Galactic Astronomy
By (Author) James Binney
By (author) Michael Merrifield
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
16th November 1998
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
523.112
Paperback
816
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
1134g
A definitive treatment of the phenomenology of galaxies - this volume takes account of advances in the field. The text draws on observations of both our own galaxy, the Milky Way, and of external galaxies. The two sources are complementary, since the former tend to be highly detailed but difficult to interpret, while the latter are typically poorer in quality but conceptually simpler to understand. Binney and Merrifield introduce all astronomical concepts necessary to understand the properties of galaxies, including co-ordinate systems, magnitudes and colours, the phenomenology of stars, the theory of stellar and chemical evolution, and the measurement of astronomical distances. The book's core covers the phenomenology of external galaxies, star clusters in the Milky Way, the interstellar media of external galaxies, gas in the Milky Way, the structure and kinematics of stellar components of the Milky Way, and the kinematics of external galaxies. Throughout, the book emphasizes the observational basis for current understanding of galactic astronomy.
Winner of the 2013 Eddington Medal, Royal Astronomical Society
James Binney is Professor of Physics and a Fellow of Merton College, University of Oxford. His books include Galactic Dynamics (Princeton), which he coauthored with Scott Tremaine. Michael Merrifield is University Lecturer in Astronomy at the University of Southampton.