The birth of modern astronomy:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cham
Springer
2018
|
Schriftenreihe: | Historical & cultural astronomy
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XLII, 565 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9783319990811 |
ISSN: | 2509-310X |
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100 | 1 | |a Habing, Harm J. |d 1937- |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)1146116500 |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a The birth of modern astronomy |c by Harm J. Habing |
264 | 1 | |a Cham |b Springer |c 2018 | |
300 | |a XLII, 565 Seiten |b Illustrationen, Diagramme |c 24 cm | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
490 | 0 | |a Historical & cultural astronomy |x 2509-310X | |
648 | 7 | |a Geschichte 1945-2015 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf | |
650 | 4 | |a Astronomy | |
650 | 4 | |a History | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Astronomie |0 (DE-588)4003311-9 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
689 | 0 | 0 | |a Astronomie |0 (DE-588)4003311-9 |D s |
689 | 0 | 1 | |a Geschichte 1945-2015 |A z |
689 | 0 | |5 DE-604 | |
776 | 0 | 8 | |i Erscheint auch als |n Online-Ausgabe |z 978-3-319-99082-8 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804180010713481216 |
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adam_text | CONTENTS
PART
1 1945-1984:
ANYTHING
GOES
1
2
1945-1960:
NEW
OPTICAL
INSTRUMENTS
AND
THE
BEGINNING
OF
RADIO
ASTRONOMY
.................................................
3
1.1
OPTICAL ASTRONOMY
......................................
3
THE 200-INCH HALE
TELESCOPE
AND
THE
48-INCH SCHMIDT
.........
3
PHOTO-ELECTRIC LIGHT
MEASUREMENTS
IN
PLACE
OF
PHOTOCHEMICAL
MEASUREMENTS
............................
7
THE `PALOMAR
OBSERVATORY
SKY SURVEY :
A PUBLIC
TREASURE
TROVE
........................................
8
1.2
THE RISE
OF
RADIO
ASTRONOMY
..............................
9
THE
EXISTENCE
OF
`RADIO
STARS
............................
13
THE FIRST IDENTIFICATIONS
OF
`RADIO
STARS
WITH
OPTICALLY
KNOWN
OBJECTS
........................................
17
THE 21-CM LINE: ANOTHER
NEW
FIELD
OF
RESEARCH
.............
20
SYNCHROTRON
RADIATION
..................................
23
1954 BREAKTHROUGH:
BAADE
AND
MINKOWSKI IDENTIFIED
THE
CYGNUS A
RADIO
SOURCE
.........................
26
1955:
RADIO
ASTRONOMY
GIVES
A
NEW VISION
OF
THE
UNIVERSE
....................................
28
1.3
THE
LEGACY
OF
THE
V2: X-RADIATION
FROM
THE
SUN
..............
29
SPUTNIK
AND
THE
SPACE
AGE
...............................
29
1.4
THE
REMARKABLE BEGINNING
OF
INFRARED ASTRONOMY
.............
31
REFERENCES
.................................................
32
1945-1959:
STARS
AND
GALAXIES
................................
33
2.1
STARS
..................................................
33
STARS
ON
THE
MAIN
SEQUENCE
..............................
36
THE
CHEMICAL
COMPOSITION
OF
STELLAR ATMOSPHERES
...........
36
IX
$
B1IOTHEK
DEUTSCHES
MUSEUM
Y
..
HLUENCHE A
X
CONTENTS
HOW
STARS
CHANGE
AS
THEY
BECOME OLDER:
THE
SOLUTION
TO THE
MYSTERY
OF
THE
RED
GIANTS
..........................
37
CLOSELY COUPLED BINARY STARS
AND
NOVAE;
FLOWS
OF
MATTER
AND
DISKS
.......................................
42
2.2 GALAXIES
...............................................
46
THE
CONCEPT
OF
`STELLAR POPULATIONS
.......................
46
THE MILKY WAY
........................................
47
M3 1,
THE
ANDROMEDA NEBULA
.............................
55
CLUSTERS
OF
GALAXIES
AND
SUPERCLUSTERS
......................
56
THE HUBBLE CONSTANT
AND
THE
AGE
OF
THE
UNIVERSE
.............
58
GAMOW S PREDICTION
OF A
REMNANT
OF
THE
BIG
BANG
............
59
`STEADY STATE
THEORY
AND
CONFLICT
.........................
59
REFERENCES
.................................................
63
3 1960-1974: DEVELOPING
NEW INSTRUMENTS
.......................
65
3.1 OPTICAL ASTRONOMY
......................................
65
PLANS
FOR NEW
AND
BIGGER TELESCOPES
......................
65
BELOW
THE
SEEING LIMIT
.................................
69
3.2 RADIO ASTRONOMY
.......................................
69
3.3 INFRARED
ASTRONOMY
......................................
75
3.4 X-RAY
AND
GAMMA ASTRONOMY
.............................
77
X-RAY ASTRONOMY
......................................
77
GAMMA RADIATION
......................................
81
3.5 COMPUTERS
AND
AUTOMATION
...............................
82
3.6 OBSERVATIONS
AT
HIGH
ALTITUDE
..............................
83
REFERENCES
.................................................
85
4 1960-1974:
STARS
...........................................
87
4.1 HOW
NATURE
CREATES
STARS
.................................
87
DARK CLOUDS
AND
MOLECULES
..............................
87
THE ORION NEBULA
AS
MODEL
..............................
94
T TAU
AND
HAEBE
STARS
.................................
96
ASSOCIATIONS
OF
YOUNG
STARS
..............................
97
COCOON STARS: STARS
UNDER
CONSTRUCTION
.....................
99
4.2 THE SPECTRUM
AND
THE
LIFE
COURSE
OF
STARS
...................
99
MODELS
FOR
THE
ATMOSPHERE
OF
STARS
........................
101
TRACKS
OF
EVOLUTION
IN
THE
HR DIAGRAM
.....................
102
THE LIFECYCLE
OF
LIGHT
STARS
SUCH AS
THE
SUN
.................
105
THE FORMATION
OF
`DUST PARTICLES
AND
THE
EMISSION
OF
GAS
BY
AGB
STARS
....................................
106
CHROMOSPHERE, CORONA
AND
MAGNETIC ACTIVITY
...............
107
SOLAR OSCILLATIONS
OR
HELIOSEISMOLOGY
......................
