1st Edition

Dawn of the Stars: The Story of the Seven Sisters A Primer on Stellar and Gravitational Astrophysics and the Interplay Between Them

226 Pages 47 Color Illustrations
by CRC Press

226 Pages 47 Color Illustrations
by CRC Press

This book offers a unique approach to learning astrophysics by combining rigorous scientific content with an engaging narrative. It introduces readers to the fundamental principles of stellar evolution, star formation, binary interactions, and gravitational astrophysics through the story of seven stars, the Seven Sisters, who were born in the Pleiades cluster and travel through the Milky Way.... Read more

Chapter 1 Life Emerges,   Chapter 2 A Gust of Wind,   Chapter 3 The Triplets,   Chapter 4 From a Lonely Road to a Crowded Cluster,   Chapter 5 A Tale of Two Black Holes,   Chapter 6 A Bond Forged of Fire,   Chapter 7 The Making of a Millisecond Pulsar,   Chapter 8 Taming the Beast,   Chapter 9 The Beast Awakens,   Chapter 10 A Long-Awaited Reunion

Biography

 Dr. Nathan W. C. Leigh is a Professor of astrophysics at the Universidad de Concepcion in Chile, and a Research Scientist at the American Museum of Natural History. He works as a theorist using a combination of computational simulations and analytic methods.  His primary research interests include gravitational dynamics, chaos, the three-body problem, black holes, star cluster evolution and both single and binary star evolution.  He has worked at the European Space Agency, the American Museum of Natural History, the Flatiron Institute, and many more. 

Dr. Aaron M. Geller holds a PhD in astrophysics and is a research faculty member at Northwestern University’s Center for Interdisciplinary Exploration and Research in Astrophysics (CIERA) and the Lead Data Scientist within Northwestern IT Research Computing and Data Services (RCDS), USA. His research combines multi-wavelength observations, including stellar photometry and spectroscopy, with numerical simulations, often incorporating advanced statistical, data science, and computational techniques.

Dr. Taeho Ryu is a Professor in astrophysics and JILA Associate fellow at the University of Colorado, Boulder, USA. He is a theoretical astrophysicist studying interactions between black holes and their surroundings, as well as interactions between stars in various environments, which can lead to the generation of electromagnetic radiation and gravitational waves. His expertise lies in numerical modeling of short-lived, observable astronomical phenomena.