Stellar Populations (IAU S262)
IAU Symposium 262 presents reviews on the current understanding of the theories of stellar evolution, galaxy formation and galaxy evolution. It emphasises what we have learned in the past few years from massive surveys covering large portions of the sky (e.g. SDSS, HDF, UDF, GOODS, COSMOS). Several critical aspects of research on stellar populations deserve further effort in order to be brought in tune with other areas of astrophysical research. The next ten years will see the opening of major observatories that will increase the quality and quantity of astronomical data by orders of magnitude. The expected benefits from these instruments for the study of stellar populations are explored. This critical review of state of the art observational and theoretical work will appeal to all those working on stellar populations, from distant galaxies to local resolved galaxies and galactic star clusters.
- Presents an up-to-date summary of current research in stellar populations, from the most distant galaxies to the nearest clusters
- Balances observational and theoretical work to provide a consistent view of the evolution of stellar populations
- Focuses on future expectations in stellar population research
Reviews & endorsements
'With over 450 attendants and a long programme of review and contributed talks by many distinguished workers, the range of topics is excellent. … The volume serves well as a comprehensive snapshot of this exciting field …' Contemporary Physics
'… serves well as a comprehensive snapshot of this exciting field…' Contemporary Physics
Product details
April 2010Hardback
9780521764841
480 pages
254 × 180 × 23 mm
0.98kg
291 b/w illus. 17 tables
Out of stock in print form with no current plan to reprint
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Physics of stellar populations
- 2. Spectral evolution models
- 3. Milky Way and local galaxies
- 4. Early- and late-type galaxies
- 5. Lessons from large surveys
- 6. Galaxy formation
- 7. The next decade
- 8. Posters
- Author index.