Almost everyone has heard about astronomy though they might not understand it, and almost everyone knows about meteorology even if they cannot spell it. This book is all about the bit in between. Primarily an introductory textbook for students with a background of basic classical physics, it endeavours to describe and explain the phenomena of the terrestrial outer atmosphere and the regions of ‘space’ nearest to the Earth.
As practitioners will know, this is not a part of the environment that is well known to the general public. The performance of the communications media when attempting to discuss an aurora, or describe the ionosphere, or report the effects of a magnetic storm, is ample testimony to that. Yet, while our subject is a branch of physics and also a branch of geophysics, it may properly be included amongst the environmental sciences as well. Though in the main an academic subject, it is also one which impinges on practical effects of the environment – for instance, communications technology and space activities.
The present book is a sequel to The Upper Atmosphere and Solar–Terrestrial Relations, which Van Nostrand Reinhold Co. Ltd. published in 1979. I would have liked to get away with merely inserting necessary corrections to the original text, but, unfortunately for me, the science of the upper atmosphere and near space has moved on apace. So I have had to add a good deal of new material, and the whole book has, in fact, been recast – though some of the original matter has been retained (with Van Nostrand Reinhold's kind permission) where it seemed appropriate.
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