The Rotation of Sun and Stars
The Sun and stars rotate in different ways and at different velocity rates. The knowledge of how they rotate is important in understanding the formation and evolution of stars and their structure. The closest star to our Earth, the Sun, is a good laboratory to study in detail the rotation of a G star and allows to test new ideas and develop new techniques to study stellar rotation. More or less massive, more or lessevolved objects, however, can have averydifferent rotation rate, structure and history. In recent years our understanding of the rotation of the Sun has greatly improved. The Sun has a well-known large-scale rotation, which can be m- sured thanks to visible features across the solar disk, such as sunspots, or via spectroscopy. In addition, several studies cast light on differential rotation in the convective zone and on meridional circulation in the radiative zone of the Sun. Even the rotation of the core of the Sun can now be studied thanks to various methods, such as dynamics of the gravitational moments and of course, helioseismology, through g-modes analysis. Moreover, the magnetic field is strongly linked to the matter motions in the solar plasma. The solar magnetic field can be measured only at the surface or in theupperlayers.Itistheproductof theinternaldynamoorof thelocaldynamos if they exist – in any case magnetic field and rotation cannot thus be separated.
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The Rotation of Sun and Stars
The Sun and stars rotate in different ways and at different velocity rates. The knowledge of how they rotate is important in understanding the formation and evolution of stars and their structure. The closest star to our Earth, the Sun, is a good laboratory to study in detail the rotation of a G star and allows to test new ideas and develop new techniques to study stellar rotation. More or less massive, more or lessevolved objects, however, can have averydifferent rotation rate, structure and history. In recent years our understanding of the rotation of the Sun has greatly improved. The Sun has a well-known large-scale rotation, which can be m- sured thanks to visible features across the solar disk, such as sunspots, or via spectroscopy. In addition, several studies cast light on differential rotation in the convective zone and on meridional circulation in the radiative zone of the Sun. Even the rotation of the core of the Sun can now be studied thanks to various methods, such as dynamics of the gravitational moments and of course, helioseismology, through g-modes analysis. Moreover, the magnetic field is strongly linked to the matter motions in the solar plasma. The solar magnetic field can be measured only at the surface or in theupperlayers.Itistheproductof theinternaldynamoorof thelocaldynamos if they exist – in any case magnetic field and rotation cannot thus be separated.
54.99 In Stock
The Rotation of Sun and Stars

The Rotation of Sun and Stars

by Jean-Pierre Rozelot (Editor)
The Rotation of Sun and Stars

The Rotation of Sun and Stars

by Jean-Pierre Rozelot (Editor)

Paperback(Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st ed. 2009)

$54.99 
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Overview

The Sun and stars rotate in different ways and at different velocity rates. The knowledge of how they rotate is important in understanding the formation and evolution of stars and their structure. The closest star to our Earth, the Sun, is a good laboratory to study in detail the rotation of a G star and allows to test new ideas and develop new techniques to study stellar rotation. More or less massive, more or lessevolved objects, however, can have averydifferent rotation rate, structure and history. In recent years our understanding of the rotation of the Sun has greatly improved. The Sun has a well-known large-scale rotation, which can be m- sured thanks to visible features across the solar disk, such as sunspots, or via spectroscopy. In addition, several studies cast light on differential rotation in the convective zone and on meridional circulation in the radiative zone of the Sun. Even the rotation of the core of the Sun can now be studied thanks to various methods, such as dynamics of the gravitational moments and of course, helioseismology, through g-modes analysis. Moreover, the magnetic field is strongly linked to the matter motions in the solar plasma. The solar magnetic field can be measured only at the surface or in theupperlayers.Itistheproductof theinternaldynamoorof thelocaldynamos if they exist – in any case magnetic field and rotation cannot thus be separated.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783642099649
Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Publication date: 10/22/2010
Series: Lecture Notes in Physics , #765
Edition description: Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st ed. 2009
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

Table of Contents

The Sun: A Slowly Rotating Star.- What Is Coming: Issues Raised from Observation of the Shape of the Sun.- Effects of Rotation on Stellar p-Mode Frequencies.- Approaching the Low-Frequency Spectrum of Rotating Stars.- The Rotation of the Solar Core.- Physics of Rotation in Stellar Models.- Long Baseline Interferometry of Rotating Stars Across the HR Diagram: Flattening, Gravity Darkening, Differential Rotation.- Is the Critical Rotation of Be Stars Really Critical for the Be Phenomenon?.- On the Rotation of A-Type Stars.- The Solar Magnetic Field: Surface and Upper Layers, Network and Internetwork Field.
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