Books by "Charles A. Lockwood"

5 books found

History of the Town of Springfield, Vermont

History of the Town of Springfield, Vermont

by Charles Horace Hubbard, Justus Dartt

1895

History of Ohio

History of Ohio

by Charles Burleigh Galbreath

1925

The Better Angels

The Better Angels

by Charles McCarry

2010 · Abrams

In this political thriller by the author of The Secret Lovers, Paul Christopher's cousins tinker with an election while a reporter chases a lead. Originally published in 1979, The Better Angels is set close to the end of the twentieth century in a drastically changed America. The CIA has been dissolved into the Foreign Intelligence Service. It is an election year. In Washington, D.C., an Englishman crashes a cocktail party at the home of TV anchorman Patrick Graham with a secret that could shake up an already deeply polarized nation. Soon, Graham is traveling the globe in search of the explosive truth . . . From the writer the New York Times Book Review called "the genuine article," The Better Angels is a thrilling and relevant masterwork. Praise for The Better Angels "A thinking man's thriller with a frightening finale." — Newsweek

Convection and Substorms

Convection and Substorms

by Charles F. Kennel

1996 · Oxford University Press

The magnetosphere is the region where cosmic rays and the solar wind interact with the Earth's magnetic field, creating such phenomena as the northern lights and other aurorae. The configuration and dynamics of the magnetosphere are of interest to planetary physicists, geophysicists, plasma astrophysicists, and to scientists planning space missions. The circulation of solar wind plasma in the magnetosphere and substorms have long been used as the principle paradigms for studying this vital region. Charles F. Kennel, a leading scientist in the field, here presents a synthesis of the convection and substorm literatures, and an analysis of convection and substorm interactions; he also suggests that the currently accepted steady reconnection model may be advantageously replaced by a model of multiple tail reconnection events, in which many mutually interdependent reconnections occur. Written in an accessible, non-mathematical style, this book introduces the reader to the exciting discoveries in this fast-growing field.