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This volume contains a comprehensive treatment of X-ray spectroscopy, as applied in astrophysics. It is presented in the form of extensive notes of lectures given by seven distinguished scientists at the Tenth Summer School of the European Astrophysics Doctoral Network. The subjects covered are: basic line and continuum radiation processes in X-ray and gamma-ray astronomy; atomic physics of collision- and radiation-dominated plasmas; X-ray spectroscopic observations with ASCA and BeppoSAX; future X-ray spectroscopy missions; X-ray optics, and X-ray spectroscopy instrumentation. The book, which will appeal to both researchers and graduate students, is timely in view of the scheduled launches of the big X-ray observatories AXAF and XMM in 1999.
IAU symposium 165 'Compact Stars in Binaries' was held from 15
through 19 August 1994, as part of the 22nd General Assembly of the
IAU in The Hague. The symposium, supported by IAU Commissions
35,37,44 and 48, and co-sponsored by Commission 42, was attended by
about 400 to 500 participants. This symposium received support
from: - The International Astronomical Union; - The Royal
Netherlands Academy of Sciences; - The Netherlands Ministery of
Education and Science; - The Leids Kerkhoven Bosscha Fonds; - The
Stichting Fysica. The field of compact stars in binaries is one of
the most active areas of present-day astrophysics. An absolute
highlight of the last few years was the 1993 Nobel Prize of
physics, awarded to Taylor and Hulse for their discovery of the
binary pulsar PSR 1913+ 16, and the measurement of the orbital
decay of this system due to the emission of gravitational waves.
The aim of the organizers of the symposium was to present an
overview of the most significant observational discoveries of the
past decade, in com bination with a review of the most important
theoretical developments. We were very happy that most of the
world's leading experts in observation and theory were present at
the symposium to review the various aspects of the subject. The
contents of their oral presentations are now published in the form
of these proceedings, which we expect to become an important source
of reference for the coming years."
This NATO AS was the third in the series of Advanced Study
Institutes on neutron stars, which started with 'Timing Neutron
Stars', held in Qe me near izmir, Turkey (April 1988), followed by
'Neutron Stars, an Interdis ciplinary Subject', held in Agia
Pelagia on the island of Crete (September 1990). The first school
centered on our main observational access to neu tron stars, i. e.
the timing of radio pulsars and accretion powered neutron stars,
and on what timing of neutron stars teaches us of their structure
and environment. The second school had as its theme the interplay
between diverse areas of physics which find interesting, even
exotic applications in the extreme conditions of neutron stars and
their magnetospheres. As the field has developed, with the number
of observed neutron stars rapidly in creasing, and our knowledge of
many individual neutron stars getting deeper and more detailed, an
evolutionary picture of neutron stars has started to emerge. This
led us to choose 'The Lives of the Neutron Stars' as the uni fying
theme of this third Advanced Study Institute on neutron stars.
Different types of neutron star activity have been proposed to
follow one another in stages during the lives of neutron stars in
the same basic population; the evolutionary connection between
low-mass X-ray binaries and millisecond radio pulsars is perhaps
the prime example."
This book addresses graduate students in astronomy and
astrophysics. The first part is devoted to galactic high-energy
astrophysics. It treats particle accelerations (including shocks),
the interstellar medium and supernovae remnants, high-energy
emissions from normal stars and accretion in close binaries. The
second part deals with observationslike pulsar timing, and its
measurement with radioastronomical tools, and astrometry, as
performed in the HIPPARCOS satellite program.
This NATO AS was the third in the series of Advanced Study
Institutes on neutron stars, which started with 'Timing Neutron
Stars', held in Qe me near izmir, Turkey (April 1988), followed by
'Neutron Stars, an Interdis ciplinary Subject', held in Agia
Pelagia on the island of Crete (September 1990). The first school
centered on our main observational access to neu tron stars, i. e.
the timing of radio pulsars and accretion powered neutron stars,
and on what timing of neutron stars teaches us of their structure
and environment. The second school had as its theme the interplay
between diverse areas of physics which find interesting, even
exotic applications in the extreme conditions of neutron stars and
their magnetospheres. As the field has developed, with the number
of observed neutron stars rapidly in creasing, and our knowledge of
many individual neutron stars getting deeper and more detailed, an
evolutionary picture of neutron stars has started to emerge. This
led us to choose 'The Lives of the Neutron Stars' as the uni fying
theme of this third Advanced Study Institute on neutron stars.
Different types of neutron star activity have been proposed to
follow one another in stages during the lives of neutron stars in
the same basic population; the evolutionary connection between
low-mass X-ray binaries and millisecond radio pulsars is perhaps
the prime example."
This volume contains a comprehensive treatment of X-ray
spectroscopy, as applied in astrophysics. It is presented in the
form of extensive notes of lectures given by seven distinguished
scientists at the Tenth Summer School of the European Astrophysics
Doctoral Network. The subjects covered are: basic line and
continuum radiation processes in X-ray and gamma-ray astronomy;
atomic physics of collision- and radiation-dominated plasmas; X-ray
spectroscopic observations with ASCA and BeppoSAX; future X-ray
spectroscopy missions; X-ray optics, and X-ray spectroscopy
instrumentation. The book, which will appeal to both researchers
and graduate students, is timely in view of the scheduled launches
of the big X-ray observatories AXAF and XMM in 1999.
X-ray binaries are stellar systems that combine one normal star (like our sun) and a smaller star, such as a white dwarf, a neutron star, or a black hole. This timely text provides a comprehensive overview of the unique and varied behavior of these combinations. Fifteen specially-written chapters by a team of the world's foremost researchers in the field explore all aspects of the X-ray binaries, including the X-ray, ultraviolet, optical, and radio properties of these violent systems, and address key issues such as how these systems formed and what their fate might be. They also discuss X-ray bursts and quasi-periodic oscillations, the connections between millisecond radio pulsars and low-mass X-ray binaries, and how the magnetic field of a neutron star decays. This long-awaited review provides graduate students and researchers with the standard reference on X-ray binaries for many years to come.
IAU symposium 165 'Compact Stars in Binaries' was held from 15
through 19 August 1994, as part of the 22nd General Assembly of the
IAU in The Hague. The symposium, supported by IAU Commissions
35,37,44 and 48, and co-sponsored by Commission 42, was attended by
about 400 to 500 participants. This symposium received support
from: - The International Astronomical Union; - The Royal
Netherlands Academy of Sciences; - The Netherlands Ministery of
Education and Science; - The Leids Kerkhoven Bosscha Fonds; - The
Stichting Fysica. The field of compact stars in binaries is one of
the most active areas of present-day astrophysics. An absolute
highlight of the last few years was the 1993 Nobel Prize of
physics, awarded to Taylor and Hulse for their discovery of the
binary pulsar PSR 1913+ 16, and the measurement of the orbital
decay of this system due to the emission of gravitational waves.
The aim of the organizers of the symposium was to present an
overview of the most significant observational discoveries of the
past decade, in com bination with a review of the most important
theoretical developments. We were very happy that most of the
world's leading experts in observation and theory were present at
the symposium to review the various aspects of the subject. The
contents of their oral presentations are now published in the form
of these proceedings, which we expect to become an important source
of reference for the coming years.
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