<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Physical cosmology / Stellar astronomy / Galaxies / Celestial mechanics / Lenticular galaxy / Active galactic nucleus / Star / Stellar kinematics / Cosmic distance ladder / Astronomy / Space / Galactic astronomy
Date: 2012-07-02 03:10:42
Physical cosmology
Stellar astronomy
Galaxies
Celestial mechanics
Lenticular galaxy
Active galactic nucleus
Star
Stellar kinematics
Cosmic distance ladder
Astronomy
Space
Galactic astronomy

Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc. 000, 1–Printed 2 JulyMN LATEX style file v2.2)

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 1,51 MB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Digital Spectroscopy— - Light and a Laptop One of the most vexing tasks in teaching astronomy has always been spectroscopy. Stellar spectroscopy, laboratory spectroscopy, in-the-field spectroscopy, doesn’t matter. It

Digital Spectroscopy— - Light and a Laptop One of the most vexing tasks in teaching astronomy has always been spectroscopy. Stellar spectroscopy, laboratory spectroscopy, in-the-field spectroscopy, doesn’t matter. It

DocID: 1uN6D - View Document

Astronomy Assessment and TPS Questions: Stellar Evolution In a main sequence star, gravitational collapse is balanced by convection of stellar material from the core.

DocID: 1tMJF - View Document

The After SDSS-IV, Letter of Intent: Andrew Tkachenko on behalf of the KU Leuven Gaia/K2/TESS/PLATO2.0 team (Institute of Astronomy, KU Leuven, Belgium) High precision stellar astrophysics: an avant-guard look at the ast

The After SDSS-IV, Letter of Intent: Andrew Tkachenko on behalf of the KU Leuven Gaia/K2/TESS/PLATO2.0 team (Institute of Astronomy, KU Leuven, Belgium) High precision stellar astrophysics: an avant-guard look at the ast

DocID: 1swJt - View Document

Stellar Spectroscopy The Message of Starlight Travis A. Rector National Optical Astronomy Observatories 950 N. Cherry Ave., Tucson, AZUSA email:

Stellar Spectroscopy The Message of Starlight Travis A. Rector National Optical Astronomy Observatories 950 N. Cherry Ave., Tucson, AZUSA email:

DocID: 1rXhv - View Document

197 Candidates and 104 Validated Planets in K2’s First Five Fields Ian J. M. Crossfield1,2 , David R. Ciardi3 , Erik A. Petigura4,5 , Evan Sinukoff6,7 , Joshua E. Schlieder8,9 , Andrew W. Howard6 , Charles A. Beichman3

197 Candidates and 104 Validated Planets in K2’s First Five Fields Ian J. M. Crossfield1,2 , David R. Ciardi3 , Erik A. Petigura4,5 , Evan Sinukoff6,7 , Joshua E. Schlieder8,9 , Andrew W. Howard6 , Charles A. Beichman3

DocID: 1roBc - View Document