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Top : Science : Physics : Astrophysics
  • Computational Software@
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    See Also:

    Sites:
  • Above the Skies, An Exploration into Our Universe Through Animated Spectroscopy: A description at the layman level about the applications of spectroscopy in the investigation of the Solar System, with interactive diagrams
  • ADAF Theory: Accretion disk theory, mixing-length theory of convection, advection-dominated accretion flows.
  • AMASE - Astrophysics Multi-spectral Archive Search Engine: An online astrophysics catalog developed using object-oriented database technology to help researchers locate multi-mission data in the NASA archives.
  • Astronomy and Astrophysics for all...: you can find every thing you want on this topic in this site...
  • Astrophysics: E-Print archive since April of 1992.
  • Astrophysics and Astronomy: Introductory essays on astrophysics and astronomy.
  • Cambridge Relativity: Beginner's guide to all the basic concepts of Astrophysics written by active scientists at Cambridge University, UK.
  • Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics: Nationally supported research centre. Find out about current research, upcoming seminars and job opportunities.
  • Cause of the Characteristics of Quasars: Hypothesis which attempts to explain the characteristics of QSOs (Quasi-Steller Objects), a.k.a. quasars, as optical illusions created by gravitational lensing and other phenomena.
  • Contents: Accretion in astrophysics - active galactic nuclei, processes and dynamics.
  • Dyson Sphere: A list of frequently asked questions with answers.
  • Encyclopedia of Astronomy and Astrophysics: Comprehensive archive of explantory articles on all key Astrophysics topics, categorised and fully searchable; actively updated by the Institute of Physics.
  • Famous Astrophysicists: Profiles several prominent astrophysicists.
  • Fermilab Theoretical Astrophysics Group: Partially funded by a NASA Astrophysics Theory grant, find information about the group's past and future meetings.
  • Grand Challenge Problems in Computational Astrophysics: Research session at the Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics (IPAM), Los Angeles, CA, USA; 7 March - 10 June 2005.
  • Gravity is Cool, or, Why our Universe is Hospitable to Life: Text of the 1999 Oppenheimer lecture at UC Berkeley given by professor Freeman Dyson on the origin of life and other subjects.
  • Hands-On Astrophysics: Offers educational products that help students understand basic astronomy concepts.
  • Hyperspace: Site devoted to hyperspatial theories.
  • Interdisciplinary Astrophysics Group:
  • Living Reviews in Solar Physics: A peer-refereed, solely online journal publishing invited reviews covering all areas of solar and heliospheric physics research. Published by the Max Planck Institute for Aeronomy, Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany.
  • Modified Newtonian Dynamics: Overview of a controversial theory which is not generally accepted by the astrophysical community.
  • NASA Astrophysics Data System: Search system for abstracts in astrophysics, planetary sciences and solar physics.
  • Network Generator: Generates astrophysical reaction rates online using an extended database.
  • Nuclear Astrophysics Data: An area for providing nuclear data for astrophysics calculations, such as nucleosynthesis, stellar evolution, the Big Bang, and super-nova dynamics.
  • Olber's Paradox Solved: A well know problem from astrophysics, Olber's paradox (Why is the night sky dark?), solved. As well as Newton's related Gravity paradox.
  • Physics 208 - Introduction to Astrophysics: Course offered via The Electronic University, an educational outreach server at the University of Oregon.
  • Physics Topics - Teaching Notes: Teaching notes on celestial mechanics, classical mechanics, and stellar atmospheres.
  • Red Shift by Photon Decay: Author explains how Hubble's red shift of starlight spectra results from photon decay, proportional to traveled distance.
  • SIMBAD Astronomical Database: The SIMBAD astronomical database provides basic data, cross-identifications and bibliography for astronomical objects outside the solar system. SIMBAD can be queried by object name, coordinates, other criteria (filters), and lists of objects.
  • Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory: A research institute of the Smithsonian Institution headquartered in Cambridge, MA, where it is joined with the Harvard College Observatory (HCO) to form the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA).
  • Solar System - Celestial Mechanics: Presents ideas about the rotation of the sun and planets.
  • Space Physics Textbook: A free online textbook on space physics.
  • Temporal Annex: Information mostly on the fourth dimension and theoretical physics.
  • The Astrophysical Journal: Devoted to recent developments, discoveries, and theories in astronomy and astrophysics.
  • The Astrophysics Spectator: Articles published on this site cover current research in astronomy and astrophysics, describe our current understanding of astronomical phenomena, and comment on issues related to astronomical research.
  • The Electric Universe: Physics knows four forces; 20th-century scientists were convinced that one of those, the electric force, played no macroscopic role in the Universe; site explains why that is incorrect.
  • The NASA Astrophysics Data System: The Astrophysics Data System (ADS) is a NASA-funded project which maintains four bibliographic databases containing more than 4.0 million records: Astronomy and Astrophysics, Instrumentation, Physics and Geophysics, and preprints in Astronomy.
  • The Structure, Stability, and Dynamics of Self-Gravitating Systems: An interactive Astrophysics textbook from Louisiana State University.
  • The Titius-Bode Number Sequence Deciphered: An explanation of the Titius-Bode Law of planetary spacing.
  • THIS-Tuneable Heterodyne Infrared Spectrometer: THIS - instrument pages for the Tuneable Heterodyne Infrared Spectrometer developed by the University of Cologne. THIS is a transportable receiver designed for atmospheric and astrophysical observations in the mid infrared spectral region (7-28 µm).
  • Titius-Bode Law: Overview of the Titius-Bode Law.
  • University of Surrey - Department of Physics (Research): University of Surrey abridged version of the book "Astrophysics" , with many links to relevant material on astronomy, astrophysics and cosmology.
  • You Be the Astrophysicist: Interactive site for learning about astronomy and astrophysics.


