New Frontiers in Black Hole Astrophysics (IAU S324)
Black holes lie at the heart of some of the most fascinating astrophysical phenomena. IAU Symposium 324 marked the 100th anniversary of Schwarzschild's solution of Einstein's field equations predicting the existence of black holes. Our understanding of black holes has come an impressively long way since then, with the last major discovery being coalescing black holes producing gravitational waves, also predicted in 1916. In this volume, observational and theoretical experts discuss the current state-of-the-art in the astrophysics of black-hole systems and their exploitation in testing fundamental theories of physics. Topics span a wide range and include a historical review, the similarity and diversity of black hole systems, gamma ray bursts, tidal disruption events, active galactic nuclei, black hole systems as multi-messenger sources, and the opening of new observational horizons. This fresh review is especially useful to researchers and graduate students engaged in these exciting fields.
- Reviews many different topics connected to black hole research
- Provides a useful state-of-the-art summary for graduate students and researchers
- The Symposium marked the centenary of the Schwarzschild solution (of Einstein's field equations) that first predicted the existence of black holes
Product details
July 2017Hardback
9781107169944
350 pages
254 × 180 × 17 mm
0.77kg
110 b/w illus. 20 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Similarity and diversity of Black Hole systems
- 2. Gamma ray bursts
- 3. Tidal disruption events
- 4. Active galactic nuclei
- 5. Tests of fundamental theories of physics using Black Hole systems
- 6. Technology drivers and future capabilities.