108
THE
LIFECYCLE
OF
THE
MID-WEIGHT
AND
THE
HEAVY
STARS
.........
108
CONTENTS XI
LOSS
OF
MASS
OF
HEAVY
MAIN
SEQUENCE
STARS
.................
109
WOLF-RAYET STARS,
AN
EVOLUTIONARY
ENIGMA
..................
110
VERY
HEAVY
STARS,
THE
HYPERGIANTS
.........................
111
.....................................
CLOSE
BINARY
STARS
113
4.3
DYING
AND
EXTINCT
STARS
..................................
115
WHITE
DWARFS
AND
PLANETARY
NEBULAE
.......................
115
...........................................
SUPERNOVAE
117
NEUTRON STARS
AND
BLACK
HOLES
............................
124
4.4
MYSTERIOUS
SOURCES
OF
GAMMA
RADIATION
....................
138
REFERENCES
.................................................
139
5
1960-1974:
GALAXIES
.........................................
141
5.1
GALAXIES
WITHOUT
STRONG
RADIO
RADIATION
.....................
141
HOW
ARE
GALAXIES
FORMED?
...............................
142
EVOLUTION
OF
GALAXIES
OR
THE
RELATION
BETWEEN
THE
AGE
OF A
STAR
AND
THE
CHEMICAL
ELEMENTS
IT CONTAINS
..........
143
GAS
IN
THE
DISK
OF
OUR
GALAXY
............................
144
CENTER
OF
OUR
GALAXY
AND
OF
THE
ANDROMEDA
NEBULA
...........
146
STABILITY
OF
THE
DISK
OF
OUR
GALAXY
AND
A
DARK
MATTER
HALO
.....
150
HOW
ARE
THE
SPIRAL
ARMS
MAINTAINED?
......................
150
INTRUDERS IN
OUR
GALAXY
..................................
151
COLLISIONS
AND
MERGERS
BETWEEN
GALAXIES
...................
154
M82:
MASSIVE
STAR
FORMATION?
............................
155
STARBURST GALAXIES
......................................
157
DO
WE
KNOW
ALL
THE
TYPES
OF
GALAXIES?
.....................
158
1974:
A
NEW PARADIGM-THE
EXISTENCE
OF
DARK MATTER
.......
158
5.2
RADIO GALAXIES
AND
OTHER
UNUSUAL
GALAXIES
...................
162
RADIO GALAXIES
........................................
164
SEYFERT GALAXIES
.......................................
165
QUASARS
..............................................
166
IN SUMMARY:
GALAXIES
WITH
ACTIVE
NUCLEI ( AGNS )
...........
173
5.3
LARGE
AND
LARGEST
SCALE
..................................
174
CLUSTERS
AND
SUPERCLUSTERS
...............................
174
COSMOLOGY:
THE
OUTLOOK
IN 1961
..........................
178
1965:
BACKGROUND
RADIATION:
A NEW FOUNDATION
FOR COSMOLOGY
....................................
180
AN
INDEPENDENT
ARGUMENT
ABOUT
THE
HISTORY
OF
THE
EARLY
UNIVERSE
........................................
185
FOCUSING ATTENTION
ON
THE
PAST:
HOW
WERE
THE
CLUSTERS
OF
GALAXIES FORMED?
....................................
186
REFERENCES
.................................................
188
6
1975-1984:
DEVELOPMENTS IN INSTRUMENTS
.......................
191
6.1
PLANNING
FOR
THE
FUTURE
...................................
191
6.2
RESEARCH
FROM
SPACE
.....................................
192
XII
CONTENTS
6.3 THE
GROWING SIGNIFICANCE
OF
COMPUTERS: AUTOMATION
...........
193
6.4 INNOVATIONS
IN
OPTICAL
ASTRONOMY
..........................
194
TELESCOPES
............................................
195
DETECTORS
.............................................
196
MORE PRECISE
SPECTROSCOPY
...............................
197
MULTIFIBER SPECTROSCOPY
.................................
197
6.5
RADIO
ASTRONOMY
.......................................
198
6.6
INFRARED ASTRONOMY
......................................
202
AIRCRAFT, BALLOONS
AND
SATELLITES
...........................
202
THE CURIOUS AFCRL CATALOG
.............................
203
IRAS,
THE
`INFRARED ASTRONOMICAL SATELLITE
..................
204
6.7
THE
FAR ULTRAVIOLET
......................................
208
6.8
X-RAY RADIATION
........................................
209
6.9 GAMMA RADIATION
.......................................
209
6.10
GEV
AND
TEV PHOTONS
...................................
211
REFERENCES
.................................................
212
7
1975-1984:
STARS
...........................................
213
7.1
STAR FORMATION
.........................................
213
DARK
CLOUDS
AND
COMPACTION
.............................
213
YOUNG
STARS
AND
DARK
CLOUDS
.............................
218
HIGH
SPEEDS,
`JETS
AND
HERBIG-HARO OBJECTS
................
219
DISKS
OF
`DUST
AROUND YOUNG STARS:
REMAINS
OF
A
PLANET-FORMING
PROCESS?
................................
221
7.2
STARS
ON
THE
MAIN
SEQUENCE
...............................
225
LIGHT
STARS
ON
THE
MAIN SEQUENCE:
ACTIVITY
..................
225
THE EXPULSION
OF
MATTER
BY
HIGH-MASS
STARS
................
227
BLOWING
BUBBLES
.......................................
230
THE MOST
MASSIVE
STARS
AND
THE
WOLF-RAYET STARS
.............
231
X-RADIATION
FROM
HIGH-MASS
STARS
........................
233
7.3
THE END
AND WHAT
REMAINS
...............................
233
DISINTEGRATING
LOW-MASS
STARS
AND
THE
FORMATION
OF
WHITE DWARFS
.........................................
234
SUPERNOVAE
...........................................
237
WHITE DWARFS
..........................................
242
NEUTRON STARS
AND
STELLAR BLACK
HOLES
......................
246
X-RAY STARS:
A SUMMARY
FROM
1985
.......................
251
ACCRETION DISKS
.......................................
257
NEW: THE SS433 MICROQUASAR
............................
258
NEW: SGR,
THE
SOFT GAMMA REPEATER
......................
260
REFERENCES
.................................................
262
8 1975-1984: GALAXIES
AND
THE
UNIVERSE
..........................
265
8.1
NEW
PHYSICS
...........................................
