Freshly Printed - allow 4 days lead
Planetary Nebulae (IAU S323)
Multi-Wavelength Probes of Stellar and Galactic Evolution
Planetary nebulae are important laboratories for understanding processes in different cosmic environments and for studying stellar and galactic evolution.
Xiaowei Liu (Edited by), Letizia Stanghellini (Edited by), Amanda Karakas (Edited by)
9781107169913, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 28 September 2017
426 pages
25.5 x 17.9 x 2 cm, 0.83 kg
Planetary nebulae, glowing shells of ionized gas, are the spectacular products of the evolution of low- and intermediate-mass stars. For astrophysicists, they are important laboratories for the understanding of atomic, molecular, dust, and plasma processes in different cosmic environments; they enable the exploration of the fundamental physics of single and binary star evolution including nucleosynthesis, rotation, mass transfer and loss, and magnetic fields; and they help trace stellar populations, the kinematics, and chemistry of galaxies including our own galaxy, the Milky Way. This volume reviews the current status of this vibrant research field in the form of invited reviews, contributed talks, and posters presented at the IAU Symposium 323. It should be of interest to researchers and advanced students interested in this field and in related fields, including stellar physics, the interstellar medium, and Galactic and extragalactic astronomy.
1. A census of the post-AGB stars and PN populations
2. PNe as a versatile laboratory I
3. PNe as a versatile laboratory II
4. From the AGB to the WD stellar phases
5. The connection between binary evolution and PN phenomena
6. PNe in nearby galaxies and chemical evolution
7. PNe outside of the local group
8. First results from Gaia and looking to the future
Poster presentations
Author index.
Subject Areas: Astrophysics [PHVB], Astronomy, space & time [PG]