Stars and Atoms Stars and Atoms A. S. EDDINGTON M. A., D. Sc., LL.
D., F. R S., Flumian Professor of Astronomy in the University of
Cambridge OXFORD AT THE CLARENDON PRESS 1927 PREFACE STARS and
Atoms was the title of an Evening Dis course given at the meeting
of the British Association in Oxford in August 1926. In adapting it
for publication the restrictions of a time limit are removed and
accord ingly it appears in this book as three lectures. Earlier in
the year I had given a course of three lectures in Kings College,
London, on the same topics these have been combined with the Oxford
lecture and are the origin of most of the additions. A full account
of the subject, including the mathe matical theory, is given in my
larger book, The Internal Constitution of the Stars Camb. Univ.
Press, 1926. Here I only aim at exposition of some of the leading
ideas and results. The advance in our knowledge of atoms and
radiation has led to many interesting developments in astronomy and
reciprocally the study of matter in the extreme con ditions
prevailing in stars and nebulae has played no mean part in the
progress of atomic physics. This is the general theme of the
lectures. Selection has been made of the advances and discoveries
which admit of comparatively elementary exposition but it is often
necessary to detnand from the reader a concentration of thought
which, it is hoped, will be repaid by the fascination of the
subject. The treatment was meant to be discursive rather than
systematic but habits of mind refuse to be suppressed entirely and
a certain amount of system has crept in. In these problems where
our thought fluctuates continually from the excessively great to
the excessively small, from the star to the atom and back to the
star, the story of 6 Preface progress is rich in variety if it has
not lost too much in the telling, it should convey in full measure
the delights and the troubles of scientific investigation in all
its phases. Temperatures are expressed throughout in degrees
Centigrade. The English billion, trillion, c. io l8, c. are used.
A. S. E. CONTENTS LECTURE I. THE INTERIOR OF A STAR . 9 Temperature
in the Interior . .11 lonization of Atoms, 17 Radiation Pressure
and Mass . . 24 The Interior of a Star . . 26 Opacity of Stellar
Matter . . 28 The Relation of Brightness to Mass . 31 Dense Stars .
. 36 LECTURE II. SOME RECENT INVESTIGATIONS 42 The Story of Algol
., 42 The Story of the Companion of Sirius . . 48 Unknown Atoms and
Interpretation of Spectra . 53 Spectral Series . . 59 The Cloud in
Space . . 63 The Suns Chromosphere . . 70 The Story of Betelgeuse .
.76 LECTURE III. THE AGE OF THE STARS . 85 Pulsating Stars, . 85
The Cepheid as a Standard Candle .90 The Contraction Hypothesis . .
94. Subatomic Energy . t oo Evolution of the Stars . .106 Radiation
of Mass . - in APPENDIX Further Remarks on the Companion of Sirius
. 122 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS FIG. 1. The Sun. Hydrogen
Spectroheliogram. J. Evershed . . Frontispiece 2. Solar Vortices.
Hydrogen Spectroheliogram. Mount Wilson Observatory . To face page
10 3. Tracks of Alpha Particles helium atoms. C. T. R. Wilson . .
18 4. Tracks of Beta Particles electrons. C. T. R. Wilson . . 18 5.
lonization by X-rays. C. T. R. Wilson, 24 6. Ions produced by
Collision of a Beta particle C. T. R Wilson . . 24 7. The
Mass-luminosity Curve . . page 33 8. The Ring Nebula in Lyra.
Slitless Spectro gram. W. H. Wright . .To face page 4 9. Flash
Spectrum of Chromosphere showing Head of the Balmer Series British
Eclipse Expedition, 14 Jan. 1926 . 54 10. Solar Prominence. British
Eclipse Expedi tion, 29 May 1919 . . 70 11. Star Cluster a
Centauri. Cape Observatory 70 LECTURE I THE INTERIOR OF A STAR sun
belongs to a system containing some 3,000 JL million stars. The
stars are globes comparable in size with the sun, that is to say,
of the order of a million miles in diameter. The space for their
accommodation is on the most lavish scale...
General
Imprint: |
Read Books
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
March 2007 |
First published: |
March 2007 |
Authors: |
A. S. Eddington
|
Dimensions: |
216 x 140 x 7mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - Trade
|
Pages: |
132 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-4067-7145-9 |
Categories: |
Books >
Science & Mathematics >
Science: general issues >
General
|
LSN: |
1-4067-7145-7 |
Barcode: |
9781406771459 |
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