265
GRAVITATIONAL LENSES
....................................
265
INVISIBLE
OR
`DARK
MATTER
................................
268
CONTENTS
XIII
8.2
GALAXIES
WITHOUT
AN
ACTIVE
NUCLEUS
.........................
273
ELLIPTICAL
GALAXIES
......................................
273
........................
................
SPIRAL
GALAXIES
275
8.3
RADIO
GALAXIES: GALAXIES
WITH
AN
ACTIVE
NUCLEUS
..............
279
SPEEDS
GREATER
THAN THE
SPEED
OF
LIGHT?
....................
279
MASSIVE
BLACK HOLES
....................................
280
8.4
MERGERS,
CANNIBALISM
AND
MASSIVE
STAR FORMATION
.............
282
8.5
DEEPER
IN
THE
UNIVERSE
...................................
283
MORE
RED
SHIFT
MEASUREMENTS
AND
THE
DISCOVERY
OF
THE
COSMIC WEB
.......................................
284
QUASARS
..............................................
287
THE
QUASAR
POPULATION
PAST
AND
PRESENT
....................
289
BETWEEN GALAXIES:
THE
LYMAN
FOREST
.......................
290
CLUSTERS
OF
GALAXIES
....................................
290
THE
BUTCHER-OEMLER
EFFECT
...............................
294
8.6
STRUCTURE IN
THE
UNIVERSE
..................................
296
BACKGROUND
RADIATION
..................................
296
INFLATION!
.............................................
296
FIRST
ATTEMPTS
AT
AN
EXPLANATION
OF
THE
`STRUCTURE
............
297
REFERENCES
.................................................
299
PART
II
1985-2015:
LONG-PLANNED
EXPLORATION
9
1985-2015:
PLANS, PEOPLE,
ORGANIZATIONS
AND
INSTRUMENTS
.........
303
9.1
PEOPLE
AND
THEIR
PLANS
....................................
303
WHAT
THE
ASTRONOMERS
WANTED
............................
303
ORGANIZATIONS
AND
FINANCES
..............................
306
SOCIOLOGICAL
OBSERVATIONS
...............................
307
INTERNET,
COMPUTERS,
SOFTWARE
............................
307
LEGACY
PROGRAMS
......................................
308
9.2
OPTICAL
TELESCOPES
......................................
310
HUBBLE
SPACE
TELESCOPE
.................................
310
MORE
AND
LARGER
TELESCOPES
IN DRY
CONDITIONS
...............
311
SHARPENING
THE
IMAGES:
ADAPTIVE OPTICS
....................
312
EXTREMELY
LARGE TELESCOPES
..............................
312
ROBOT
TELESCOPES
AND
SURVEYS
............................
314
9.3
SATELLITES FOR
ASTROMETRY:
HIPPARCOS
AND
GAIA
................
315
9.4
INFRARED
TELESCOPES
......................................
316
GROUND-BASED
INFRARED
TELESCOPES
AND
SURVEYS
..............
317
TELESCOPES
IN
SPACE
....................................
319
9.5
MILLIMETER
AND
SUB-MILLIMETER TELESCOPES
....................
321
RADIATION
AT
WAVELENGTHS BETWEEN
1
CM
AND
1
MM
............
321
RADIATION
AT
WAVELENGTHS
BETWEEN
I
AND
0.1
MM
.............
322
XIV
CONTENTS
9.6
RADIO ASTRONOMY
.......................................
323
SINGLE-DISH TELESCOPES
..................................
323
APERTURE
SYNTHESIS
TELESCOPES
............................
326
1994:
SKA,
A
GRAND
NEW
PLAN
...........................
326
9.7
ASTRONOMY
OF
THE
EXTREME
ULTRAVIOLET
AND
X-RADIATION
.........
327
EXTREME ULTRAVIOLET
TELESCOPES
...........................
327
X-RAY TELESCOPES
......................................
327
9.8
DETECTING PHOTONS
WITH
THE
HIGHEST ENERGY
...................
331
DETECTING
GAMMA RADIATION
..............................
331
VHE:
PHOTONS
OF
VERY HIGH ENERGY
........................
332
REFERENCES
.................................................
335
10
1995-2015:
MAIN-SEQUENCE
STARS
AND
FAILED STARS
...............
337
10.1
BROWN
DWARFS
OR
FAILED
STARS
.............................
337
PREDICTING, NAMING
AND
DISCOVERING
BROWN DWARFS
..........
337
MORE BROWN
DWARFS
...................................
340
THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS
ABOUT
BROWN
DWARFS
.............
341
SPECTRA
AND
THE
TYPES
OF
BROWN DWARFS
...................
342
THE
ATMOSPHERE
......................................
342
CIRCUMSTELLAR
DISKS
AND
PLANETS
..........................
343
ACTIVITY
.............................................
343
HOW
BROWN
DWARFS
WERE
FORMED
.........................
344
10.2
LIGHT STARS
............................................
344
THE EXTERIOR
OF
THE
SUN
.................................
344
BELOW
THE
SURFACE
OF
THE
SUN
............................
347
HELIOSEISMOLOGY
......................................
348
NEUTRINOS
FROM
THE
SUN
.................................
351
OTHER LIGHT
STARS
THAN
THE
SUN:
ASTEROSEISMOLOGY
............
352
10.3
MASSIVE STARS
.........................................
355
WHERE
ARE
THEY?
......................................
355
THE DEVELOPMENT
OF
MASSIVE
STARS IS
STILL
NOT
FULLY
UNDERSTOOD
......................................
355
REFERENCES
.................................................
358
11
1995-2015:
SOMETHING
COMPLETELY
NEW: EXOPLANETS
..............
361
11.1 HOW
TO
FIND PLANETS
OF
STARS
OTHER
THAN
THE
SUN?
..............
361
THE INITIAL DISCOVERIES
.................................
361
MORE DETECTION TECHNIQUES
.............................
366
SPACE
TELESCOPES:
COROT
AND
KEPLER
.....................
368
11.2
THE
SOLAR SYSTEM
AS AN
EXAMPLE
..........................
370
THE
KANT-LAPLACE THEORY
OF
THE
ORIGIN
OF
OUR
SOLAR
SYSTEM
...
370
LATE HEAVY BOMBARDMENT;
MIGRATION; WATER
ON
EARTH;
THE
NICE MODEL
.......................................
