Synopses & Reviews
This new series provides a vehicle for the publication of advances in planetary science research. It will include reference volumes and graduate-level books on the terrestrial and gas giant planets and their satellites, asteroids, comets, the interplanetary medium, and extra-solar planets. Topics will include interior, surface, and atmospheric features and processes, as well as the dynamic interaction between objects. These contributions by recognized authorities originate from a Royal Society discussion meeting held to review the most recent results obtained from the current generation of X-ray telescope research. The launch of Chandra and XMM-Newton has revolutionized research in X-ray astronomy over the past few years, and high quality X-ray observations now being made have had a major impact on topics ranging from protostars to cosmology. This book is a valuable reference for research astronomers and graduate students.
Synopsis
A review of the most recent results from the current generation of X-ray telescopes.
About the Author
Andrew Fabian is a Royal Society Research Professor at the Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge.Kenneth Pounds is Professor of Space Physics at the University of Leicester.Roger Blandford is currently Richard Chace Tolman Professor of Theoretical Astrophysics at Caltech, California.
Table of Contents
Preface; 1. Forty years on from Aerobee 150: a personal perspective K. Pounds; 2. X-ray spectroscopy of astrophysical plasmas S. M. Kahn, E. Behar, A. Kinkhabwala and D. W. Savin; 3. X-rays from stars M. Gudel; 4. X-ray observations of accreting white-dwarf systems M. Cropper, G. Ramsay, C. Hellier, K. Mukai, C. Mauche and D. Pandel; 5. Accretion flows in X-ray binaries C. Done; 6. Recent X-ray observations of supernova remnants C. R. Canizares; 7. Luminous X-ray sources in spiral and star-forming galaxies M. Ward; 8. Cosmological constraints from Chandra observations of galaxy clusters S. W. Allen; 9. Clusters of galaxies: a cosmological probe R. Mushotzky; 10. Obscured active galactic nuclei: the hidden side of the X-ray Universe G. Matt; 11. The Chandra Deep Field-North Survey and the cosmic X-ray background W. N. Brandt, D. M. Alexander, F. E. Bauer and A. E.Hornschemeier; 12. Hunting the first black holes G. Hasinger; 13. X-ray astronomy in the new millennium: a summary R. D. Blandford.