     from Wikipedia

    Astrophysics

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Jump to: navigation, search
    NGC 4414, a typical spiral galaxy in the constellation Coma Berenices, is about 56,000 light-years in diameter and approximately 60 million light-years distant
    NGC 4414, a typical spiral galaxy in the constellation Coma Berenices, is about 56,000 light-years in diameter and approximately 60 million light-years distant

    Astrophysics is the branch of astronomy that deals with the physics of the universe, including the physical properties (luminosity, density, temperature, and chemical composition) of celestial objects such as stars, galaxies, and the interstellar medium, as well as their interactions. The study of cosmology is theoretical astrophysics at the largest scales where Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity plays a major role.

    Because astrophysics is a very broad subject, astrophysicists typically apply many disciplines of physics, including mechanics, electromagnetism, statistical mechanics, thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, relativity, nuclear and particle physics, and atomic and molecular physics. In practice, modern astronomical research involves a substantial amount of physics. The name of a university's department ("astrophysics" or "astronomy") often has to do more with the department's history than with the contents of the programs. Astrophysics can be studied at the bachelors, masters, and Ph.D. levels in aerospace engineering, physics, or astronomy departments at many universities.

    History

    Although astronomy is as ancient as recorded history itself, it was long separated from the study of physics. In the Aristotelian worldview, the celestial world tended towards perfection—bodies in the sky seemed to be perfect spheres moving in perfectly circular orbits—while the earthly world seemed uped to imperfection; these two realms were not seen as related.

    Aristarchus of Samos (c.310 – c.250 BC) first put forward the notion that the motions of the celestial bodies could be explained by assuming that the Earth and all the other planets in the Solar System orbited the Sun. Unfortunately, in the geocentric world of the time, Aristarchus' heliocentric theory was deemed outlandish and heretical, and for centuries, the apparently common-sense view that the Sun and other planets went round the Earth went basically unquestioned. Then an astronomer, named Nicolaus Copernicus, revived the heliocentric model in the 16th century. In 1609 Galileo Galilei discovered the four brightest moons of Jupiter, and documented their orbits about that planet, which contradicted the geocentric dogma of the Catholic Church of his time, and escaped serious punishment only by maintaining that his astronomy was a work of mathematics, not of natural philosophy (physics), and therefore purely abstract.

    The availability of accurate observational data (mainly from the observatory of Tycho Brahe) led to research into theoretical explanations for the observed behavior. At first, only empirical rules were discovered, such as Kepler's laws of planetary motion, discovered at the start of the 17th century. Later that century, Isaac Newton bridged the gap between Kepler's laws and Galileo's dynamics, discovering that the same laws that rule the dynamics of objects on Earth rule the motion of planets and the moon. Celestial mechanics, the application of Newtonian gravity and Newton's laws to explain Kepler's laws of planetary motion, was the first unification of astronomy and physics.

    After Isaac Newton published his book, Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica, maritime navigation was transformed. Starting around 1670, the entire world was measured using essentially modern latitude instruments and the best available clocks. The needs of navigation provided a drive for progressively more accurate astronomical observations and instruments, providing a background for ever more available data for scientists.

