Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-swr86 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-18T19:00:09.010Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Fifty Years of Research on Stellar Atmospheres*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 March 2013

Dimitri Mihalas*
Affiliation:
Applied Physics Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM 87545
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

I would like to begin by saying what a pleasure it is for me to be here. For my entire adult life I have wanted to come to Australia. Actually, I have been invited to visit here twice before, but each time I was thwarted by circumstances beyond my control. But this time I was determined to (a) prove that the third time is indeed the charm, and (b) pay homage to Walter Stibbs, who in my mind is the epitome of a scholar and a gentleman. I have known Walter as colleague, teacher, and friend, not to mention as an inspiration, both professional and personal. So I am here today to try to give some sense of progress in the study of stellar atmospheres, a field that Walter has graced with his virtuosic touch. I will follow an unabashedly personal path, describing the development as I experienced it. I will focus almost entirely on early-type stars, where we may reasonably expect the atmospheric layers to be homogeneous, and in radiative equilibrium. Only at the end will I mention our nearest stellar neighbor, the Sun, which, because we can study it in so much detail, offers counterexamples to almost all of the the theory that works so well for early-type stars. I offer apologies in advance to anyone this approach may offend.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Astronomical Society of Australia 2001

Footnotes

*

Paper given at ‘Some Highlights in Astronomy & Astrophysics’, a symposium in honor of Walter Stibbs's 80th Birthday, held in Canberra, Australia, September 30–October 1, 1999.

References

Anderson, L. 1985, ApJ, 298, 848 Google Scholar
Auer, L., & Mihalas, D. 1969, ApJ, 158, 641 Google Scholar
Auer, L., & Mihalas, D. 1970, ApJ, 160, 1161 Google Scholar
Auer, L., & Mihalas, D. 1972, ApJS, 124, 193 Google Scholar
Auer, L., & Mihalas, D. 1973a, ApJS, 125, 433 Google Scholar
Auer, L., & Mihalas, D. 1973b, ApJ, 184, 151 Google Scholar
Aufdenberg, J., Hauschildt, P., Shore, S., & Baron, E. 1998, ApJ, 498, 1998 Google Scholar
Cannon, C. 1973a, JQSRT, 13, 627 Google Scholar
Cannon, C. 1973b, ApJ, 185, 621 Google Scholar
Castelli, F., & Kurucz, R. 1994, A. & Ap., 281, 817 Google Scholar
Castor, J., Abbott, D., & Klein, R. 1975, ApJ, 195, 157 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chandrasekhar, S., & Breen, F. 1946, ApJ, 104, 430 Google Scholar
Chandrasekhar, S., & Munch, G. 1946, ApJ, 104, 446 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grigsby, J., Morrison, N., & Anderson, L. 1985, ApJS, 78, 203 Google Scholar
Hauschildt, P., Allard, F., & Baron, E. 1999, ApJ, 512, 377 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hauschildt, P., Allard, F., Ferguson, J., Baron, E., & Alexander, D. 1999, ApJ, 525, 871 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hubeny, I., & Lanz, T. 1995, ApJ, 439, 875 Google Scholar
Mark, C. 1947, Phys.Rev., 72, 558 Google Scholar
Mihalas, D. 1965, ApJS, 9, 321 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mihalas, D. 1966, ApJS, 13, 1 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mihalas, D. 1972, ApJ, 177, 115 Google Scholar
Mihalas, D. 1973, ApJ, 197, 209 Google Scholar
Mihalas, D., & Hummer, D. 1973, ApJ, 179, 827 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mihalas, D., & Morton, D. 1965, ApJ, 143, 253 Google Scholar
Olson, G., Auer, L., & Buchler, R. 1986, JQSRT, 35, 431 Google Scholar
Pound, E. 1960, The ABC of Reading (New York: New Directions Books)Google Scholar
Scharmer, G. 1981, ApJ, 249, 720 Google Scholar
Strom, S., & Avrett, E. 1964, ApJ, 140, 1381 Google Scholar
Strom, S., & Avrett, E. 1965, ApJS, 12, 1 Google Scholar
Strom, S., & Kurucz, R. 1965, JQSRT, 16, 591 Google Scholar
Thévenin, F., & Idiart, T. 1999, ApJ, 521, 753 CrossRefGoogle Scholar