Recommendations for a basic Astronomy textbook

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    Astronomy Textbook
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A high school Physics teacher with 18 years of experience is seeking a suitable undergraduate-level astronomy textbook to prepare for teaching an upcoming Astronomy course. The course will not be rigorous due to the school's demographics, and the teacher is specifically looking for resources to enhance their own understanding rather than materials for students. A recommendation for OpenStax was made, highlighting its free astronomy ebook as a valuable resource for educators. The teacher expressed appreciation for this suggestion, indicating a positive reception to the idea of utilizing OpenStax for their preparation.
Greg Craven
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Summary: Looking for a textbook to bring a high school Physics teacher up to speed on basic astronomy.

I've been teaching high school Physics and Chemistry for 18 years. I've been tapped to teach an Astronomy course next year, despite never having taken an actual astronomy course. Given the demographics of my school, it won't be a highly rigorous course.

So I'm looking for recommendations for a good undergraduate-level survey text on Astronomy for me to read over the summer that will give me the basics. To be clear, I am not looking for recommendations for a high school level textbooks for my students. We don't have the money for textbooks for the class, so I'll be taking over the retiring teacher's cobbled-together curriculum.

Thanks much!
 
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Checkout openstax.org. They have a good free astro ebook.
 
jedishrfu said:
Checkout openstax.org. They have a good free astro ebook.
I'd never heard of Openstax.org, but it sounds like an amazing project. Thanks for the tip!
 
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This thread only works as a summary from the original source: List of STEM Masterworks in Physics, Mechanics, Electrodynamics... The original thread got very long and somewhat hard to read so I have compiled the recommendations from that thread in an online (Google Drive) spreadsheet. SUMMARY Permits are granted so you can make comments on the spreadsheet but I'll initially be the only one capable of edition. This is to avoid the possibility of someone deleting everything either by mistake...
By looking around, it seems like Dr. Hassani's books are great for studying "mathematical methods for the physicist/engineer." One is for the beginner physicist [Mathematical Methods: For Students of Physics and Related Fields] and the other is [Mathematical Physics: A Modern Introduction to Its Foundations] for the advanced undergraduate / grad student. I'm a sophomore undergrad and I have taken up the standard calculus sequence (~3sems) and ODEs. I want to self study ahead in mathematics...

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