Massive Stars in Starbursts
Out of Print
Part of Space Telescope Science Institute Symposium Series
- Editors:
- Claus Leitherer, Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore
- Nolan Walborn, Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore
- Timothy Heckman, Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore
- Colin Norman, Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore
- Date Published: May 1991
- availability: Unavailable - out of print February 2006
- format: Hardback
- isbn: 9780521404655
Out of Print
Hardback
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This book reviews the importance of massive stars in several areas of astrophysics. Massive stars are objects that are 10-100 times the mass of our Sun. Above ten solar masses, loss through stellar winds begins to have a major impact on the evolution of a star. The upper limit of 100 solar masses is derived from observations. Significant progress has now been achieved in massive star research. New models, along with high quality observations, have improved our understanding of the formation, structure, atmosphere, and evolution of these massive objects. They are formed in violent bursts of star formation and are probably related to the phenomena observed in active galactic nuclei. The workshop at the Space Telescope Science Institute examined the interplay between the astrophysics of massive stars and their location in extragalactic starburst regions. There are eighteen chapters by leading researchers. Each has been carefully edited to ensure that the book is a comprehensive introduction to the theory and observation of massive stars in starburst regions.
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×Product details
- Date Published: May 1991
- format: Hardback
- isbn: 9780521404655
- length: 349 pages
- dimensions: 257 x 180 x 22 mm
- weight: 0.78kg
- contains: 85 b/w illus. 5 tables
- availability: Unavailable - out of print February 2006
Table of Contents
1. Massive stars
2. Spectra of massive blue stars
3. Massive red stars in galaxies
4. Model atmospheres of massive hot stars
5. Massive star evolution
6. The observational H-R diagram and the IMF of massive stars
7. IR- and mm-observations of regions of massive star formation
8. 30 Doradus, starburst rosetta
9. Properties of giant HII regions
10. Supernovae and supernova remnants in starbursts
11. Observations and models of blue compact dwarf galaxies
12. The initial mass function in M82
13. Population synthesis models of starbursts
14. HII and infrared in global starburst galaxies
15. Stellar content of starburst galaxies
16. Models of starburst galaxies
17. The starburst-AGN connection
18. Cosmological consequences of starbursts.
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