New Windows on Massive Stars (IAU S307)
Massive stars play a crucial role in the Universe: they are important drivers for the photometric and chemical evolution of galaxies; they are sources of important elements, including those necessary for life; and, with their strong winds and supernova explosions, they feed the interstellar medium with momentum and kinetic energy, impacting on the star formation rate. Knowledge of the evolution of massive stars is important not only for stellar physics, but also for probing the evolution of galaxies and their star formation histories throughout cosmic time. This volume provides an introduction to these topics and to the techniques used to investigate the properties of massive stars, including asteroseismology, spectropolarimetry, and interferometry. It highlights synergies between these new techniques and more classical methods, to create a synthetic view of massive stars, leading researchers towards new and innovative solutions to the most topical questions regarding the evolution of massive stars.
- Provides a fresh summary on massive star physics and evolution, directed at those who are interested in massive stars in galaxies
- Features cross-disciplinary reviews to fosters links between the cutting-edge techniques of asteroseismology, interferometry, and spectropolarimetry
- Provides basic introductions to these three observational techniques for researchers who wish to understand their main features, and weigh up their benefits and potential weaknesses
Product details
April 2015Hardback
9781107078581
500 pages
255 × 180 × 25 mm
1kg
100 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Challenges in massive star evolution
- 2. Asteroseismology
- 3. Interferometry
- 4. Spectropolarimetry
- 5. Synergies between different techniques
- 6. Towards a synthetic view
- Author index.