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SpS1-Infrared and submillimetre-wave spectroscopy as probes of stellar evolution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2010

Sun Kwok*
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China email: sunkwok@hku.hk
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For over a hundred years, optical spectroscopy has been the main tool to study stellar structure and evolution. Photospheric spectra of the electronic transitions of atoms and ions are used to determine the temperature and elemental abundance. Beyond atomic and ionic lines, only the electronic transitions of a few simple molecules (C2, CN, H2O, TiO, CH, etc.) appear in the optical photospheric spectra. With the recent development of infrared and submm spectroscopy, a wide range of molecules have been observed, specially in cool atmospheres of red giants and brown dwarfs. We also realize that beyond the photosphere, a stellar system consists of chromosphere, corona, and stellar wind. Both young and evolved stars possess extensive circumstellar regions and the atoms, molecules, and solid particles in this environment radiate a wide range of lines and bands observable at infrared and submm wavelengths.

Type
Contributed Papers
Copyright
Copyright © International Astronomical Union 2010

References

Kwok, S. 2007, Physics and Chemistry of the Interstellar Medium, University Science BooksGoogle Scholar