WASHINGTON ā Itās that time of year when the travel sections of bookstores are flooded with people pouring over the latest Frommerās to plan their summer vacations.
The must-see museums in Madrid? There are guides for that. The best restaurants in Rome? Several maps on the shelves hold the answer.
But if youāre looking for a truly out-of-this-world journey, only one travel book will suffice. Itās called ā,ā and it details the must-do activities and canāt-miss destinations on the planets and their moons.
Olivia Koski, head of operations at Guerrilla Science, and Jana Grcevich, astronomer and science educator at the American Museum of Natural History, are the authors behind the new space travel publication. The idea for the book came shortly after Guerrilla Science launched its Intergalactic Travel Bureau, which hosts live, interactive space planning sessions for the public.
The best places to vacation in space
If Koski had to pick one place to visit, it would be Jupiter, which like Saturn, is a gas planet. āYou couldnāt actually stand on the surface of Jupiter, but you could orbit around it and see the beautiful swirling gasses from orbit,ā she said. Jupiterās unique moons ā including one covered in volcanoes and another covered in ice ā are also a big draw. Grcevich’s pick would be Titan, the largest moon on Saturn. āIām into beach vacations, although this is not a usual beach vacation because itās several hundred degrees below zero,ā she said. Travelers can expect to find ābeautiful methane and ethane lakes that you could walk on the shores ofā and an atmosphere so thick, one ācould become airborne under your own power.ā via AP) (NASA, ESA, and A. Simon (GSFC)
While āVacation Guide to the Solar Systemā errs on the side of fun and fantasy, the subject is no laughing matter. Koski and Grcevich include fascinating facts about the science of the solar system on every page.
They even consulted with astronomers, physicists and space lawyers to answer potential questions pertaining to planetary travel ā including what itād be like to ride a bike on Mars. Ā
āIt turns out that when you start asking questions like, āIf you get mugged on the moon, what do you do?ā These are questions that havenāt quite been fully answered yet,ā Grcevich said.
āBut whatās fascinating is that a lot of people are thinking about them, even if that particular case hasnāt arisen yet,ā Koski added.
Interested in an intergalactic holiday? Koski and Grcevich share some of their best tips for an expedition far away from Earth in the gallery above.Ā
Olivia Koski and Jana Grcevich, authors of “Vacation Guide to the Solar System,” will be at D.C.’s East City Book Shop Wednesday, June 7 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. The is free and open to the public.Ā