371
WARNING:
THE
SOLAR SYSTEM
IS SMALL-AT
LEAST IN
ASTRONOMICAL TERMS
...................................
372
CONTENTS
XV
11.3
PLANET FORMATION
.......................................
373
FROM
DUST
PARTICLES
TO
PLANETESIMALS
......................
373
THE STRUCTURE
OF
PLANET-FORMING
DISKS
....................
374
THE
PROBLEM
OF
THE
HOT
JUPITERS
..........................
375
PLANET
ATMOSPHERES
...................................
375
SUMMARY: WHAT HAVE
WE
LEARNED
ABOUT
THE
PLANETARY
SYSTEMS?
....................................
376
REFERENCES
.................................................
379
12
1985-2015:
THE
FORMATION
OF
STARS
............................
381
12.1
SUCCESSIVE
STAGES
IN
THE
FORMATION
OF
LOW-MASS
STARS
.........
381
FINALLY:
A COMPREHENSIVE
THEORY
........................
381
JETS
ARE
COMMON
PHENOMENA
............................
384
TTAU
STARS
HAVE
AN
ACTIVE
SURFACE
AND
OFTEN EMIT
LOTS
OF
X-RADIATION
.......................................
384
SILHOUETTED
DISKS
.....................................
385
STAGES
OF
STAR
FORMATION
INDICATED
BY MOLECULAR
SPECIES
......
387
12.2
MOLECULES
GALORE
......................................
389
THE
TREASURES
OF
THE
COLLECTOR
...........................
389
SMALL
GRAINS
OF
DUST,
THE
FORMATION
OF
ICE
AND
COMPLEX
MOLECULES
...................................
389
12.3
THE
FORMATION
OF
HIGH-MASS
STARS
.........................
392
HOW
A
HIGH-MASS
BINARY
STAR
WAS
DISCOVERED
IN
STATU
NASCENDI
.......................................
392
12.4
THE
CHANGING MORPHOLOGY
OF
CLOUDS
......................
398
A
LIFECYCLE
..........................................
398
DENSER
AND
DARKER
CLUMPS-SNAKES
......................
399
THE
IMPORTANCE
OF
FILAMENTS
............................
400
12.5
THE
FORMATION
OF
STAR
CLUSTERS,
ILLUSTRATED
BY
THE
W3/W4/W5
REGION
....................................
402
REFERENCES
.................................................
405
13
1995-2015:
WHAT
IS
LEFT:
COMPACT
OBJECTS
......................
407
13.1
WHITE
DWARFS
.........................................
408
13.2
NEUTRON
STARS
.........................................
413
PULSARS
..............................................
413
PULSAR
WINDS
.........................................
414
BLACK
WIDOWS
........................................
416
MAGNETARS,
APX
AND
SGR
..............................
416
A
SUMMARY
OF
THE
DIFFERENT
TYPES
OF
NEUTRON
STARS
..........
418
13.3
X-RAY
BINARY
STARS:
THE HOSTS
FOR
NEUTRON
STARS
AND
BLACK
HOLES
...........................................
419
COMMON
PROPERTIES
OF
X-RAY
BINARY
STARS
.................
419
BLACK
HOLES
..........................................
425
ULTRALUMINOUS
X-RAY SOURCES
(ULXS)
....................
429
REFERENCES
.................................................
430
XVI
CONTENTS
14 1995-2015:
TRANSIENT
PHENOMENA, MERGERS
AND
EXPLOSIONS
........
433
14.1 MICROLENSING: SEARCHING FOR
INVISIBLE OBJECTS
................
434
14.2 PSEUDO
SUPERNOVAE
OR
SUPERNOVA IMPOSTORS
.................
436
14.3 RED NOVAE: ARE
WE SEEING
A
`COMMON
ENVELOPE EVENT?
.......
437
14.4 RADIO
AND
INFRARED
TRANSIENTS
.............................
441
FAST
RADIO BURSTS
.....................................
441
14.5 CORE-COLLAPSE
SUPERNOVAE
...............................
442
MANY
MORE
SUPERNOVAE
FOUND,
AND
THE
COMPLEXITY
INCREASES
...
442
THE STAR BEFORE
THE
SUPERNOVA
EXPLOSION
..................
444
SN1987A:
FINALLY
A
SUPERNOVA
CLOSE
BY
...................
445
THEORETICAL
CONSIDERATIONS FOR
THE
COLLAPSE
OF
THE
CORE
OF
A
SUPERNOVA
.......................................
451
14.6 GAMMA
RAY BURSTS
(OR
GRBS)
............................
453
14.7 TYPE
LA SUPERNOVAE
.....................................
457
14.8 GRAVITY
WAVES
.........................................
460
REFERENCES
.................................................
461
15
1985-1995:
GALAXIES
.........................................
463
15.1
ELLIPTICAL GALAXIES
......................................
463
A NUMBER
OF VERY
DIFFERENT
TYPES
........................
463
CHARACTERISTICS
OF
THE
STELLAR POPULATION
....................
464
X-RAYS
PROVE
THE
PRESENCE
OF
DARK
MATTER
IN
AND
AROUND
ELLIPTICAL
GALAXIES
...............................
465
15.2 DISK
GALAXIES
.........................................
465
DISK GALAXIES:
THE FORMATION
OF
NEW
STARS
................
466
THE CENTER
OF OUR
MILKY
WAY
AND
THE
ANDROMEDA
NEBULA: VERY MASSIVE
BLACK HOLES?
.......................
466
STARS
FROM
PREHISTORY
..................................
469
CHEMICAL
ABUNDANCES IN
OTHER
SPIRAL
GALAXIES
..............
473
15.3 DWARF GALAXIES
........................................
473
15.4 MERGERS
AND
STARBURSTS
..................................
474
TOO
CLOSE
TO
BIG BROTHER
................................
475
THE MAGELLANIC STREAM
AND
THE
STRUCTURE
OF
THE
SMALL
MAGELLANIC CLOUD
.....................................
476
M82
................................................
477
SUPER
WINDS
.........................................
478
ARP 220:
AN
UNUSUAL
CASE
..............................
480
15.5
ACTIVE
NUCLEI
OF
GALAXIES
(AGNS)
.........................
481
QUASARS
.............................................
481
UNIFICATION
..........................................
483
MASSIVE BLACK HOLES IN
THE
CENTER
OF
GALAXIES
..............
