Our systems are now restored following recent technical disruption, and we’re working hard to catch up on publishing. We apologise for the inconvenience caused. Find out more

Recommended product

Popular links

Popular links


The Observation and Analysis of Stellar Photospheres

The Observation and Analysis of Stellar Photospheres

The Observation and Analysis of Stellar Photospheres

4th Edition
David F. Gray, Western University, Ontario
December 2021
Paperback
9781009078016

Experience the eBook and the associated online resources on our new Higher Education website. Go to site For other formats please stay on this page.

    This textbook describes the equipment, observational techniques, and analysis used in the investigation of stellar photospheres. Now in its fourth edition, the text has been thoroughly updated and revised to be more accessible to students. New figures have been added to illustrate key concepts, while diagrams have been redrawn and refreshed throughout. The book starts by developing the tools of analysis, and then demonstrates how they can be applied. Topics covered include radiation transfer, models of stellar photospheres, spectroscopic equipment, how to observe stellar spectra, and techniques for measuring stellar temperatures, radii, surface gravities, chemical composition, velocity fields, and rotation rates. Up-to-date results for real stars are included. Written for starting graduate students or advanced undergraduates, this textbook also includes a wealth of reference material useful to researchers. eBook formats include color imagery while print formats are greyscale only; a wide selection of the color images are available online.

    • Leads the reader through the primary tools and observing techniques used to understand stellar spectra, supported by extensive observations and analysis of real stars
    • Each chapter concludes with exercises that allow the reader to directly engage with the content and deepen their understanding
    • This new edition features the latest developments in the area, alongside an extensive update of the references to the published literature

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Gray's newest edition has made several key improvements that will render it an important book not only for stellar atmospheres and evolution courses, but also for courses involving modern instrumentation techniques or for anyone working in the field of exoplanets. Each chapter is clearly and logically laid out and extensively referenced, including exercises to support scaffolded learning throughout the undergraduate and graduate curriculum; this makes the book an easy choice for professors teaching both introductory and upper level courses. Gray's new book is destined to become an essential companion for every professional astronomer whose research is impacted by observational effects and the inner workings of stellar photospheres.' Prof. Michelle J. Creech-Eakman, New Mexico Tech

    'Gray's textbook has been a staple for my teaching and research for the past two decades. The close connection the book makes between theory and observation has always distinguished it and made it particularly valuable. The addition of new topics and results, and the inclusion of many of the more recent, seminal references make the new edition particularly valuable for students and researchers entering the field of stellar astrophysics.' Prof. Christopher M. Johns-Krull, Rice University

    'David Gray's book puts the decades of the author's hands-on experience, combined with his scientific ingenuity, into a form that students and young researcher love. Clearly, David Gray's book has evolved. The Fourth Edition is not just a graduate student's textbook, it is now also an up-to-date window into practical stellar astrophysical research. As in the past, all my graduate students will get it as their bible.' Prof. Klaus G. Strassmeier, University of Potsdam, and Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics, Germany

    See more reviews

    Product details

    December 2021
    Paperback
    9781009078016
    550 pages
    244 × 169 × 28 mm
    0.912kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface to the first edition
    • Preface to the second edition
    • Preface to the third edition
    • Preface to the fourth edition
    • 1. Background
    • 2. Fourier transforms
    • 3. Spectroscopic tools
    • 4. Light detectors
    • 5. Radiation terms and definitions
    • 6. The black body and its radiation
    • 7. Energy transport in stellar photospheres
    • 8. The continuous absorption coefficient
    • 9. The model photosphere
    • 10. Analysis of stellar continua
    • 11. The line absorption coefficient
    • 12. The measurement of spectral lines
    • 13. The behavior of spectral lines
    • 14. The measurement of stellar radii and temperatures
    • 15. The measurement of surface gravity
    • 16. The measurement of chemical composition
    • 17. Velocity fields in stellar photospheres
    • 18. Stellar rotation
    • Appendix A. Useful constants
    • Appendix B: Approximate physical parameters of stars
    • Appendix C. Atomic data
    • Appendix D. The strongest lines in the solar spectrum
    • Appendix E. Computation of random errors
    • Index.
      Author
    • David F. Gray , Western University, Ontario

      David F. Gray is a Professor Emeritus of Astronomy at Western University, London, Ontario, Canada, where he has held positions since 1966. He was president of IAU Commission 36, on the Theory of Stellar Atmospheres 1988–1991, and served on the observing-time allocation panels of the Hubble Space Telescope and the Canada–France–Hawaii telescope. He is a member of the Canadian Astronomical Society, the International Astronomical Union, Sigma Xi Honorary Society, and the American Astronomical Society, and has served on numerous organizing committees for astronomical symposia. He was an invited lecturer at the Canary Islands Winter School of Astrophysics, the Catania Observatory, and the Beijing Observatory.