Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of acronyms
- Foreword
- Chapter 1 Birth and childhood of X-ray astronomy
- Chapter 2 X-ray emission and interaction with matter
- Chapter 3 Tools and techniques
- Chapter 4 Solar system X-rays
- Chapter 5 X-ray absorption and scattering in the Interstellar Medium
- Chapter 6 Active stellar coronae
- Chapter 7 Early-type stars
- Chapter 8 Supernova explosions and their remnants
- Chapter 9 Neutron stars, pulsars, pulsar wind nebulae, and more supernova remnants
- Chapter 10 Cataclysmic variable stars
- Chapter 11 X-ray binaries
- Chapter 12 Black-hole X-ray binaries
- Chapter 13 Normal and starburst galaxies
- Chapter 14 Active galactic nuclei
- Chapter 15 Clusters of galaxies
- Chapter 16 The diffuse X-ray background
- Chapter 17 Gamma-ray bursts
- Index
- Plate section
Foreword
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of acronyms
- Foreword
- Chapter 1 Birth and childhood of X-ray astronomy
- Chapter 2 X-ray emission and interaction with matter
- Chapter 3 Tools and techniques
- Chapter 4 Solar system X-rays
- Chapter 5 X-ray absorption and scattering in the Interstellar Medium
- Chapter 6 Active stellar coronae
- Chapter 7 Early-type stars
- Chapter 8 Supernova explosions and their remnants
- Chapter 9 Neutron stars, pulsars, pulsar wind nebulae, and more supernova remnants
- Chapter 10 Cataclysmic variable stars
- Chapter 11 X-ray binaries
- Chapter 12 Black-hole X-ray binaries
- Chapter 13 Normal and starburst galaxies
- Chapter 14 Active galactic nuclei
- Chapter 15 Clusters of galaxies
- Chapter 16 The diffuse X-ray background
- Chapter 17 Gamma-ray bursts
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
This is a book about X-ray astronomy. We take a historical perspective because this is how we saw it happen and because this gives a feeling for the observable universe. In a table listing all members of a class of objects, the brightest source does not stand out, but in the first observation, it is a splendid object and remembered fondly by those involved in the discovery.
Some 50 years ago X-rays from stars other than our Sun were unknown and unexpected by all but a few pioneering scientists. Since the discovery of cosmic X-rays in 1962 the field has grown at an astonishing rate. Since the first edition of this book, published in 1995 and including results from the first X-ray telescopes, the sensitivity of X-ray observations has increased dramatically. In 1999 the Chandra and XMM X-ray observatories were launched and, in 10 years of operation, have produced X-ray images of comparable angular resolution to those obtained by the largest ground-based observatories. More importantly, X-ray spectroscopy of sufficient resolution to allow comparison with spectra at other wavelengths has become possible. Technical improvements in dispersive spectroscopy mean that high resolution X-ray spectra of faint sources have become available for the first time. This has helped propel X-ray astronomy to its rightful place as a sub-discipline of astronomy, where a knowledge of truly multiwavelength results is necessary for the study of any class of objects. This book, however, is about X-rays.
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- Information
- Exploring the X-ray Universe , pp. xiii - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010