485
DISKS
AROUND
MASSIVE BLACK HOLES
.......................
487
15.6
CLUSTERS
OF
GALAXIES
....................................
487
GRAVITATIONAL
LENSES
...................................
489
15.7
LARGE SCALE
AND
EVEN
LARGER:
COSMOLOGY
...................
492
VOIDS
AND
WALLS
.......................................
492
CONTENTS
XVII
INTERGALACTIC
MATTER,
THE
LYMAN
WOOD
.....................
493
HOW FAR
CAN
WE
LOOK
BACK INTO
THE
PAST?
...................
494
15.8
BACKGROUND
RADIATION
..................................
496
COSMOGONY,
OR
HOW
DID
THE
STRUCTURE
OF
THE
UNIVERSE
COME
ABOUT?
.........................................
499
.............................................
....
REFERENCES
502
16
1995-2005:
GALAXIES
AND ANOTHER
REVOLUTION
....................
505
16.1
THE
CONCORDANCE
MODEL
OF
THE
UNIVERSE
....................
506
THE
EXPANSION
OF
THE
UNIVERSE
IS
ACCELERATING
..............
506
`ANISOTROPIES
AND
FUNDAMENTAL
PROPERTIES
OF
THE
UNIVERSE
....
510
A
`CONCORDANT MODEL
OF
THE
UNIVERSE
....................
513
16.2
ACDM:
A SUCCESSFUL
THEORY
FOR
THE
ORIGIN
OF
THE
COSMIC
WEB
AND
ITS STARS
AND
GALAXIES
.....................
514
16.3
THE
EXISTENCE
OF
SUPERMASSIVE
BLACK
HOLES
AND
THEIR
RELATION
TO THE
SURROUNDING
GALAXY
........................
519
SUPERMASSIVE
BLACK
HOLES
DO
EXIST
......................
520
AN
UNEXPECTED
RELATIONSHIP
BETWEEN
GALAXIES
AND
MASSIVE
BLACK HOLES
...................................
522
16.4
LARGE
SURVEYS
.........................................
524
THE
SLOAN DIGITAL
SKY
SURVEY
............................
524
2
DFRGS: THE `TWO-DIMENSIONAL
FIBER
GALAXY
......................................
REDSHIFT
SURVEY
530
OTHER
SURVEYS
........................................
532
REFERENCES
.................................................
533
17
2005-2015:
HARVEST TIME
....................................
535
17.1
SEARCHING FOR
HIGH-Z
GALAXIES
............................
536
THE
CFHT SURVEY
.....................................
538
LYMAN-BREAK
GALAXIES:
Z=
2-3
..........................
539
FURTHER
THAN
Z=3.....................................
540
17.2
STAR
FORMATION
THROUGH
THE
AGES
..........................
540
GAS
CLOUDS
AT
HIGH
Z
...................................
540
NEWLY FORMED
STARS
...................................
541
17.3
CLUSTERS
GALORE
........................................
544
THE
BULLET CLUSTER:
UNEXPECTED
EVIDENCE
OF
THE
EXISTENCE
OF
DARK
MATTER
...............................
545
17.4
EARLY
TIMES:
RE-IONIZATION
...............................
546
QUASARS
AND
RE-IONIZATION
..............................
546
RE-IONIZATION
AND
THE
21
CM
LINE
.........................
548
17.5
BARYONIC
ACOUSTIC OSCILLATIONS
............................
550
REFERENCES
.................................................
552
EPILOGUE
......................................................
555
INDEX
.........................................................
557
Contents Part I 1 2 1945-1984: Anything Goes 1945-1960: New Optical Instruments and the Beginning of Radio Astronomy...................................................................................................... 1.1 Optical Astronomy ............................................................................... The 200-inch Hale Telescope and the 48-inch Schmidt................. Photo-Electric Light Measurements in Place of Photochemical Measurements ......................................................... The ‘Palomar Observatory Sky Survey’: A Public Treasure Trove ................................................................................... 1.2 The Rise of Radio Astronomy............................................................. The Existence of ‘Radio Stars’......................................................... The First Identifications of ‘Radio Stars’ with Optically Known Objects................................................................................... The 21 -cm Line: Another New Field of Research......................... Synchrotron Radiation ...................................................................... 1954 Breakthrough: Baade and Minkowski Identified the Cygnus A Radio Source ................................................... 1955 : Radio Astronomy Gives a New Vision of the Universe .......................................................................... 1.3 The Legacy of the V2: X-Radiation from the Sun ............................ Sputnik and the Space Age................................................................