    At the end of the 19th century, it was discovered that, when decomposing the light from the Sun, a multitude of spectral lines were observed (regions where there was less or no light). Experiments with hot gases showed that the same lines could be observed in the spectra of gases, specific lines corresponding to unique chemical elements. In this way it was proved that the chemical elements found in the Sun (chiefly hydrogen) were also found on Earth. Indeed, the element helium was first discovered in the spectrum of the Sun and only later on Earth, hence its name. During the 20th century, spectroscopy (the study of these spectral lines) advanced, particularly as a result of the advent of quantum physics that was necessary to understand the astronomical and experimental observations.[1]

    See also:

    Observational astrophysics

    The Pleiades, an open cluster of stars observed in the constellation of Taurus. NASA photo
    The Pleiades, an open cluster of stars observed in the constellation of Taurus. NASA photo

    The majority of astrophysical observations are made using the electromagnetic spectrum.

    Other than electromagnetic radiation, few things may be observed from the Earth that originate from great distances. A few gravitational wave observatories have been constructed, but gravitational waves are extremely difficult to detect. Neutrino observatories have also been built, primarily to study our Sun. Cosmic rays consisting of very high energy particles can be observed hitting the Earth's atmosphere.

    Observations can also vary in their time scale. Most optical observations take minutes to hours, so phenomena that change faster than this cannot readily be observed. However, historical data on some objects is available spanning centuries or millennia. On the other hand, radio observations may look at events on a millisecond timescale (millisecond pulsars) or combine years of data (pulsar deceleration studies). The information obtained from these different timescales is very different.

    The study of our own Sun has a special place in observational astrophysics. Due to the tremendous distance of all other stars, the Sun can be observed in a kind of detail unparalleled by any other star. Our understanding of our own sun serves as a guide to our understanding of other stars.

    The topic of how stars change, or stellar evolution, is often modeled by placing the varieties of star types in their respective positions on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, which can be viewed as representing the state of a stellar object, from birth to destruction. The material composition of the astronomical objects can often be examined using:

    Theoretical astrophysics

    Nucleosynthesis
    Related topics

    edit


    Theoretical astrophysicists use a wide variety of tools which include analytical models (for example, polytropes to approximate the behaviors of a star) and computational numerical simulations. Each has some advantages. Analytical models of a process are generally better for giving insight into the heart of what is going on. Numerical models can reveal the existence of phenomena and effects that would otherwise not be seen.[2][3]

    Theorists in astrophysics endeavor to create theoretical models and figure out the observational consequences of those models. This helps allow observers to look for data that can refute a model or help in choosing between several alternate or conflicting models.

    Theorists also try to generate or modify models to take into account new data. In the case of an inconsistency, the general tendency is to try to make minimal modifications to the model to fit the data. In some cases, a large amount of inconsistent data over time may lead to total abandonment of a model.

    Topics studied by theoretical astrophysicists include: stellar dynamics and evolution; galaxy formation; large-scale structure of matter in the Universe; origin of cosmic rays; general relativity and physical cosmology, including string cosmology and astroparticle physics. Astrophysical relativity serves as a tool to gauge the properties of large scale structures for which gravitation plays a significant role in physical phenomena investigated and as the basis for black hole (astro)physics and the study of gravitational waves.

    Some widely accepted and studied theories and models in astrophysics, now included in the Lambda-CDM model are the Big Bang, Cosmic inflation, dark matter, and fundamental theories of physics.

    A few examples of this process:

    Physical process Experimental tool Theoretical model Explains/predicts
    Gravitation Radio telescopes Self-gravitating system Emergence of a star system
    Nuclear fusion Spectroscopy Stellar evolution How the stars shine and how metals formed
    The Big Bang Hubble Space Telescope, COBE Expanding universe Age of the Universe
    Quantum fluctuations Cosmic inflation Flatness problem
    Gravitational collapse X-ray astronomy General relativity Black holes at the center of Andromeda galaxy
    CNO cycle in stars

    Dark matter and dark energy are the current leading topics in astrophysics, as their discovery and controversy originated during the study of the galaxies.

    See also

    Wikibooks
    Wikibooks has a book on the topic of

    References

    1. ^ Frontiers of Astrophysics: Workshop Summary, H. Falcke, P. L. Biermann
    2. ^ H. Roth, A Slowly Contracting or Expanding Fluid Sphere and its Stability, Phys. Rev. (39, p;525–529, 1932)
    3. ^ A.S. Eddington, Internal Constitution of the Stars

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