de uiterste buitenkant van het zonnestelsel waar de Oortwolk een groot reservoir van langperiodieke kometen is. Geleidelijkaan schuif je naar de zon toe. Eerst passeer je buitenbeentje Pluto. Dààrna de Kuipergordel die bevolkt wordt door ijsdwergen en kortperiodieke kometen. Vervolgens ontmoet je de vier grote gasvormige planeten die allen veel manen en ringen bezitten. Vooraleer bij de vier kleine versteende planeten te belanden, moet je eerst nog de asteroïdengordel voorbij. Als je deze snelweg met kleine meteoriden en grote planetoïden veilig is overgestoken, beland je op een gegeven ogenblik op de kleine aarde waar de levensomstandigheden uitermate gunstig zijn. Er wordt op gewezen dat dit te wijten is aan een zeer broos evenwicht. Tenslotte kom je oog in oog met de zon. Onze ster die 99,85 % van alle massa van het zonnestelsel heeft opgeslokt en die de gunstige eigenschap bezit om gedurende 10 miljard jaar zonder onderbreking of verzwakking te stralen.&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text>How has the most celebrated scientific theory of our century held up under today's exacting scrutiny of planetary probes, radio astronomy, atomic clocks, and electronic super-computers? After eighty years, was Einstein right? Einstein's theory has proven crucial to our understanding of such recently discovered features of the cosmos as pulsars, quasars, black holes, and gravitational lenses. Clifford Will has written a lively and lucid chronicle of the triumph of one of the towering intellectual achievements of our century. This book is intended for general; students on courses in modern physics or relativity.</text>
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                <text>C. Mertens, W. De Brouwer</text>
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                <text>dit cursusboek maakt dfeel uit van een multimdiaal project van BRT-OPEN SCHOOL.</text>
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                <text>&lt;div class="Y3BBE"&gt;Het boek "&lt;strong class="Yjhzub"&gt;&lt;span class="T286Pc"&gt;&lt;span class="T286Pc"&gt;Wat was er voor de oerknal?&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;" van Govert Schilling behandelt enkele van de meest fundamentele en tot de verbeelding sprekende vragen over de kosmos en de oorsprong van het universum.De samenvatting (gebaseerd op het algemene thema van het boek en gerelateerde publicaties van de auteur) omvat doorgaans de volgende punten:&lt;br /&gt;&lt;strong class="Yjhzub"&gt;De Oerknaltheorie:&lt;/strong&gt; Het boek legt de theorie van de oerknal (Big Bang) uit als het algemeen aanvaarde wetenschappelijke model voor het ontstaan van ruimte, tijd en materie, zo'n 13,8 miljard jaar geleden.&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;span class="T286Pc"&gt;&lt;strong class="Yjhzub"&gt;Fundamentele Vragen:&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;Govert Schilling onderzoekt universele vragen waar iedereen mee worstelt, zoals:&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;span class="T286Pc"&gt;- Wat ging er precies aan de oerknal vooraf? Was er überhaupt iets, of was er "niks"?&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;span class="T286Pc"&gt;- Wat bevindt zich buiten het waarneembare heelal?&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;span class="T286Pc"&gt;- Wat is onze plaats in de uitgestrekte en wonderlijke kosmos?&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;span class="T286Pc"&gt;&lt;strong class="Yjhzub"&gt;Wetenschappelijke Inzichten:&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;De auteur bespreekt diverse theorieën en moderne wetenschappelijke inzichten uit de astronomie, kosmologie en (kwantum)fysica die proberen een antwoord te geven op deze diepzinnige vragen.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;span class="T286Pc"&gt;&lt;strong class="Yjhzub"&gt;Toegankelijke Uitleg:&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;Het boek staat bekend om de heldere en verhalende manier waarop Schilling, een gerenommeerd wetenschapsjournalist en sterrenkundige, complexe materie toegankelijk maakt voor een breed publiek.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span class="uJ19be notranslate"&gt;&lt;span class="vKEkVd"&gt; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/span&gt;Kortom, het boek neemt de lezer mee naar de grenzen van ons begrip van ruimte en tijd om de mysteries rond het begin van alles te verkennen.</text>
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                <text>Kunnen we ooit alles weten? Of zijn er onderzoeksgebieden die zich voor altijd buiten de grenzen van het menselijk verstand blijven bevinden? Hoe gaan we om met het idee dat we mogelijk nooit alles zullen begrijpen?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
