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An Introduction to Close Binary Stars

This 2001 book was the first to provide a pedagogical and comprehensive introduction to binary stars for advanced students.

R. W. Hilditch (Author)

9780521241069, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 12 March 2001

392 pages, 157 b/w illus. 5 tables 31 exercises
24.4 x 17 x 2.2 cm, 0.82 kg

'This is a comprehensive companion book for courses on stellar astrophysics, and stellar structures and evolution.' Aslib Book Guide

Binary systems of stars are as common as single stars. They are of fundamental importance because they allow stellar masses, radii and luminosities to be measured directly, and explain a host of diverse and energetic phenomena including X-ray binaries, cataclysmic variables, novae, symbiotic stars, and some types of supernovae. This 2001 book was the first to provide a pedagogical and comprehensive introduction to binary stars. It combines theory and observations at all wavelengths to develop a unified understanding of binaries of all categories. It comprehensively reviews methods for calculating orbits, the Roche model, ideas about mass exchange and loss, methods for analysing light curves, the masses and dimensions of different binary systems, and imaging the surfaces of stars and accretion structures. This book provides a thorough introduction to the subject for advanced undergraduate and graduate students. Researchers will also find this to be an authoritative reference.

Preface
1. Close binary stars - a historical review
2. Two-body orbital motion
3. The determination of orbits
4. Perturbations, the Roche model, and mass exchange/loss
5. Photometry and polarimetry - stellar sizes and shapes
6. Masses and absolute dimensions for stars in binaries
7. The imaging of stellar surfaces and accretion structures
Problems
Outline answers
Bibliography.

Subject Areas: Astrophysics [PHVB], Physics [PH], Galaxies & stars [PGM]

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