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The IAU Symposium No. 55 on 'X-Ray and Gamma-Ray Astronomy' has
occurred, not entirely by coincidence, at an important moment in
the development of these new branches of observational astronomy.
In X-ray astronomy the data from the first X-ray observatory UHURU
have contributed to a new view of the X-ray sky and a new
conception of the nature and properties of galactic and
extragalactic X-ray sources. In gamma-ray astronomy the exciting
and often controversial nature of the results underlines the
importance of the forthcoming launch of SAS-B, the first orbiting
y-ray observatory. As Bruno Rossi reminds us (p. I), the Symposium
occurred almost exactly ten years after the first detection of the
X-ray star Sco X-I. During this time we have moved from the
detection of a handful of the nearest and brightest sources to the
detailed study of the nature of stellar sources in the farthest
reaches of our own galaxy and in external galaxies of the local
group. The detection of pulsating X-ray sources in bi nary systems
permits the measurement of pulsation periods, and orbital
parameters with precisions comparable to any yet achieved with
traditional observational techniques. The strong indications that
most X-ray sources are extremely compact objects give us confidence
that X-ray astronomy will playa significant and possibly decisive
role in the study of stars near the end point of stellar
evolution."
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