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The analysis of starlight : two centuries of astronomical spectroscopy / John B. Hearnshaw, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2014Edition: Second editionDescription: 1 online resource (xvi, 367 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781139382779 (ebook)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 522/.6709 23
LOC classification:
  • QB465 .H43 2014
Online resources:
Contents:
1. Introduction to spectroscopy, spectroscopes and spectrographs -- 2. The analysis of sunlight: the earliest pioneers -- 3. The foundations of special analysis: from Fraunhofer to Kirchhoff -- 4. Early pioneers in stellar spectroscopy -- 5. Spectral classification at Harvard -- 6. The doppler effect -- 7. The interpretation of stellar spectra and the birth of astrophysics -- 8. Spectral classification: from the Henry Draper catalogue to the MK-system and beyond -- 9. Spectroscopy of peculiar stars -- 10. Quantitative analysis of stellar spectra -- 11. Some miscellaneous topics in stellar spectroscopy: individual stars of note, stellar chromospheres, interstellar lines and ultraviolet spectroscopy from space -- Appendix A. List of solar lines designated by letters by Fraunhofer and others -- Appendix B. Vogel's first spectral classification scheme of 1874.
Summary: First published in 1986, this is the story of the analysis of starlight by astronomical spectroscopy. Beginning with Joseph Fraunhofer's discovery of spectral lines in the early nineteenth century, this new edition continues the story through to the year 2000. In addition to the key discoveries, it presents the cultural and social history of stellar astrophysics by introducing the leading astronomers and their struggles, triumphs and disagreements. Basic concepts in spectroscopy and spectral analysis are included, so both observational and theoretical aspects are described, in a non-mathematical framework. This new edition covers the final decades of the twentieth century, with its major advances in stellar astrophysics: the discovery of extrasolar planets, new classes of stars and the observation of the ultraviolet spectra of stars from satellites. The in-depth coverage makes it essential reading for graduate students working in stellar spectroscopy, professional and amateur astronomers, and historians of science.
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Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).

1. Introduction to spectroscopy, spectroscopes and spectrographs -- 2. The analysis of sunlight: the earliest pioneers -- 3. The foundations of special analysis: from Fraunhofer to Kirchhoff -- 4. Early pioneers in stellar spectroscopy -- 5. Spectral classification at Harvard -- 6. The doppler effect -- 7. The interpretation of stellar spectra and the birth of astrophysics -- 8. Spectral classification: from the Henry Draper catalogue to the MK-system and beyond -- 9. Spectroscopy of peculiar stars -- 10. Quantitative analysis of stellar spectra -- 11. Some miscellaneous topics in stellar spectroscopy: individual stars of note, stellar chromospheres, interstellar lines and ultraviolet spectroscopy from space -- Appendix A. List of solar lines designated by letters by Fraunhofer and others -- Appendix B. Vogel's first spectral classification scheme of 1874.

First published in 1986, this is the story of the analysis of starlight by astronomical spectroscopy. Beginning with Joseph Fraunhofer's discovery of spectral lines in the early nineteenth century, this new edition continues the story through to the year 2000. In addition to the key discoveries, it presents the cultural and social history of stellar astrophysics by introducing the leading astronomers and their struggles, triumphs and disagreements. Basic concepts in spectroscopy and spectral analysis are included, so both observational and theoretical aspects are described, in a non-mathematical framework. This new edition covers the final decades of the twentieth century, with its major advances in stellar astrophysics: the discovery of extrasolar planets, new classes of stars and the observation of the ultraviolet spectra of stars from satellites. The in-depth coverage makes it essential reading for graduate students working in stellar spectroscopy, professional and amateur astronomers, and historians of science.

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