Guinness World Records - Softcover

 
9780440423102: Guinness World Records

Inhaltsangabe

From the (new) shortest man to the longest fingernails, from the smallest bird to the largest gathering of Smurfs—if a world record has been created or surpassed, it’s here!

Guinness World Records™ 2011 gathers the most amazing, inspiring, and wild record breakers yet. Filled with don’t-try-this-at-home human achievements, natural and technological wonders, incredible feats in sports and entertainment, and much more, this fully updated edition introduces thrilling new records and incredible facts that will fascinate young and old alike. Did you know . . .

• The most tattooed senior citizen is Tom Leppard (U.K.), who at seventy-four years of age has 99.9 percent of his body covered?
• Afghanistan now shares with Iraq the record as the most land-mined country in the world, with an estimated total of ten million mines each?
• The big-eared fennec fox has a novel way of cooling down in its Saharan home? When the temperature reaches 100 degrees Fahrenheit, the fox loses heat by panting at a rapid rate of 690 breaths per minute.

And that’s just a hint of what you’ll find inside this addictive book, including new photos and spreads on TV’s diamond anniversary (75 years of record-breaking shows), pop culture (including 3-D films), and Mr. World Record Breaker Ashrita Furman—plus fun quiz questions that will put your skills to the test.

Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.

Auszug. © Genehmigter Nachdruck. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Chapter 1

space

contents

A sense of scale 3

Saturn 7

FEATURE: Space shuttles 11

The Sun 15



a sense of scale

Largest spiral galaxy Discovered in 1986, from photographs taken by the Anglo-Australian astronomer David Malin, and later named after him, Malin 1 is a spiral galaxy some 1.1 billion light-years away. In terms of its diameter, it is the largest known spiral galaxy in the Universe, measuring around 650,000 light-years across-several times the size of our Milky Way, which has a diameter of around 100,000 light-years. Malin 1 contains some 50 billion suns' worth of free- floating hydrogen.

Largest globular cluster Omega Centauri, in the southern constellation of Centaurus, is the most massive of the roughly 140 globular clusters surrounding our galaxy. Consisting of several million stars with a combined mass equivalent to 5 million suns, it is visible to the naked eye as a hazy star. However big this might seem, it would still take around a thousand Omega Centauris to equal just one spiral galaxy such as the galaxy in which we live, the Milky Way.

Largest star Due to the physical difficulties in directly measuring the size of a distant star, not all astronomers agree on the largest star, but the most likely candidate is VY Canis Majoris, a red supergiant some 5,000 light-years away. Estimates of its size give it a diameter of between 1.55 and 1.86 billion miles (2.5-3 billion km). If placed at the center of the Solar System, its outer surface would reach beyond the orbit of Jupiter.

Largest star with a planet In January 2003 astronomers announced their discovery of a planet orbiting the orange giant star HD 47536. This star is expanding at the end of its life and currently measures around 20.5 million miles (33 million km, or 23 times the size of the Sun) across. The planet is some 186 million miles (300 million km) from its star but will eventually be consumed in a few tens of millions of years as the star continues to expand into a red giant.

ILargest extrasolar planet Discovered in 2006, TrES-4 is an extra solar planet some 1,400 light-years away, orbiting its parent star GSC 02620-006648 once every 3.5 days. It was discovered using the transit method, where the planet eclipses its star during its short orbit as seen from Earth. With a diameter of around 150,000 miles (240,000 km), it is some 1.7 times the size of Jupiter.

Largest dwarf planet The icy world Eris was discovered in January 2005. It has a highly elliptical orbit, with its distance from the Sun ranging from between 3.4 and 9.07 billion miles (5.6 and 14.6 billion km), and a diameter of around 1,490 miles (2,400 km). Before the reclassification of Pluto as a dwarf planet, Eris was regarded by many as the tenth planet of the Solar System. Eris has a small moon, Dysnomia, around 217 miles (350 km) across.

Largest Kuiper Belt Object The Kuiper Belt is the cloud of frozen gases and debris at the edges of our Solar System around 55 AU (5 billion miles; 8.1 billion km) from the Sun. The Kuiper Belt object 50000 Quaoar measures around 800 miles (1,300 km) across and was discovered by Chad Trujillo and Mike Brown (both U.S.A.) at Caltech, Pasadena, California, U.S.A., on June 4, 2002. The object, originally dubbed 2002 LM60, is named after a creation god of the Tongva tribe- the original inhabitants of the Los Angeles area. It orbits the Sun at a distance of around 4 billion miles (6 billion km) and has an orbital period of 288 years.

