BOOKREVIEWS N° R1027
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Published in 2008 by CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Address : The Edinburgh
Building, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 2RU, UK
Telephone : 01223
312393
Fax : 01223 315052
Internet : www.cambridge.org
ISBN :
978-0-521-87472-4 - 590 pages – hardback
Massive stars
are short lived and rare, yet they help to shape our Universe. They shine
brightly in ultraviolet light, die in supernova explosions which enrich
galaxies in elements such as oxygen, and sometimes their demise is associated
with intense bursts of gamma-rays. IAU Symposium 250 charts our current
understanding of the life, evolution and death of massive stars, both within
the local Universe and when the Universe was in its infancy. These proceedings
comprise over 50 extensive review and contributed papers spanning five
contemporary themes: atmospheres of massive stars; the physics and evolution of
massive stars; massive stars in the nearby Universe; hydrodynamics and feedback
from massive stars in galaxy evolution; and massive stars as probes of the
early Universe. Summaries of special sessions on magnetic massive stars and
massive stars at low metallicity are also included.
• Provides an
insight into a fast-developing field of contemporary astrophysics from
appropriate experts covering a range of overlapping fields • Coverage spans the
properties and evolution of massive stars; core-collapse supernovae; young,
massive star clusters; stellar populations of high-redshift galaxies; and
gamma-ray bursts • Includes summaries of special sessions on magnetic massive
stars and massive stars at low metallicity

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