|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
These are the proceedings of a meeting celebrating Michael
Thompson's seminal work on solar and stellar physics, as well as
his major contributions to the development of the National Center
for Atmospheric Research. The meeting also marked Michael J.
Thompson's untimely death in October 2018. Michael played a key
role in the development of helioseismology and its application to
the study of the structure and dynamics of the solar interior, and
he provided a strong foundation for the extension of seismic
studies for other stars. After focusing for several years on more
administrative activities, he was returning to leading the seismic
studies of solar interior rotation and he was deeply involved in
the understanding of the dynamics of the core of stars, when his
life was tragically lost. The conference focused on dynamical
aspects of the sun and stars, based on the large amount of data
available on solar and stellar oscillations, and the extensive and
detailed modelling now becoming feasible. Combining observations,
seismic analysis, and modelling the meeting and this book serve as
a fitting memorial to a close colleague and friend, much missed.
We stand at the threshold of an exciting era of Asteroseismology.
In a few months' time, the Canadian small-satellite
asteroseismology mission MOST will be laun ched. Danish and French
missions MONS and COROT should follow, with the ESA mission
Eddington following in 2007/8. Helioseismology has proved spec
tacularly successful in imaging the internal structure and dynamics
of the Sun and probing the physics of the solar interior.
Ground-based observations have detected solar-like oscillations on
alpha Centauri A and other Sun-like stars, and diagnostics similar
to those used in helioseismology are now being used to test and
constrain the physics and evolutionary state of these stars.
Multi-mode oscillations are being observed in an abundance of other
stars, including slowly pulsating B stars (SPB stars), delta Scuti
stars, Ap stars and the pulsating white dwarfs. New classes of
pulsators continue to be discovered across the Hertzsprung-Russell
diagram. For good reason it was decided to entitle our conference
'Asteroseismology Across the HR Diagram' . Yet the challenges still
to be faced to make asteroseismology across the HR diagram a
reality are formidable. Observation, data analysis and theory all
pose hard problems to be overcome. In conceiving this meeting, the
aim of the organisers was to facilitate a cross-fertilization of
ideas and approaches between researchers working on different
pulsators and with different areas of expertise. We venture to
suggest that in this the conference was a great success."
This book presents the proceedings of the IVth Azores International
Advanced School in Space Sciences entitled "Asteroseismology and
Exoplanets: Listening to the Stars and Searching for New Worlds".
The school addressed the topics at the forefront of scientific
research being conducted in the fields of asteroseismology and
exoplanetary science, two fields of modern astrophysics that share
many synergies and resources. These proceedings comprise the
contributions from 18 invited lecturers, including both monographic
presentations and a number of hands-on tutorials.
These are the proceedings of a meeting celebrating Michael
Thompson's seminal work on solar and stellar physics, as well as
his major contributions to the development of the National Center
for Atmospheric Research. The meeting also marked Michael J.
Thompson's untimely death in October 2018. Michael played a key
role in the development of helioseismology and its application to
the study of the structure and dynamics of the solar interior, and
he provided a strong foundation for the extension of seismic
studies for other stars. After focusing for several years on more
administrative activities, he was returning to leading the seismic
studies of solar interior rotation and he was deeply involved in
the understanding of the dynamics of the core of stars, when his
life was tragically lost. The conference focused on dynamical
aspects of the sun and stars, based on the large amount of data
available on solar and stellar oscillations, and the extensive and
detailed modelling now becoming feasible. Combining observations,
seismic analysis, and modelling the meeting and this book serve as
a fitting memorial to a close colleague and friend, much missed.
We stand at the threshold of an exciting era of Asteroseismology.
In a few months' time, the Canadian small-satellite
asteroseismology mission MOST will be laun ched. Danish and French
missions MONS and COROT should follow, with the ESA mission
Eddington following in 2007/8. Helioseismology has proved spec
tacularly successful in imaging the internal structure and dynamics
of the Sun and probing the physics of the solar interior.
Ground-based observations have detected solar-like oscillations on
alpha Centauri A and other Sun-like stars, and diagnostics similar
to those used in helioseismology are now being used to test and
constrain the physics and evolutionary state of these stars.
Multi-mode oscillations are being observed in an abundance of other
stars, including slowly pulsating B stars (SPB stars), delta Scuti
stars, Ap stars and the pulsating white dwarfs. New classes of
pulsators continue to be discovered across the Hertzsprung-Russell
diagram. For good reason it was decided to entitle our conference
'Asteroseismology Across the HR Diagram' . Yet the challenges still
to be faced to make asteroseismology across the HR diagram a
reality are formidable. Observation, data analysis and theory all
pose hard problems to be overcome. In conceiving this meeting, the
aim of the organisers was to facilitate a cross-fertilization of
ideas and approaches between researchers working on different
pulsators and with different areas of expertise. We venture to
suggest that in this the conference was a great success."
|
|