Largest asteroid in the asteroid belt Among all the objects in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, Ceres is the largest, with an average diameter of 584.7 miles (941 km). Discovered by Giuseppe Piazzi in Palermo, Sicily, on January 1, 1801, Ceres is large enough to have an almost spherical shape. It is classified as the smallest dwarf planet and is due to be visited by NASA's Dawn probe in 2015.

HLargest asteroid visited by spacecraft First discovered in 1885, 253 Mathilde, like Ceres, is found in the Asteroid Belt. It measures 41 x 29 x 28 miles (66 x 48 x 46 km) and became the third and largest asteroid to be encountered by a spacecraft in June 1997, when NASA's NEAR Shoemaker spacecraft passed it.

saturn

Least round planet A combination of its low density (less than water) and rapid rotation (10.6 hours) gives Saturn the most oblate shape among the planets. Its equatorial diameter is 74,897.5 miles (120,536 km) while its polar diameter is just 67,560 miles (108,728 km).

HLongest-lasting lightning storm A lightning storm in Saturn's upper atmosphere raged for more than eight months in 2009. Monitored by the Cassini spacecraft, the storm, with a diameter of several thousand miles, caused lightning flashes in Saturn's atmosphere around 10,000 times the intensity of their terrestrial counterparts.

HLargest eruptive ice plumes Active cryovolcanism on Enceladus, Saturn's sixth-largest moon, had been predicted by scientists ever since the encounters by the two Voyager spacecraft in the early 1980s had revealed the geologically young surface of this icy moon. In 2005, observations from the Cassini spacecraft showed immense plumes of water ice above the moon's south pole. They are formed by the eruption of pressurized water reservoirs beneath the ice, forced to the surface by volcanic activity. They are at least as tall as the moon's 313-mile (505-km) diameter.

HClosest moon to Saturn Discovered in July 2009 using observations from the Cassini spacecraft, S/2009 S 1 is a tiny moon just 985 ft. (300 m) across that orbits Saturn at a distance of just 35,251 miles (56,732 km), less than the radius of the planet. It orbits within the outer B Ring and was discovered using the shadow it cast across the rings themselves.

HOutermost discrete ring The most outwardly discrete ring, as opposed to a diffuse dust disk, is the contorted F Ring, with an orbital radius of 87,600 miles (141,000 km). It lies some 2,500 miles (4,000 km) beyond the edge of the main ring system and is probably the most dynamically active ring in the Solar System. Just a few hundred miles wide, the F Ring is thin and held in place by two shepherd moons, Pandora and Prometheus, whose gravitational interactions with the ring particles produce twisted knots within the ring that can change appearance in just a few hours.

Tallest ridge in the Solar System Observations of Saturn's moon Iapetus by the NASA/ESA spacecraft Cassini-Huygens on December 31, 2004, revealed a ridge at least 800 miles (1,300 km) long, reaching an altitude of around 12 miles (20 km) above the surface. Iapetus is just 890 miles (1,400 km) across.

Largest chaotically rotating object Saturn's moon Hyperion measures 254 x 161 x 136 miles (410 x 260 x 220 km) and is the largest highly irregularly shaped body in the Solar System. It is one of only two bodies in the Solar System discovered to have completely chaotic rotation, tumbling in its orbit around Saturn. The other is asteroid 4179 Toutatis, measuring 2.7 x 1.5 x 1.1 miles (4.5 x 2.4 x 1.9 km).

Closest moons to each other Janus and Epimetheus share the same average orbit some 56,500 miles (91,000 km) above Saturn. As their orbital paths are only 31 miles (50 km) apart, one of the moons is always catching the other up. Every four years they come within 6,200 miles (10,000 km) of each other and swap orbits, before drifting apart again.

Satellite with the thickest atmosphere Saturn's large moon Titan has the thickest atmosphere of any moon in the Solar System, exerting a surface pressure of 1.44 bar. It consists mainly of nitrogen gas and is the most similar atmosphere to our own in the Solar System.

space shuttles

The Space Shuttle-or, more accurately, the Shuttle Transportation System (STS)-made its first test flights in 1981, and orbital missions began the following year....

„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.