Share
Photometric and Spectroscopic Binary Systems: Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute Held at Maratea, Italy, June 1-14, 1980
Carling, E. B. ; Kopal, Zdenek (Author)
·
Springer
· Paperback
Photometric and Spectroscopic Binary Systems: Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute Held at Maratea, Italy, June 1-14, 1980 - Carling, E. B. ; Kopal, Zdenek
Choose the list to add your product or create one New List
✓ Product added successfully to the Wishlist.
Go to My Wishlists
Origin: U.S.A.
(Import costs included in the price)
It will be shipped from our warehouse between
Monday, July 29 and
Monday, August 05.
You will receive it anywhere in United Kingdom between 1 and 3 business days after shipment.
Synopsis "Photometric and Spectroscopic Binary Systems: Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute Held at Maratea, Italy, June 1-14, 1980"
Our conference - opening today - has two aims in view: first, to commemorate some milestones in the development of the studies of close binary systems whose anniversaries fall in these years, as well as to take stock of our present knowledge accumulated through- out preceding decades, in order to consider where do we go from here. This summer, 310 years will have elapsed since the first ec- lipsing binary - Algol - was discovered in Bologna by Geminiano Montanari (1633-1687) to be a variable star; and 198 years have gone by since John Goodricke of York (1764-1786) established the fact that Algol's light changes were periodic. Moreover, it is al- most exactly (to a month) now 100 years since Edward Charles Pickering (1846-1919) of Harvard Observatory in the United States took the first steps towards the development of systematic methods of analysis of the light changes of Algol and related systems - a topic which will constitute the major part of the programme of our present conference. The three dates recalled above illustrate that the discoverers of such celestial objects and observers of their light changes have been systematically ahead of the theoreticians endea- vouring to understand the significance of the observed data by de- cades and centuries in the past - a fact which, incidentally, con- tinues to hold good (albeit with a diminishing lead-time) up to the present.