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Jets from Stars and Galactic Nuclei [electronic resource] : Proceedings of a Workshop Held at Bad Honnef, Germany, 3–7 July 1995 / edited by Wolfgang Kundt.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Lecture Notes in Physics ; 471Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 1996Description: IX, 294 p. 41 illus. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783540499534
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 520 23
LOC classification:
  • QB4
Online resources:
Contents:
Jets from stars and burning disks -- Black hole, jet, and disk: The universal engine -- Simple sums on burning discs -- Coherent emission and intraday variability of active galactic nuclei -- Particle acceleration in extended radio sources—A critical review -- Plasma acceleration and jet formation by a magnetized rotator -- The astrophysical plasma gun -- Magnetized accretion-ejection structures -- Jet formation in astrophysical converging flows -- Observational properties of jets from young stars -- Near-infrared imaging in H2 of molecular (CO) outflows from young stars -- The jets in SS 433 -- The SS 433 system -- Southern hemisphere VLBI observations of GRO J1655-40 -- Jets in planetary nebulae -- Supermassive binaries and extragalactic jets -- Accretion and jet power -- Jets and QSO spectra -- An interpretation of radio-loud-radio-quiet QSO differences -- Jets in gamma-bright AGN: Constraints on reprocessing mechanisms -- Spectral evolution along the jest of M 87 and 3C 273 -- X-ray observations of Cen A -- Superluminal sources -- The sub-parsec-scale structure and evolution of the jet in centaurus A -- The central engine in the galactic nucleus -- Our galactic center -- The missing X-rays in SGR A*: Evidence for a supermassive black hole in the galactic center -- Numberical simulations of supersonic jets: The cocoon emission.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Jets are ubiquitous in the Universe, but ill-understood. Conservative books base their interpretations on focused stellar winds, ejected "bullets", black-hole central engines, and in-situ upgrading of electron energies via shocks. This volume, however, attempts a uniform interpretation of the bipolar-flow family, involving extremely relativistic pair plasma as the jet substance, and rotating magnets (possibly burning disks) as the central engines. Among the discussed sources are SS 433, YSO jets, planetary nebulae, our galactic center, and the class of extragalactic QSOs, both radio-loud and radio-quiet.
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Jets from stars and burning disks -- Black hole, jet, and disk: The universal engine -- Simple sums on burning discs -- Coherent emission and intraday variability of active galactic nuclei -- Particle acceleration in extended radio sources—A critical review -- Plasma acceleration and jet formation by a magnetized rotator -- The astrophysical plasma gun -- Magnetized accretion-ejection structures -- Jet formation in astrophysical converging flows -- Observational properties of jets from young stars -- Near-infrared imaging in H2 of molecular (CO) outflows from young stars -- The jets in SS 433 -- The SS 433 system -- Southern hemisphere VLBI observations of GRO J1655-40 -- Jets in planetary nebulae -- Supermassive binaries and extragalactic jets -- Accretion and jet power -- Jets and QSO spectra -- An interpretation of radio-loud-radio-quiet QSO differences -- Jets in gamma-bright AGN: Constraints on reprocessing mechanisms -- Spectral evolution along the jest of M 87 and 3C 273 -- X-ray observations of Cen A -- Superluminal sources -- The sub-parsec-scale structure and evolution of the jet in centaurus A -- The central engine in the galactic nucleus -- Our galactic center -- The missing X-rays in SGR A*: Evidence for a supermassive black hole in the galactic center -- Numberical simulations of supersonic jets: The cocoon emission.

Jets are ubiquitous in the Universe, but ill-understood. Conservative books base their interpretations on focused stellar winds, ejected "bullets", black-hole central engines, and in-situ upgrading of electron energies via shocks. This volume, however, attempts a uniform interpretation of the bipolar-flow family, involving extremely relativistic pair plasma as the jet substance, and rotating magnets (possibly burning disks) as the central engines. Among the discussed sources are SS 433, YSO jets, planetary nebulae, our galactic center, and the class of extragalactic QSOs, both radio-loud and radio-quiet.

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