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YOUR BOOK SUGGESTIONS
Sep 23, 2004 - Wow, thanks to everyone who sent in your lists of favorite books - 
many, many great suggestions. I'll keep this at my side as I put together an essential 
list of space and astronomy books, but I thought you'd all find the suggestions 
helpful as well. So, here's a reprint of just a few of the emails I received (I edited 
them down for length). If I've read the book, or have something to say, my comments 
are in red and bold. I've linked the books to Amazon.com so you can peruse further.

Thanks again, keep 'em coming!

Fraser Cain
Publisher
Universe Today

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EARLIEST STAR FORMING GALAXIES FOUND
Sep 23, 2004 - Astronomers have been studying the deepest optical view of the Universe 
- the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF) - and they think they've found some of the first 
star forming galaxies. These galaxies began forming 0.5 to 1 billion years after the 
Big Bang. The team analyzed the HUDF, and found dozens of red, dim dwarf galaxies, 
which appear to be the first basic galactic building blocks. These would merge with 
other galaxies to eventually form the complex spiral formations like our own Milky 
Way. The also found regions which were more dense than others, which supports the 
theory that dense regions of space where the first places galaxies formed.

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IT'S NOT A COMET, IT'S A PULSAR
Sep 23, 2004 - The Chandra X-Ray Observatory took this image of a pulsar surrounded by 
high-energy particles as it plows through interstellar space. The pulsar is hurtling 
to the left in this image at a speed of 2.1 million kph (1.3 million mph), and the 
particles are being blasted back like the tail on a comet. The pulsar is known as "The 
Mouse", aka G359.23-0.82, and it was discovered in 1987 by radio astronomers using the 
Very Large Array in New Mexico. Because it's moving so quickly and interacting so 
visibly with its environment, astronomers have a unique opportunity to understand 
pulsar magnetic fields, and how they eject material.

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