Observing and Measuring Visual Double Stars (eBook)
XIV, 419 Seiten
Springer New York (Verlag)
978-1-4614-3945-5 (ISBN)
The second edition of Observing and Measuring Visual Double Stars (2004) is the definitive book for those who are serious about this fascinating aspect of astronomy. It deals with equipment (you can start modestly with commercial or even home-made instruments), observing methods using binoculars upwards to advanced instrumentation and techniques, including speckle interferometry. The astronomy of double stars, including orbital calculation, is given its own section.
This second edition of this popular book contains a significant amount of completely new material, inspired by the work done by observers - particularly in the USA - since the first edition was published. This includes the use of the Internet to carry out astrometry (precise astronomical measurement) using existing survey plates and films. The new edition contains an excellent guide to sketching double stars, a topic not previously covered. In addition, there is information about how to image double stars of unequal brightness, always a difficult matter but now somewhat easier because of advances in hardware and image-processing software. Nearly all of the chapters and tables have been updated.
The CD-ROM that accompanied the first edition of Observing and Measuring Visual Double Stars is replaced by access to the Springer Extras web site. The extra information includes the complete Washington Double Star and Tycho-2 Catalogs. There is an extensive database of astrometric, double-and multiple-star formation, including positions, orbits, separations, and magnitudes, and a software suite that implements many of the calculations and equations featured in the book.
R.W. Argyle works in the Astronomy Survey unit of the Institute of Astronomy at the University of Cambridge in England, where he has been Senior Research Associate since 1998. He is a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society (since 1977) and Director of the Double Star Section, the Webb Society (since 1970). He edited the first edition of Observing and Measuring Visual Double Stars (2004). He is the author of many articles for the Deep-sky Observer of the Webb Society. He writes a monthly column on double stars in Astronomy Now, the UK astronomical journal. He is co-author of research papers on binary stars in refereed astronomical journals.
The second edition of Observing and Measuring Visual Double Stars (2004) is the definitive book for those who are serious about this fascinating aspect of astronomy. It deals with equipment (you can start modestly with commercial or even home-made instruments), observing methods using binoculars upwards to advanced instrumentation and techniques, including speckle interferometry. The astronomy of double stars, including orbital calculation, is given its own section.This second edition of this popular book contains a significant amount of completely new material, inspired by the work done by observers - particularly in the USA - since the first edition was published. This includes the use of the Internet to carry out astrometry (precise astronomical measurement) using existing survey plates and films. The new edition contains an excellent guide to sketching double stars, a topic not previously covered. In addition, there is information about how to image double stars of unequal brightness, always a difficult matter but now somewhat easier because of advances in hardware and image-processing software. Nearly all of the chapters and tables have been updated.The CD-ROM that accompanied the first edition of Observing and Measuring Visual Double Stars is replaced by access to the Springer Extras web site. The extra information includes the complete Washington Double Star and Tycho-2 Catalogs. There is an extensive database of astrometric, double-and multiple-star formation, including positions, orbits, separations, and magnitudes, and a software suite that implements many of the calculations and equations featured in the book.
R.W. Argyle works in the Astronomy Survey unit of the Institute of Astronomy at the University of Cambridge in England, where he has been Senior Research Associate since 1998. He is a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society (since 1977) and Director of the Double Star Section, the Webb Society (since 1970). He edited the first edition of Observing and Measuring Visual Double Stars (2004). He is the author of many articles for the Deep-sky Observer of the Webb Society. He writes a monthly column on double stars in Astronomy Now, the UK astronomical journal. He is co-author of research papers on binary stars in refereed astronomical journals.
Foreword.- Preface.- Chapter 1: More than one Sun.- Chapter 2: Why observe double stars?.- Chapter 3: The Observation of Binocular Double Stars.- Chapter 4: Double Star Sketching.- Chapter 5: Multiple stars and planets.- Chapter 6: Is the Sun a double star?.- Chapter 7: The orbital elements of a Visual Binary Star.- Chapter 8: Orbit computation.- Chapter 9: Ten famous double stars.- Chapter 10: The resolution of a telescope.- Chapter 11: Reflecting telescopes and double star astronomy.- Chapter 12: Simple techniques of measurement.- Chapter 13: Filar micrometer.- Chapter 14: The Diffraction Grating Micrometer.- Chapter 15: CCD Camera Observations.- Chapter 16: Lucky Imaging.- Chapter 17: The DSLR Camera.- Chapter 18: Astrometric Speckle Interferometry for the Amateur.-Chapter 19: Internet astrometry.- Chapter 20: How to measure the minima of eclipsing binaries; an amateur's experiences.- Chapter 21: Lunar Occultations.- Chapter 22: What the amateur can contribute.- Chapter 23: Some active amateur double star observers.- Chapter 24: An observing session.- Chapter 25: Some Useful Formulae.- Chapter 26: Star atlases and software.- Chapter 27: Catalogues.- Chapter 28: Publication of results.- Chapter 29: Brief biographies.- Chapter 30: References and Bibliography.- Index.
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 6.9.2012 |
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Reihe/Serie | The Patrick Moore Practical Astronomy Series | The Patrick Moore Practical Astronomy Series |
Zusatzinfo | XIV, 419 p. |
Verlagsort | New York |
Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Naturwissenschaften ► Physik / Astronomie ► Astronomie / Astrophysik |
Technik | |
ISBN-10 | 1-4614-3945-0 / 1461439450 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-4614-3945-5 / 9781461439455 |
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