Hot Stars in the Galactic Halo
The stars that comprise a halo around our Galaxy are intriguing; they have abundances of elements that suggest they are old. The properties of these "hot stars" and similar stars in other galaxies challenge the current, well-established theory of stellar evolution in many ways. In this book, experts contribute up-to-date and comprehensive reviews of the major topics in the field. They study the collective properties of these stars that provide important revelations for many areas of astrophysics--including how our Galaxy was formed. The contributors also reveal the exciting renaissance occurring in their studies owing to important new observations with the Hubble Space Telescope and ASTRO1 and to techniques recently developed for ground-based observations. Advances in computers have also recently led to a far more detailed and complete theoretical understanding of stellar evolution. This book will be of interest to researchers and graduate students in astronomy and astrophysics.
- Many significant results, including those from the Hubble Space Telescope and ASTRO1
- Advances in numerical modelling of stellar evolution
Reviews & endorsements
Review of the hardback: 'No astrophysicist can be expert in all aspects of the Galactic Halo. What is needed, therefore, is a single volume which brings many areas of halo research together. Hot Stars in the Galactic Halo meets the requirement because it contains review and contributed papers, by recognised experts in each field, all of which are clearly written and have extensive citations of the astronomical literature … Hot Stars in the Galactic Halo will undoubtedly serve as an invaluable reference text for many years to come.' The Observatory
Product details
March 2011Paperback
9780521174923
406 pages
244 × 170 × 21 mm
0.65kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Participants
- Preface
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Part I. Introductory Papers:
- 1. What is the galaxy's halo population?
- 2. Theoretical properties of horizontal-branch stars
- 3. A review of A-type horizontal-branch stars
- Part II. Surveys:
- 4. A progress report on the Edinburgh-Cape object survey
- 5. A 300 square degree survey of young stars at high galactic latitudes
- 6. The isolation of a new sample of B stars in the halo
- 7. A northern catalog of FHB/A stars
- 8. Recent progress on a continuing survey of galactic globular clusters for blue stragglers
- 9. UV observations with FAUST and the galactic model
- 10. Hot stars at the South Galactic Pole
- Part III. Clusters:
- 11. Population II horizontal branches: a photometric study of globular clusters
- 12. The period-shift effect in Oosterhoff type II globular clusters
- 13. UV photometry of hot stars in omega centauri
- 14. Spectroscopic and UBV observations of blue stars at the NGP
- 15. Population I horizontal branches: probing the halo-to-disk transition
- Part IV. Stars:
- 16. Very hot subdwarf O stars
- 17. Quantitative spectroscopy of the very hot subluminous O-stars: K646, PG1159-035, and KPD0005+5106
- 18. Analyzing the helium-rich hot sdO stars in the Palomar Green Survey
- 19. Late type companions of hot sd O stars
- 20. Hot stars in globular clusters
- 21. Faint blue stars from the Hamburg Schmidt Survey
- 22. Stellar winds and the evolution of sdB's to sdO's
- 23. Halo stars in the Vilnius photometric system
- 24. Horizontal branch stars in the geneva photometric system
- 25. Zeeman observations of FHB stars and hot subdwarf stars
- 26. What does a FHB star's spectrum look like?
- 27. A technique for distinguishing FHB stars from A-type stars
- 28. eEemental abundances of halo A and interloper stars
- 29. The mass of blue horizontal branch stars in the globular cluster NGC6397
- 30. IUE observations of blue HB stars in the globular clusters M3 and NGC6752
- 31. Metallicities and kinematics of the local RR lyraes: lukewarm stars in the halo
- 32. Baade–Wesselink analyses of field vs. cluster RR lyrae variables
- 33. The rotation of population II A stars
- 34. Horizontal branch stars and possibly related objects
- 35. A new group of post-AGB objects - the hot carbon-poor stars
- 36. MK classifications of hot stars in the halo
- 37. Photometry of XX Virginis and V716 Ophiuchi and the period luminosity relations of type II cepheids
- 38. Rotation and oxygen line strengths in blue horizontal branch stars
- Part V. Miscellaneous:
- 39. UBV CCd photometry of the halo of M31
- 40. Can stars still form in the galactic halo?
- 41. The ultraviolet imaging telescope on the Astro -1 and Astro -2 missions
- 42. Are analogues of hot subdwarf stars responsible for the UVX phenomenon in galaxy nucleli
- 43. A survey for field BHB stars outside the solar circle
- 44. Post-AGB A and F supergiants as standard candles
- 45. The extended horizontal-branch: a challenge for stellar evolution theory
- 46. Astronomical patterns in fractals: the work of A. G. Davis Philip on the Mandelbrot Set
- Part VI. Summary:
- 47. Final remarks
- Author index
- Subject index.