Revealing the heart of the galaxy : the Milky Way and its black hole /

"Written in an informal and engaging style, this volume traces the discoveries that led to our understanding of the size and structure of the Milky Way, and the conclusive evidence for a massive black hole at its center. Robert H. Sanders, an astronomer who witnessed many of these developments,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sanders, Robert H. (Author)
Published: Cambridge University Press,
Publisher Address: New York, NY, USA :
Publication Dates: 2014.
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Subjects:
Summary: "Written in an informal and engaging style, this volume traces the discoveries that led to our understanding of the size and structure of the Milky Way, and the conclusive evidence for a massive black hole at its center. Robert H. Sanders, an astronomer who witnessed many of these developments, describes how we parted the veil of interstellar dust to probe the strange phenomena within. We now know that the most luminous objects in the Universe - quasars and radio galaxies - are powered by massive black holes at their hearts. But how did black holes emerge from being a mathematical peculiarity, a theoretical consequence of Einstein's theory of gravity, to become part of the modern paradigm that explains active galactic nuclei and galaxy evolution in normal galaxies such as the Milky Way? This story, aimed at non-specialist readers and students and historians of astronomy, will both inform and entertain"--
Carrier Form: ix, 197 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (pages 185-192) and index.
ISBN: 9781107039186 :
1107039185
Index Number: QB843
CLC: P145.8
Call Number: P145.8/S215
Contents: 1. Introduction -- 2. The discovery of the Milky Way Galaxy -- 3. The new physics -- 4. Parting the veil with radio astronomy -- 5. The violent universe -- 6. New windows on the galactic center -- 7. The Milky Way as a barred spiral galaxy -- 8. The evolving view of active galactic nuclei -- 9. The "paradox of youth": young stars in the galactic center -- 10. Stellar orbits in the galactic center, QED -- 11. black holes here, black holes there ... -- 12. Traces of activity: past, present, and future -- 13. After words: progress in astronomy.