1.4 The Remarkable Beginning of Infrared Astronomy.......................... References ...................................................................................................... 1945-1959: Stars and Galaxies.................................................................. 2.1 Stars....................................................................................................... Stars on the Main Sequence ............................................................. The Chemical Composition of Stellar Atmospheres ..................... 3 3 3 7 8 9 13 17 20 23 26 28 29 29 31 32 33 33 36 36 ix
x Contents How Stars change as they become Older: the Solution to the Mystery of the Red Giants ................................................. Closely Coupled Binary Stars and Novae; Flows of Matter and Disks............................................................................ 2.2 Galaxies............................................................................................ The Concept of ‘Stellar Populations’ ........................................... The Milky Way.............................................................................. М31, the Andromeda Nebula ........................................................ Clusters of Galaxies and Superclusters......................................... The Hubble Constant and the Age of the Universe........................ Gamow’s Prediction of a Remnant of the Big Bang...................... ‘Steady State Theory’ and Conflict................................................ References ................................................................................................ 42 46 46 47 55 56 58 59 59 63 3 1960-1974: Developing New Instruments ............................................ 3.1 Optical Astronomy .......................................................................... Plans for New and Bigger Telescopes .......................................... Below the Seeing Limit ................................................................ 3.2 Radio Astronomy ............................................................................ 3.3 Infrared
Astronomy.......................................................................... 3.4 X-Ray and Gamma Astronomy........................................................ X-Ray Astronomy.......................................................................... Gamma Radiation.......................................................................... 3.5 Computers and Automation ............................................................ 3.6 Observations at High Altitude.......................................................... References ................................................................................................ 65 65 65 69 69 75 77 77 81 82 83 85 4 1960-1974: Stars .................................................................................... 4.1 How Nature Creates Stars............................................................... Dark Clouds and Molecules.......................................................... The Orion Nebula as Model.......................................................... T Tau and HAeBe Stars ................................................................ Associations of Young Stars.......................................................... Cocoon Stars: Stars under Construction........................................ 4.2 The Spectrum and the Life Course of Stars .................................... Models for the Atmosphere of Stars.............................................. Tracks of Evolution in the HR Diagram........................................ The Lifecycle of Light Stars such as the
Sun................................ The Formation of ‘Dust Particles’ and the Emission of Gas by AGB Stars...................................................................... Chromosphere, Corona and Magnetic Activity ............................ Solar Oscillations or Helioseismology.......................................... The Lifecycle of the Mid-Weight and the Heavy Stars ................ 87 87 87 94 96 97 99 99 101 102 105 37 106 107 108 108
Contents xi Loss of Mass of Heavy Main Sequence Stars.................................. 109 Wolf-Rayet Stars, an Evolutionary Enigma.................................... 110 Very Heavy Stars, the Hypergiants................................................... Ill Close Binary Stars ............................................................................. 113 4.3 Dying and Extinct Stars ........................................................................ 115 White Dwarfs and Planetary Nebulae............................................... 115 Supernovae......................................................................................... 117 Neutron Stars and Black Holes......................................................... 124 4.4 Mysterious Sources of Gamma Radiation ........................................ 138 References ........................................................................................................ 139 5 1960-1974: Galaxies....................................................................................... 141 5.1 Galaxies without Strong Radio Radiation.............................................141 How are Galaxies formed?............................................................... 142 Evolution of Galaxies or the Relation between the Age of a Star and the Chemical Elements it Contains................... 143 Gas in the Disk of our Galaxy ......................................................... 144 Center of our Galaxy and of the Andromeda Nebula..................... 146 Stability of the Disk of our Galaxy and a Dark Matter
Halo........ 150 How are the Spiral Arms Maintained? ............................................. 150 Intruders in our Galaxy...................................................................... 151 Collisions and Mergers between Galaxies...................................... 154 M82: Massive Star Formation?......................................................... 155 Starburst Galaxies............................................................................... 157 Do we know all the Types of Galaxies?.......................................... 158 1974: A New Paradigm—the Existence of Dark Matter ............. 158 5.2 Radio Galaxies and other Unusual Galaxies.........................................162 Radio Galaxies ................................................................................... 164 Seyfert Galaxies ................................................................................. 165 Quasars................................................................................................ 166 In Summary: Galaxies with Active Nuclei (‘AGNs’)..................... 173 5.3 Large and Largest Scale .........................................................................174 Clusters and Superclusters ................................................................ 174 Cosmology: the Outlook in 1961 ..................................................... 178 1965: Background Radiation: A New Foundation for Cosmology .......................................................................... 180 An Independent Argument about the History of the Early Universe
................................................................................... 185 Focusing Attention on the Past: How were the Clusters of Galaxies formed? ........................................................................... 186 References ...................................................................................................... 188 6 1975-1984: Developments in Instruments................................................. 191 6.1 Planning for the Future...........................................................................191 6.2 Research from Space.............................. 192
Contents xii 6.3 6.4 The Growing Significance of Computers: Automation....................... 193 Innovations in Optical Astronomy .......................................................194 Telescopes........................................................................................... 195 Detectors............................................................................................. 196 More Precise Spectroscopy............................................................... 197 Multifiber Spectroscopy................................................................... 197 6.5 Radio Astronomy .................................................................................. 198 6.6 Infrared Astronomy................................................................................ 202 Aircraft, Balloons and Satellites....................................................... 202 The Curious AFCRL Catalog........................................................... 203 IRAS, the‘Infrared Astronomical Satellite’................................... 204 6.7 The Far Ultraviolet ................................................................................ 208 6.8 X-Ray Radiation.................................................................................... 209 6.9 Gamma Radiation.................................................................................. 209 6.10 GEV and TEV Photons..........................................................................211 References
........................................................................................................212 7 1975-1984: Stars ...........................................................................................213 7.1 Star Formation .......................................................................................213 Dark Clouds and Compaction........................................................... 213 Young Stars and Dark Clouds........................................................... 218 High Speeds,‘Jets’and Herbig-Haro Objects ............................... 219 Disks of ‘Dust’ Around Young Stars: Remains of a Planet-Forming Process? ................................................................. 221 7.2 Stars on the Main Sequence ................................................................. 225 Light Stars on the Main Sequence: Activity.................................... 225 The Expulsion of Matter by High-Mass Stars ................................ 227 Blowing Bubbles................................................................................ 230 The Most Massive Stars and the Wolf-Rayet Stars......................... 231 X-Radiation from High-Mass Stars ................................................. 233 7.3 The End and what Remains ................................................................. 233 Disintegrating Low-Mass Stars and the Formation of White Dwarfs ..................................................................................... 234
