Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Remarkable progress in understanding stellar phenomena has occurred in recent decades. This textbook discusses in some detail those equations and physical processes that are of greatest relevance to stellar interiors and atmospheres and closely related astrophysics. Motivation for writing this book came from my own research interests and also from teaching graduate astrophysics courses, especially a course on stellar interiors at the University of Maryland. Although the text emphasizes physical principles, astronomical results and unresolved issues are also described.
Introductory material on the history of stellar astrophysics, astronomical observations, star formation and stellar evolution are given in Chapter 1, which also contains a discussion of spectroscopic binaries. Differences between single and binary star evolution have explained a number of interesting observations that are described further in later chapters.
Stellar interiors is one of the most fundamental subjects in astrophysics. Although complicated physical processes are decisive in explaining some predictions of stellar model calculations, the basic principles of stellar interiors do not require a comprehensive knowledge of them. Chapter 2 gives an introductory discussion of the physics and equations of stellar interiors. It also includes a short description of numerical methods.
Statistical physics provides the theoretical basis for much of stellar astrophysics. In Chapter 3 those aspects of statistical physics that are of greatest relevance are developed in some detail. Stellar opacities play a vital role in interpreting observations. Absorption processes are described in Chapter 4.
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