Active OB Stars (IAU S272)
IAU Symposium 272 presents an overview of the latest research into active OB stars. These massive, volatile objects serve as test beds for extreme conditions, and research into them has entered a new era with the advent of new space and round-based instrumentation. In this volume, renowned experts discuss the cutting-edge observations, state-of-the-art modeling and recently developed techniques such as asteroseismology, interferometry and spectropolarimetry that have improved our understanding of these extreme objects. Asteroseismology allows us to infer the internal structure of massive stars and their rotation; high-resolution spectropolarimetry provides clues about magnetic fields and the confinement of their circumstellar environments; and interferometry probes the shape of these environments and investigates differential rotation. Written for researchers and graduate students, this volume will appeal to all those interested in extreme physical processes as tools to study structure evolution and mass loss of active OB stars.
- Provides an overview of the latest research into active OB stars
- Contains a wide-ranging collection of original papers, discussing cutting-edge observations, state-of-the-art modeling techniques and theories
- Examines recently developed techniques that can be applied to active OB star research, such as interferometry, asteroseismology and spectropolarimetry
Reviews & endorsements
'… will be of interest to all those working in the field of massive-star research, to get people, including new students, up to speed in the latest developments, both in theory/modelling and observations … a must for libraries.' The Observatory
Product details
September 2011Hardback
9780521198400
692 pages
253 × 184 × 31 mm
1.35kg
460 b/w illus. 45 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Opening the symposium
- 2. Rapid rotation and mixing in active OB stars
- 3. Winds and magnetic fields of active OB stars
- 4. Populations of OB stars in galaxies
- 5. Circumstellar environment of active OB stars
- 6. Periodic variations and asteroseismology of OB stars
- 7. 'Normal' and active OB stars as extreme condition test beds
- 8. Closing the symposium
- Index.