De ware uitdaging voor een wetenschapper is niet om in een de veilige achtertuin van het bekende te blijven, maar om een ontdekkingsreis te maken in de wildernis van het onbekende. Dat doet Marcus du Sautoy in dit boek.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Er zijn bekende dingen die altijd onbekend zullen blijven. Du Sautoy noemt dit de 'randen' van de wetenschap, de horizon van wat we kunnen zien. Maar voor hij in dit boek die randen bereikt, laat hij het terrein zien dat wetenschappers al wel in kaart hebben gebracht, tot en met de laatste doorbraken.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Marcus du Sautoy is hoogleraar wiskunde én hoogleraar in The Public Understanding of Science van Oxford University. Hij is onder andere bekend als presentator van de BBC-series The Story of Maths en The Code. Eerder verscheen van hem bij Nieuwezijds Het symmetrie-monster.</text>
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	Mars has long been believed to have been cold, dead and dry for aeons, but there is now striking new proof that not only was Mars a relatively warm and wet place in geologically recent times, but that even today there are vast reserves of water frozen beneath the planet’s surface. As well as casting fascinating new insights into Mars’ past, this discovery is also forcing a complete rethink about the mechanisms of global planetary change and the possibility that there is microbial life on Mars.&lt;/p&gt;
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	Following the negative tests for biological activity by the Vikings, NASA – in the belief that Mars was once warm and wet, as the erosional features on the surface suggest – decided to ‘chase the water’ in the hope of establishing that conditions on Mars were once suitable for life, although this would not prove that life had developed. The targets selected (from many) were what seemed to be an outflow channel, a dry lake and a patch of minerals emplaced by hydrothermal activity. In 1997 Mars Pathfinder landed in an outflow channel where it released the small Sojourner rover to perform chemical analyses of nearby rocks. NASA followed up in 2004 with the much larger Mars Exploration Rovers, which were equipped to act as mobile field geologists. One was landed in what seemed to be a dried up lake bed inside a crater, and the other set down in an area that a remote-sensing orbital survey had identified as haematite, a likely indicator of hydrothermal activity. Both of these missions have yielded evidence that conditions were once conducive to the development of life.&lt;/p&gt;
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	In parallel with these NASA projects, the European Space Agency developed the Mars Express remote-sensing orbiter, which has detected traces of methane that may have been released by microbes. If microbial life is found on Mars, will it be based on DNA? Will this indicate that life developed independently? Or that it has characteristics in common with the most ancient forms of terrestrial life? If life is found on two planets in the same planetary system, this would favour the panspermia hypothesis. And if martian life is radically different, then in light of the discovery of planetary systems around other stars, this would, as remarked by Philip Morrison of MIT, "transform life from the status of a miracle to that of a statistic". These are all questions that the exploration of Mars for life are aimed to answer.&lt;/p&gt;
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		Growing evidence, based on observations from orbiters, landers and telescopes, indicates that Mars may still have numerous hidden water reservoirs. Moreover, from the point of view of habitability, Mars is a prime target for astrobiologists in search of extant or extinct microbial life because we know that life exists in earth?s permafrost regions, such as parts of Siberia and the Antarctic, which are the closest terrestrial analogues to Mars.&lt;/p&gt;
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	Wat is de oerknal? Waarom bestaat er een dag en een nacht? Wat is het verschil tussen planeten en sterren? Hoe is men ooit op de maan gekomen? Waarvoor dienen satellieten en wat is zwaartekracht? Ben je nieuwsgierig naar de antwoorden op deze en nog veel andere vragen? Sla dan snel dit boek open en ga mee op ontdekkingsreis door het fascinerende heelal. - Informatieve feiten om je over te verbazen - Leuke weetjes - Grappige stripverhalen - Interessante vragen om je kennis te toetsen.&lt;/div&gt;
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