"Starting with a detailed discussion of our nearest star, the Sun, this book describes how solar physicists have come to understand its internal workings. It then considers how astronomers go about studying the basic physical properties of more distant stars. This sets the scene for a description of the life-cycles of stars, starting from their formation in the interstellar medium, through their main sequence lifetimes, to the end points of stellar evolution. The book culminates with a discussion of the formation of exotic objects such as neutron stars and black holes." Compiled by a team of experts, this textbook has been designed for elementary university courses in astronomy and astrophysics, and is written in an accessible style that avoids complex mathematics. It is therefore suitable for self-study and will appeal to amateur astronomers as well as undergraduate students.
Finally, I finished it!! This book is actually my textbook for my astronomy class. Although I was not required to read all the book, I still want to finish all of its contents and read it wholly from the beginning to the end. And it is so worth doing that. The book has wonderful figures, graphs, diagrams, appendixes to illustrate the knowledge (and you cannot find some of them on the Internet). It has mathematic equations besides pure facts, and it gives you lots of definition regarding the field of Sun and stars. The book is designed not too focused on hard physics and mathematics but provides the readers with concepts and illustration of processes. There are many questions the book raises to the readers, which makes me curious and excited to study more. To sum up, the book does a great job as an “introduction” title.
A fine textbook with clear explanations of the sun and stars. Well layout with diagrams and beautiful pictures. The science , maths and formulae are logically and clearly explained.