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Project Title: High Energy Stellar Physics
Project Advisor: Dr. Jeremy J. Drake
Background: Stars exhibit a range of energetic phenomena: hot coronae
found on young protostars and stars like the Sun; accretion; thermal radiation
from hot white dwarfs, novae and neutron stars. These phenomena are all characterised
by plasmas that radiate copiously in the X-ray range and can be studied with
satellite observatories above the Earth's atmosphere.
Scientific Questions: What heats the coronae of stars? How do stellar
outer atmospheric phenomena affect stellar evolution? - star formation itself,
angular momentum loss through stellar winds and mass ejections, and the evolution
of binary systems. What is the nature of the outer layers of neutron stars?
What is happening in violent novae explosions?
Scientific Methodology: Our studies have recently concentrated on
X-ray observations of stars using the Chandra and XMM-Newton observatories.
High resolution X-ray diffraciton grating spectra provide detailed information
on individual objects, whereas CCD imaging spectroscopy provides lower resolution
information on larger samples of objects. Other observations compliment these
studies; for example, optical high resolution spectroscopy has been used to
obtain information on elemental abundances that are of interest for probing
outer atmospheric abundance anomalies in stars.
Other links related to this project
High Energy Stellar Physics Webpage
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