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Asymptotic Giant Branch Stars 2004 Edition
Contributor(s): Habing, Harm J. (Editor), Olofsson, Hans (Editor)
ISBN: 0387008802     ISBN-13: 9780387008806
Publisher: Springer
OUR PRICE:   $170.99  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: September 2003
Qty:
Annotation: This book deals with the underlying astrophysical mechanisms of the objects known as asymptotic giant branch stars -- the structures that occur during the dramatic period prior to a star's death. Over the past three decades, asymptotic giant branch stars have become a topic of their own, and the contributions to this volume all focus on these entities themselves, rather than their connections to other fields of astronomy. Among the many topics covered are new methods of high- quality infrared observation and the more detailed and realistic simulations made possible by increasingly fast computers. This collection should be useful to graduate students who work in the field, teachers who want to address the subject in their courses, and to astronomers from various backgrounds who are interested in the astrophysics of AGB stars.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Science | Physics - General
- Science | Astronomy
- Science | Physics - Astrophysics
Dewey: 523.88
LCCN: 2003045456
Series: Astronomy and Astrophysics Library
Physical Information: 1.28" H x 6.26" W x 9.42" (2.08 lbs) 562 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
This book deals with stars during a short episode before they undergo a ma- jor, and fatal, transition. Soon the star will stop releasing nudear energy, it will become a planetary nebula for abrief but poetic moment, and then it will turn into a white dwarf and slowly fade out of sight. Just before this dramatic change begins the star has reached the highest luminosity and the largest diameter in its existence, and while it is a star detectable in galaxies beyond the Local Group, its structure contains already the inconspicuous white dwarf it will become. It is called an "asymptotic giant branch star" or "AGB star". Over the last 30 odd years AGB stars have become a topic of their own although individual members of this dass had already been studied for cen- turies without realizing what they were. In the early evolution, so called "E-AGB"-phase, the stars are a bit bluer than, but otherwise very similar to, what are now called red giant branch stars (RGB stars). It is only in the sec- ond half of their anyhow brief existence that AGB stars differ fundamentally from RGB stars.