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E-raamat: Guide to Close Binary Systems

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Introduction to Close Binary Systems provides a comprehensive survey and guide to the fast-moving field of multiple, specifically binary, stars, with an up to date account of research around 'close', i.e. interacting pairs. Such interactions allow direct quantification of stellar properties, opening up factual insights into basic building blocks of the Universe.

The book provides a much needed update for the seminal Close Binary Systems of Zdenk Kopal. Following a comparable plan, it presents relevant subject matter with an emphasis on building a framework of understanding to serve as a supporting resource for students and researchers.

The text starts from a general historical background and progresses into the main theoretical ideas supporting our prima facie interpretation of observations. The central chapters explore further into these observational methods, arranged according to the classic subdivisions of astrometry, spectroscopy and photometry. Optimal inversion of observational data into model parametrization is a theme through these chapters. Significant here is the problem of how non-uniqueness in modelling affects interpretation. The underlying issues of stellar evolution bearing on observational evidence become paramount in the last four chapters. The book proceeds step-by-step from directly understandable examples of unevolved pairs to the challenging cases where stars are found in more and more extreme conditions, leading up to the mergers of massive black hole pairs seen in the new field of gravitational wave astronomy.

This is a valuable reference for postgraduate and advanced undergraduate students working in mainstream areas of stellar astrophysics, with applications also to exoplanet research which shares some methodological features. Course designers for stellar astrophysics will find a useful selection of topics within this book.

Key features: Provides a well-explained and backgrounded, up-to-date account of close binary systems, in a fast-moving field of research that is growing in scientific importance Surveys a wide range of case-studies within the context of binary and multiple star systems Fills an acknowledged gap in current literature

Cover Image: A public memorial to Zdenek Kopal in his home town (birthplace) of Litomysl in Czechia.
Foreword ix
1 Introduction
1(34)
1.1 General Historical Background
1(17)
1.2 Basic Terminology
18(3)
1.3 Binary System Parameters
21(9)
1.4 Bibliography
30(5)
2 Statics
35(16)
2.1 Equipotential Surfaces
35(5)
2.2 Stellar Structure and Radau's Equation
40(4)
2.3 The Potential Function and Potential Energy
44(3)
2.4 Surface Gravity
47(1)
2.5 Moments of Inertia
48(2)
2.6 Bibliography
50(1)
3 Dynamics
51(24)
3.1 Kinetic Energy
51(4)
3.2 Equations of Motion
55(2)
3.3 Precession of a Spheroid
57(4)
3.4 Apsidal Motion
61(11)
3.5 Bibliography
72(3)
4 The Roche Model
75(16)
4.1 Roche Equipotentials
75(3)
4.2 The Contact Equipotential
78(7)
4.3 External Envelopes
85(4)
4.4 Bibliography
89(2)
5 Visual and Astrometric Systems
91(28)
5.1 Introduction
91(4)
5.2 Recognition of Binaries
95(2)
5.3 Quantification of Binary Occurrence
97(3)
5.4 Visual Binary Orbits
100(8)
5.5 Space Age Developments
108(6)
5.6 Bibliography
114(5)
6 Spectroscopic Binaries
119(24)
6.1 Introduction
119(3)
6.2 Spectroscopic Binary Radial Velocity Curves
122(9)
6.3 Rotational Broadening
131(4)
6.4 The Effect of Eclipses
135(2)
6.5 Proximity Effects
137(1)
6.6 Bibliography
138(5)
7 Photometric Data Analysis
143(56)
7.1 General Issues
143(4)
7.2 Eclipsing Binary Systems
147(6)
7.3 Light Curve Analysis
153(32)
7.4 Atmospheric Eclipses
185(5)
7.5 Polarimetry
190(3)
7.6 Bibliography
193(6)
8 Evolution overview
199(34)
8.1 Introduction
199(1)
8.2 Single Star Evolution
199(5)
8.3 Binary Evolution Essentials
204(20)
8.4 Advanced Evolutionary States
224(3)
8.5 Bibliography
227(6)
9 Binaries in Early Stages
233(32)
9.1 Formation of Binary and Multiple Systems
233(3)
9.2 Binary Separations
236(2)
9.3 Orbital Eccentricities
238(2)
9.4 Cataloguing Detached Systems
240(10)
9.5 The Empirical Main Sequence
250(10)
9.6 Bibliography
260(5)
10 Moderately Evolved Systems
265(32)
10.1 RS CVn Binaries
265(14)
10.2 Algol Systems
279(12)
10.3 Bibliography
291(6)
11 Binaries in advanced evolution
297(42)
11.1 Symbiotic Binaries
297(4)
11.2 Cataclysmic Variables
301(15)
11.3 X-ray Binaries
316(8)
11.4 Gravitational Wave Astronomy
324(4)
11.5 Bibliography
328(11)
Index 339
Edwin Budding is a recently retired Honorary Research Fellow in the School of Chemical and Physical Sciences, at the Victoria University of Wellington, also the Carter Observatory, Wellington, and Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand. In recent years he has been a Visiting Professor at the Department of Physics at Çanakkale 18th March University (COMU), Turkey. He has authored/edited five books, and been closely involved with the production of around 200 peer-reviewed articles, mostly in the field of close binary stars. In previous years he has held the presidency of the Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand and editorship of its journal, as well as chairing Aotearoa-New Zealand's national astronomy committee.

Osman Demircan is the Founder and Director of the Çanakkale University Observatory and Professor at the Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University (ÇOMU), Turkey. From 2000 - 2010 he was the Vice Rector, Consultant, Dean and Vice Dean at ÇOMU, having previously been Professor at Ankara University, Turkey. Prof. Demircan has authored four books and over 160 journal articles. His areas of research are on the astrophysics of close binary stars, the analysis of photometric and spectrographic data, and on exoplanet research, in particular transit observations and modelling.