Pulsars as Physics Laboratories
Roger D. Blandford(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 30. December 1993
Book
Hardback
204 pages
978-0-19-853983-4 (ISBN)
Description
The discovery 25 years ago of the remarkable objects which came to be known as pulsars, and their identification as neutron stars, fulfilled a prediction made more than 30 years earlier. Over 550 pulsars are now known, almost all detected at radio frequencies. Their pulse periods range from 1.5 ms to several seconds. Most pulsars are single neutron stars but, in an important subset, the pulsar is in a binary orbit with a companion star. Observations have revealed a wealth of detail about the structure and evolution of pulsars and the pulse-emission process, giving new insight into the behaviour of matter in the presence of extreme gravitational and electromagnetic fields. Pulsars have unique physical properties which make them nearly ideal as probes for a wide range of physical studies.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
tabl., fig.
Weight
580 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-853983-4 (9780198539834)
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Schweitzer Classification
Content
1. The Pulsar phenomenon; 2. Physics and neutron star interiors; 3. Glitches as probes of neutron star interiors; 4. Pulsars as probes of newtonian dynamical systems; 5. Pulsar demography and neutron star astrophysics; 6. Pulsar magnetospheres; 7. Coherent radio emission from pulsars; 8. Pulsar timing and relativistic gravity; 9. Binary pulsars as probes of relativistic gravity; 10. The physics of pulsar scintillation; 11. Pulsar scintillation as a physical tool; 12. Pulsars and physics