Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Like many textbooks, this one arose out of the author's frustration. While I believe that there are many excellent journal articles, scholarly reviews, conference proceedings, and even a few advanced monographs on active galactic nuclei (AGNs), there is no single place where a beginning student can get the very basic background necessary to get the most out of the more research-oriented material. The aims of this book are thus actually twofold: first, I wanted to summarize our basic, if marginal, understanding of AGNs at what I believe is a level of familiarity that should be expected of doctoral-level students in astronomy, and second, I wanted to provide a fairly comprehensive introduction to AGNs that would serve as a gateway to the more specialized review articles and research literature for students who have research ambitions in the field. The intended audience is thus advanced undergraduate and beginning graduate students in astronomy and astrophysics. Fairly complete undergraduate preparation in physics is assumed, as is some basic understanding of extragalactic astronomy.
I have tried to focus on basic issues and avoid minutiae and arcane issues, even though some of these undoubtedly will turn out to be tremendously important in the future. I have attempted to compile the basic background material that is by and- large familiar to researchers in AGNs, although I caution that it is by no means complete: research-level competence in the field of AGNs will require a good deal more background than is given here.
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