Supernovae......................................................................................... 237 White dwarfs....................................................................................... 242 Neutron Stars and Stellar Black Holes............................................ 246 X-Ray Stars: A Summary from 1985 ............................................... 251 Accretion Disks ................................................................................. 257 New: The SS433 Microquasar ......................................................... 258 New: SGR, the Soft Gamma Repeater............................................. 260 References ........................................................................................................262 8 1975-1984: Galaxies and the Universe....................................................... 265 8.1 New Physics .......................................................................................... 265 Gravitational Lenses.......................................................................... 265 Invisible or ‘Dark’ Matter.................................................................. 268
xiii Contents 8.2 Galaxies Without an Active Nucleus.....................................................273 Elliptical Galaxies.............................................................................. 273 Spiral Galaxies ................................................................................... 275 8.3 Radio Galaxies: Galaxies with an Active Nucleus..............................279 Speeds Greater than the Speed of Light?........................................ 279 Massive Black Holes.......................................................................... 280 8.4 Mergers, Cannibalism and Massive Star Formation............................282 8.5 Deeper in the Universe .......................................................................... 283 More Red shift Measurements and the Discovery of the Cosmic Web ................................................................................. 284 Quasars............................................................................................... 287 The Quasar Population Past and Present ........................................ 289 Between Galaxies: the Lyman Forest............................................... 290 Clusters of Galaxies .......................................................................... 290 The Butcher-Oemler Effect............................................................... 294 8.6 Structure in the Universe........................................................................296 Background Radiation ...................................................................... 296
Inflation! ............................................................................................. 296 First Attempts at an Explanation of the ‘Structure’ ....................... 297 References ......................................................................................................299 Part II 9 1985-2015: Long-Planned Exploration 1985-2015: Plans, People, Organizations and Instruments.................303 9.1 People and their Plans............................................................................ 303 What the Astronomers wanted ......................................................... 303 Organizations and Finances ............................................................. 306 Sociological Observations ............................................................... 307 Internet, Computers, Software ......................................................... 307 Legacy Programs .............................................................................. 308 9.2 Optical Telescopes ................................................................................ 310 Hubble Space Telescope.................................................................... 310 More and Larger Telescopes in Dry Conditions.............................. 311 Sharpening the Images: Adaptive Optics ........................................ 312 Extremely Large Telescopes............................................................. 312 Robot Telescopes and Surveys ......................................................... 314 9.3 Satellites for Astrometry: Hipparcos and
GAIA.................................. 315 9.4 Infrared Telescopes.................................................................................316 Ground-Based Infrared Telescopes and Surveys ............................ 317 Telescopes in Space .......................................................................... 319 9.5 Millimeter and Sub-Millimeter Telescopes.......................................... 321 Radiation at Wavelengths between 1 cm and 1 mm....................... 321 Radiation at Wavelengths between 1 and 0.1 mm ......................... 322
xiv Contents 9.6 Radio Astronomy .................................................................................. 323 Single-Dish Telescopes...................................................................... 323 Aperture Synthesis Telescopes......................................................... 326 1994: SKA, a Grand New Plan....................................................... 326 9.7 Astronomy of the Extreme Ultraviolet and X-Radiation ...................327 Extreme Ultraviolet Telescopes ....................................................... 327 X-Ray Telescopes.............................................................................. 327 9.8 Detecting Photons with the Highest Energy........................................331 Detecting Gamma Radiation............................................................. 331 VHE: Photons of Very High Energy................................................. 332 References ......................................................................................................335 10 1995-2015: Main-Sequence Stars and Failed Stars ............................. 337 10.1 Brown Dwarfs or Failed Stars........................................................... 337 Predicting, Naming and DiscoveringBrown Dwarfs.................... 337 More Brown Dwarfs........................................................................ 340 Theoretical Considerations about Brown Dwarfs......................... 341 Spectra and the Types of Brown Dwarfs ...................................... 342 The Atmosphere
.............................................................................. 342 Circumstellar Disks and Planets..................................................... 343 Activity.............................................................................................. 343 How Brown Dwarfs were formed................................................... 344 10.2 Light Stars............................................................................................. 344 The Exterior of the Sun.................................................................... 344 Below the Surface of the Sun......................................................... 347 Helioseismology.............................................................................. 348 Neutrinos from the Sun.................................................................... 351 Other Light Stars than the Sun: Asteroseismology....................... 352 10.3 Massive Stars ....................................................................................... 355 Where are they? .............................................................................. 355 The Development of Massive Stars is still not fully understood .............................................................................. 355 References ...................................................................................................... 358 11 1995-2015: Something Completely New: Exoplanets............................361 11.1 How to Find Planets of Stars other than the Sun?..............................361 The Initial Discoveries
.................................................................... 361 More Detection Techniques ........................................................... 366 Space Telescopes: CoRoT and Kepler........................................... 368 11.2 The Solar System as an Example....................................................... 370 The Kant-Laplace Theory of the Origin of our Solar System .. . 370 Late Heavy Bombardment; Migration; Water on Earth; the Nice Model................................................................................. 371 Warning: the Solar System is Small—at least in Astronomical Terms ........................................................................ 372
Contents XV 11.3 Planet Formation.................................................................................... 373 From Dust Particles to Planetesimals............................................. 373 The Structure of Planet-Forming Disks ......................................... 374 The Problem of the Hot Jupiters..................................................... 375 Planet Atmospheres ......................................................................... 375 Summary: What have we learned about the Planetary Systems?........................................................................... 376 References ........................................................................................................379 12 1985-2015: The Formation of Stars............................................................381 12.1 Successive Stages in the Formation of Low-Mass Stars................... 381 Finally: A Comprehensive Theory ................................................. 381 Jets are common Phenomena......................................................... 384 TTau Stars have an Active Surface and often emit lots of X-Radiation ................................................................................. 384 Silhouetted Disks ............................................................................. 385 Stages of Star Formation indicated by Molecular Species........... 387 12.2 Molecules Galore .................................................................................389 The Treasures of the
Collector....................................................... 389 Small Grains of Dust, the Formation of Ice and Complex Molecules ........................................................................ 389 12.3 The Formation of High-Mass Stars..................................................... 392 How a High-Mass Binary Star was discovered in Statu Nascendi ................................................................................. 392 12.4 The Changing Morphology of Clouds ...............................................398 A Lifecycle....................................................................................... 398 Denser and Darker Clumps—Snakes............................................. 399 The Importance of Filaments ......................................................... 400 12.5 The Formation of Star Clusters, illustrated by the W3/W4/W5 Region ............................................................................ 402 References ........................................................................................................405 13 1995-2015: What is left:Compact Objects................................................ 407 13.1 White Dwarfs .......................................................................................408 13.2 Neutron Stars .......................................................................................413 Pulsars............................................................................................... 413 Pulsar
