: Geoff McNamara
: Clocks in the Sky The Story of Pulsars
: Praxis
: 9780387765624
: 1
: CHF 31.90
:
: Astronomie: Allgemeines, Nachschlagewerke
: English
: 190
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

Pulsars are rapidly spinning neutron stars, the collapsed cores of once massive stars that ended their lives as supernova explosions.

In this book, Geoff McNamara explores the history, subsequent discovery and contemporary research into pulsar astronomy. The story of pulsars is brought right up to date with the announcement in 2006 of a new breed of pulsar, Rotating Radio Transients (RRATs), which emit short bursts of radio signals separated by long pauses. These may outnumber conventional radio pulsars by a ratio of four to one. Geoff McNamara ends by pointing out that, despite the enormous success of pulsar research in the second half of the twentieth century, the real discoveries are yet to be made including, perhaps, the detection of the hypothetical pulsar black hole binary system by the proposed Square Kilometre Array - the largest single radio telescope in the world.

Contents5
List of Illustrations7
Acknowledgments9
List of Abbreviations and Acronyms11
Prologue: Buried in the data12
Introduction13
1 'Life13
1613
2 '1932'26
3 'A New Window'37
4 'Scruff'49
5 'What makes pulsars tick?'64
6 'The Crab'76
7 'Optical Pulsars'89
8 'The Searchers'104
9 'Two by Two'116
10 'Faster'127
11 'Globular Pulsars'134
12 'Pulsar Planets'142
13 'Magnetars'151
14 'Seeing Double'160
15 'Of Multibeams and RRATs'168
16 'The Future'177
Appendix: Recollections of a Scientific Error183
Index189