An Application of Cloud-by-Cloud, Multiphase, Bayesian Modeling on System C Towards Quasar PG1206+459


Book Description

We apply a novel cloud-by-cloud, multiphase, Bayesian sampling method on absorption lines towards quasar PG1206+459. This method increases the efficiency at which different parameters can be tested, allowing for systems to be explored much faster compared to prior works. Previous studies of quasar PG1206+459 have designated three separate subsystems: A, B, and C. This study will focus on subsystem C. The entire system spans a velocity range from ~ -700 km/s to 900 km/s, whereas subsystem C covers the ~ 600 km/s to 900 km/s range. We present a detailed analysis of this subsystem, finding that the absorption is best explained using five clouds constrained on three transitions: MgII, CIII, and OVI, each corresponding to a separate phase (low, intermediate, and high). In the future, we will apply this method to the remaining two subsystems and provide a complete overview of the PG1206+459 system.




QSO Absorption Lines


Book Description

The controversial question of whether the majority of the narrow absorption lines observed in QSO spectra represent cosmological intervening systems or ejecta from the QSO themselves is settled. QSO absorption line spectroscopy, initially a mere technique, has matured into an essential extragalactic research tool for understanding the content of the Universe at redshifts between 0 and 4, and beyond. The only previous important meeting devoted to "QSO Absorption Lines" was held in May 1987 at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A. Since that time, nearly a decade ago, research has been ex tremely active in this now well-established field of astrophysics. Theoretical stud ies and simulations have taken advantage of the constant progress in computer technology, and during these last few years, the observational results have bene fited largely from the new facillities offered by the Hubble Space Telescope in the UV wavelength range and the Keck Telescope for high-resolution spectroscopy.







Probing Galaxies Through Quasar Absorption Lines (IAU C199)


Book Description

Review of recent research in the field of quasar absorption line systems.




Stellar Interiors


Book Description

That trees should have been cut down to provide paper for this book was an ecological afIront. From a book review. - Anthony Blond (in the Spectator, 1983) The first modern text on our subject, Structure and Evolution of the Stars, was published over thirty years ago. In it, Martin Schwarzschild described numerical experiments that successfully reproduced most of the observed properties of the majority of stars seen in the sky. He also set the standard for a lucid description of the physics of stellar interiors. Ten years later, in 1968, John P. Cox's tw~volume monograph Principles of Stellar Structure appeared, as did the more specialized text Principles of Stellar Evolution and Nuc1eosynthesis by Donald D. Clayton-and what a difference ten years had made. The field had matured into the basic form that it remains today. The past twenty-plus years have seen this branch of astrophysics flourish and develop into a fundamental pillar of modern astrophysics that addresses an enormous variety of phenomena. In view of this it might seem foolish to offer another text of finite length and expect it to cover any more than a fraction of what should be discussed to make it a thorough and self-contained reference. Well, it doesn't. Our specific aim is to introduce only the fundamentals of stellar astrophysics. You will find little reference here to black holes, millisecond pulsars, and other "sexy" objects.




A Decade of Hubble Space Telescope Science


Book Description

The Hubble Space Telescope has made some of the most dramatic discoveries in the history of astronomy. From its vantage point 600km above the Earth, Hubble is able to capture images and spectra that would be difficult or impossible to obtain from the ground. This volume represents some of the most important scientific achievements of the Hubble Space Telescope in its first decade of operation. Written by world experts, this is an indispensable collection of review articles for researchers and graduate students.




The Solar Corona


Book Description

Second edition graduate level textbook giving an up-to-date treatment of our understanding of the solar corona.




21st Century Astronomy


Book Description

A textbook that facilitates learning by doing.




Clustering at High Redshift


Book Description

Annotation Astronomers, astrophysicists, and other scientists and researchers from laboratories, observatories, and universities throughout North America, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East present 60 contributions addressing clustering from low to high redshift; clustering measurements in surveys; IR and sub-mm surveys; theory and models; high-redshift clusters of galaxies; QSO absorption lines; primordial galaxies; clustering around QSOs and radio galaxies; and the physics of the intra-cluster medium. Approximately 40 poster sessions are also presented. Lacks an index. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)




Supernovae and Supernova Remnants


Book Description

This conference is a tribute to those astronomers who pioneered the investigation of this subject such a short time ago and who carried it through to its present state. (H. Arp, Concluding Remarks of the Conference) A previous conference, covering mainly the observational aspects of Supernovae, was held at the Haute Provence Observatory in September 1963. In the following ten years this field of research has considerably increased; it seemed, therefore, the right time to organize an international conference on Supernovae taking into account that in the meantime important discoveries, such as the Pulsars, had been made, and new techniques of observation were available. This book contains the proceedings of this conference held at Porto Cesareo (Lecce), Italy, during the period May 7 through 11, 1973. About one hundred participants from eighteen countries attended the conference. It was also the first attempt to hold an international conference in the Salento, the southernmost region of Apulia, in whose capital, Lecce, the newly founded Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lecce is located. The program of the conference included the results and techniques of Supernova surveys, photometric and spectral studies, statistics of Supernovae, Supernova Rem nants, and finally, theories on Supernovae and Supernova Remnants.