Winds..................................................................................... 414 Black Widows................................................................................... 416 Magnetars, APX and SGR .............................................................. 416 A Summary of the Different Types of Neutron Stars................... 418 13.3 X-Ray Binary Stars: The Hosts for Neutron Stars and Black Holes........................................................................................... 419 Common Properties of X-Ray Binary Stars.................................. 419 Black Holes....................................................................................... 425 Ultraluminous X-Ray Sources (ULXs) ........................................ 429 References ........................................................................................................430
xvi Contents 14 1995-2015: Transient Phenomena, Mergers and Explosions.................433 14.1 Microlensing: Searching for Invisible Objects................................. 434 14.2 Pseudo Supernovae or Supernova Impostors ....................................436 14.3 Red Novae: Are we seeing a ‘Common Envelope Event?’.............437 14.4 Radio and Infrared Transients............................................................. 441 Fast Radio Bursts ............................................................................. 441 14.5 Core-Collapse Supernovae ..................................................................442 Many more Supernovae found, and the Complexity increases ... 442 The Star before the Supernova Explosion .................................... 444 SN1987A: Finally a Supernova close by ...................................... 445 Theoretical Considerations for the Collapse of the Core of a Supernova ................................................................................. 451 14.6 Gamma Ray Bursts (or GRBs)........................................................... 453 14.7 Type Ia Supernovae...............................................................................457 14.8 Gravity Waves....................................................................................... 460 References ........................................................................................................ 461 15 1985-1995: Galaxies....................................................................................... 463 15.1 Elliptical
Galaxies.................................................................................463 A Number of very different Types ................................................. 463 Characteristics of the Stellar Population......................................... 464 X-Rays prove the Presence of Dark Matter in and around Elliptical Galaxies................................................................ 465 15.2 Disk Galaxies ....................................................................................... 465 Disk Galaxies: The Formation of New Stars ................................ 466 The Center of our Milky Way and the Andromeda Nebula: Very Massive Black Holes?............................................... 466 Stars from Prehistory ...................................................................... 469 Chemical Abundances in other Spiral Galaxies............................ 473 15.3 Dwarf Galaxies..................................................................................... 473 15.4 Mergers and Starbursts........................................................................ 474 Too close to Big Brother.................................................................. 475 The Magellanic Stream and the Structure of the Small Magellanic Cloud............................................................................. 476 M82 .................................................................................................... 477 Super Winds ..................................................................................... 478 ARP 220: an unusual
Case.............................................................. 480 15.5 Active Nuclei of Galaxies (AGNs)..................................................... 481 Quasars.............................................................................................. 481 Unification ....................................................................................... 483 Massive Black Holes in the Center of Galaxies............................ 485 Disks around Massive Black Holes ............................................... 487 15.6 Clusters of Galaxies .............................................................................487 Gravitational Lenses......................................................................... 489 15.7 Large Scale and Even Larger: Cosmology........................................ 492 Voids and Walls................................................................................. 492
Contents xvii Intergalactic Matter, the Lyman Wood........................................... 493 How far can we look back into the Past? ...................................... 494 15.8 Background Radiation ....................................................................... 496 Cosmogony, or How did the Structure of the Universe come about? ..................................................................................... 499 References ........................................................................................................ 502 16 1995-2005: Galaxies and another Revolution...........................................505 16.1 The Concordance Model of the Universe...........................................506 The Expansion of the Universe is Accelerating ............................ 506 ‘Anisotropies’ and Fundamental Properties of the Universe .... 510 A ‘Concordant’ Model of the Universe ......................................... 513 16.2 ACDM: A Successful Theory for the Origin of the Cosmic Web and its Stars and Galaxies .............................................514 16.3 The Existence of Supermassive Black Holes and their Relation to the surrounding Galaxy ................................................... 519 ‘Supermassive Black Holes’ do exist............................................. 520 An unexpected Relationship between Galaxies and Massive Black Holes........................................................................ 522 16.4 Large Surveys....................................................................................... 524 The
Sloan Digital Sky Survey......................................................... 524 2 dFRGS: The ‘Two-Dimensional Fiber Galaxy Redshift Survey’ ............................................................................... 530 Other Surveys................................................................................... 532 References ........................................................................................................ 533 17 2005-2015: Harvest Time ............................................................................ 535 17.1 Searching for High-z Galaxies ........................................................... 536 The CFHT Survey............................................................................. 538 Lyman-Break Galaxies: z = 2-3..................................................... 539 Further than z=3 ............................................................................. 540 17.2 Star Formation through the Ages ....................................................... 540 Gas Clouds at high z........................................................................ 540 Newly formed Stars ........................................................................ 541 17.3 Clusters Galore..................................................................................... 544 The Bullet Cluster: Unexpected Evidence of the Existence of Dark Matter ................................................................ 545 17.4 Early Times: Re-ionization..................................................................546 Quasars and Re-
ionization .............................................................. 546 Re-ionization and the 21 cm Line................................................... 548 17.5 Baryonic Acoustic Oscillations........................................................... 550 References ........................................................................................................ 552 Epilogue................................................................................................................. 555 Index 557
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Habing, Harm J. 1937- |
author_GND | (DE-588)1146116500 |
author_facet | Habing, Harm J. 1937- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Habing, Harm J. 1937- |
author_variant | h j h hj hjh |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV045868306 |
classification_rvk | UB 2484 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1100119207 (DE-599)HBZHT020020069 |
dewey-full | 530.01 |
dewey-hundreds | 500 - Natural sciences and mathematics |
dewey-ones | 530 - Physics |
dewey-raw | 530.01 |
dewey-search | 530.01 |
dewey-sort | 3530.01 |
dewey-tens | 530 - Physics |
discipline | Physik |
era | Geschichte 1945-2015 gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte 1945-2015 |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV045868306 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T08:28:58Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9783319990811 |
issn | 2509-310X |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-031251652 |
oclc_num | 1100119207 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-703 DE-210 DE-706 DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-703 DE-210 DE-706 DE-12 |
physical | XLII, 565 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme 24 cm |
psigel | BSB_NED_20200811 |
publishDate | 2018 |
publishDateSearch | 2018 |
publishDateSort | 2018 |
publisher | Springer |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Historical & cultural astronomy |
spelling | Habing, Harm J. 1937- Verfasser (DE-588)1146116500 aut The birth of modern astronomy by Harm J. Habing Cham Springer 2018 XLII, 565 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Historical & cultural astronomy 2509-310X Geschichte 1945-2015 gnd rswk-swf Astronomy History Astronomie (DE-588)4003311-9 gnd rswk-swf Astronomie (DE-588)4003311-9 s Geschichte 1945-2015 z DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-3-319-99082-8 Digitalisierung Deutsches Museum application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=031251652&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=031251652&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Habing, Harm J. 1937- The birth of modern astronomy Astronomy History Astronomie (DE-588)4003311-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4003311-9 |
title | The birth of modern astronomy |
title_auth | The birth of modern astronomy |
title_exact_search | The birth of modern astronomy |
title_full | The birth of modern astronomy by Harm J. Habing |
title_fullStr | The birth of modern astronomy by Harm J. Habing |
title_full_unstemmed | The birth of modern astronomy by Harm J. Habing |
title_short | The birth of modern astronomy |
title_sort | the birth of modern astronomy |
topic | Astronomy History Astronomie (DE-588)4003311-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Astronomy History Astronomie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=031251652&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=031251652&sequence=000003&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT habingharmj thebirthofmodernastronomy |
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