Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Half-title page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Part I The Tools of Astronomy
- 1 The Celestial Sphere
- 1.1 The Greek Tradition
- 1.2 The Copernican Revolution
- 1.3 Positions on the Celestial Sphere
- 1.4 Physics and Astronomy
- 2 Celestial Mechanics
- 2.1 Elliptical Orbits
- 2.2 Newtonian Mechanics
- 2.3 Kepler’s Laws Derived
- 2.4 The Virial Theorem
- 3 The Continuous Spectrum of Light
- 3.1 Stellar Parallax
- 3.2 The Magnitude Scale
- 3.3 TheWave Nature of Light
- 3.4 Blackbody Radiation
- 3.5 The Quantization of Energy
- 3.6 The Color Index
- 4 The Theory of Special Relativity
- 4.1 The Failure of the Galilean Transformations
- 4.2 The Lorentz Transformations
- 4.3 Time and Space in Special Relativity
- 4.4 Relativistic Momentum and Energy
- 5 The Interaction of Light and Matter
- 5.1 Spectral Lines
- 5.2 Photons
- 5.3 The Bohr Model of the Atom
- 5.4 Quantum Mechanics andWave–Particle Duality
- 6 Telescopes
- 6.1 Basic Optics
- 6.2 Optical Telescopes
- 6.3 Radio Telescopes
- 6.4 Infrared, Ultraviolet, X-ray, and Gamma-Ray Astronomy
- 6.5 All-Sky Surveys and Virtual Observatories
- Part II The Nature of Stars
- 7 Binary Systems and Stellar Parameters
- 7.1 The Classification of Binary Stars
- 7.2 Mass Determination Using Visual Binaries
- 7.3 Eclipsing, Spectroscopic Binaries
- 7.4 The Search for Extrasolar Planets
- 8 The Classification of Stellar Spectra
- 8.1 The Formation of Spectral Lines
- 8.2 The Hertzsprung–Russell Diagram
- 9 Stellar Atmospheres
- 9.1 The Description of the Radiation Field
- 9.2 Stellar Opacity
- 9.3 Radiative Transfer
- 9.4 The Transfer Equation
- 9.5 The Profiles of Spectral Lines
- 10 The Interiors of Stars
- 10.1 Hydrostatic Equilibrium
- 10.2 Pressure Equation of State
- 10.3 Stellar Energy Sources
- 10.4 Energy Transport and Thermodynamics
- 10.5 Stellar Model Building
- 10.6 The Main Sequence
- 11 The Sun
- 11.1 The Solar Interior
- 11.2 The Solar Atmosphere
- 11.3 The Solar Cycle
- 12 The Interstellar Medium and Star Formation
- 12.1 Interstellar Dust and Gas
- 12.2 The Formation of Protostars
- 12.3 Pre-Main-Sequence Evolution
- 13 Main Sequence and Post-Main-Sequence Stellar Evolution
- 13.1 Evolution on the Main Sequence
- 13.2 Late Stages of Stellar Evolution
- 13.3 Stellar Clusters
- 14 Stellar Pulsation
- 14.1 Observations of Pulsating Stars
- 14.2 The Physics of Stellar Pulsation
- 14.3 Modeling Stellar Pulsation
- 14.4 Nonradial Stellar Pulsation
- 14.5 Helioseismology and Asteroseismology
- 15 The Fate of Massive Stars
- 15.1 Post-Main-Sequence Evolution of Massive Stars
- 15.2 The Classification of Supernovae
- 15.3 Core-Collapse Supernovae
- 15.4 Gamma-Ray Bursts
- 15.5 Cosmic Rays
- 16 The Degenerate Remnants of Stars
- 16.1 The Discovery of Sirius B
- 16.2 White Dwarfs
- 16.3 The Physics of Degenerate Matter
- 16.4 The Chandrasekhar Limit
- 16.5 The Cooling of White Dwarfs
- 16.6 Neutron Stars
- 16.7 Pulsars
- 17 General Relativity and Black Holes
- 17.1 The General Theory of Relativity
- 17.2 Intervals and Geodesics
- 17.3 Black Holes
- 18 Close Binary Star Systems
- 18.1 Gravity in a Close Binary Star System
- 18.2 Accretion Disks
- 18.3 A Survey of Interacting Binary Systems
- 18.4 White Dwarfs in Semidetached Binaries
- 18.5 Type Ia Supernovae
- 18.6 Neutron Stars and Black Holes in Binaries
- Part III The Solar System
- 19 Physical Processes in the Solar System
- 19.1 A Brief Survey
- 19.2 Tidal Forces
- 19.3 The Physics of Atmospheres
- 20 The Terrestrial Planets
- 20.1 Mercury
- 20.2 Venus
- 20.3 Earth
- 20.4 The Moon
- 20.5 Mars
- 21 The Realms of the Giant Planets
- 21.1 The Giant Worlds
- 21.2 The Moons of the Giants
- 21.3 Planetary Ring Systems
- 22 Minor Bodies of the Solar System
- 22.1 Pluto and Charon
- 22.2 Comets and Kuiper Belt Objects
- 22.3 Asteroids
- 22.4 Meteorites
- 23 Formation of Planetary Systems
- 23.1 Characteristics of Extrasolar Planetary Systems
- 23.2 Planetary System Formation and Evolution
- Part IV Galaxies and the Universe
- 24 The MilkyWay Galaxy
- 24.1 Counting the Stars in the Sky
- 24.2 The Morphology of the Galaxy
- 24.3 The Kinematics of the MilkyWay
- 24.4 The Galactic Center
- 25 The Nature of Galaxies
- 25.1 The Hubble Sequence
- 25.2 Spiral and Irregular Galaxies
- 25.3 Spiral Structure
- 25.4 Elliptical Galaxies
- 26 Galactic Evolution
- 26.1 Interactions of Galaxies
- 26.2 The Formation of Galaxies
- 27 The Structure of the Universe
- 27.1 The Extragalactic Distance Scale
- 27.2 The Expansion of the Universe
- 27.3 Clusters of Galaxies
- 28 Active Galaxies
- 28.1 Observations of Active Galaxies
- 28.2 A Unified Model of Active Galactic Nuclei
- 28.3 Radio Lobes and Jets
- 28.4 Using Quasars to Probe the Universe
- 29 Cosmology
- 29.1 Newtonian Cosmology
- 29.2 The Cosmic Microwave Background
- 29.3 Relativistic Cosmology
- 29.4 Observational Cosmology
- 30 The Early Universe
- 30.1 The Very Early Universe and Inflation
- 30.2 The Origin of Structure
- Appendix C Solar System Data
- Appendix D The Constellations
- Appendix E The Brightest Stars
- Appendix F The Nearest Stars
- Appendix G Stellar Data
- Appendix H The Messier Catalog
- Appendix I Constants, A Programming Module
- Appendix J Orbit, A Planetary Orbit Code
- Appendix K TwoStars, A Binary Star Code
- Appendix L StatStar, A Stellar Structure Code
- Appendix M Galaxy, A Tidal Interaction Code
- Appendix N WMAP Data
- Suggested Reading
- Index




