: Keith Robinson
: Spectroscopy: The Key to the Stars Reading the Lines in Stellar Spectra
: Springer-Verlag
: 9780387682884
: 1
: CHF 38.00
:
: Astronomie
: English
: 160
: Wasserzeichen
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

This is the first non-technical book on spectroscopy written specifically for practical amateur astronomers. It includes all the science necessary for a qualitative understanding of stellar spectra, but avoids a mathematical treatment which would alienate many of its intended readers. Any amateur astronomer who carries out observational spectroscopy and who wants a non-technical account of the physical processes which determine the intensity and profile morphology of lines in stellar spectra will find this is the only book written specially for them. It is an ideal companion to existing books on observational amateur astronomical spectroscopy.



Keith Robinson obtained a degree in physics from the University of Lancaster, and is a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Acknowledgements6
Contents7
Introduction10
Spectroscopy—A New Golden Age for Amateur Astronomy12
The Basic Stuff— Light Radiation and Atoms15
Behind the Lines— The Magnificent Energy Level Structure of an Atom33
Our Old Friend the Doppler Effect54
When Is a Spectral Line Not a Spectral Line?60
Stellar Spectra and That Famous Mnemonic78
Cool but not Smooth— The Molecular Spectra of Red Stars91
Glows in the Dark— Emission Lines and Nebulae101
GlowingVortices— Accretion Disks112
The P Cygni Profile and Friends126
Spectral Magnetism—The Zeeman Effect133
‘ How Much Gold in Them There Stars?’— The Curve of Growth147
Conclusion155
Appendix A— Powers of Ten156
Appendix B— Constants and Formulae160
Index163