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توجه ! این یک نسخه آرشیو شده میباشد و در این حالت شما عکسی را مشاهده نمیکنید برای مشاهده کامل متن و عکسها بر روی لینک مقابل کلیک کنید : Astronomical References in English



پیام بهرام پور
09-08-2010, 02:22 PM
hello dear stargazers:slow:
This is a good place to share out the data and refrences together
I hope anyone help us until we can access to the good articles and refrences

ستاره بنیادی
09-09-2010, 12:27 PM
Thanks Mr Bahrampur for creating this topic

at first porden me for my spelling error:Psmiley:



Galaxies in the
Universe
An Introduction


Linda S. Sparke
University of Wisconsin, Madison


‘Galaxies in the Universe is more
than its title suggests. It has all
the ingredients needed for a
comprehensive senior-level course
on galaxies, including the necessary
background technology, stellar
astrophysics and dynamical and
cosmological theory. The book
is full of interesting problems
aimed at broadening the reader’s
understanding.

Contents: 1. Introduction;
2. Mapping
our Milky Way;
3. The orbits of the stars;
4. Our backyard: the Local Group;
5. Spiral
and SO galaxies;
6. Elliptical galaxies;
7. Galaxy groups and clusters;
8. Large-scale
distribution of galaxies;
9. Active galactic
nuclei and the early history of galaxies;
Appendices; Index.
2007

f aslanzadeh
09-12-2010, 12:28 PM
Hi
im really glad that i find some where in this site that every one use english for sharing idias
thanks alot

ستاره بنیادی
09-22-2010, 11:43 AM
Astronomical
Spectrographs and
their History

John B. Hearnshaw
University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New
Zealand

An indispensable reference for

advanced amateur and professiona
l
astronomers, graduate students

and historians of science, this book

provides a comprehensive account

of spectrographs from their theory

and development over the last

two hundred years, to the recent

advances of the early twenty-first

century.

ستاره بنیادی
09-22-2010, 11:48 AM
Introduction to
Astronomical
Photometry

Second edition


Edwin Budding
Carter Observatory, Wellington
and Osman Demircan
اanakkale University, Turkey


Review of astronomical photometry

for graduate students, researchers

and advanced amateurs in practical

and observational astronomy.

Cambridge Observing Handbooks for


Research Astronomers, 6

2007

محمدرضا صادقیان
11-01-2010, 04:32 PM
Astronomical
Spectrographs and
their History

John B. Hearnshaw
University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New
Zealand

An indispensable reference for

advanced amateur and professiona
l
astronomers, graduate students

and historians of science, this book

provides a comprehensive account

of spectrographs from their theory

and development over the last

two hundred years, to the recent

advances of the early twenty-first

century.



Learn more:

Astronomical spectrographs analyse light emitted by the Sun, stars, galaxies and other objects in the Universe, and have been used in astronomy since the early nineteenth century. This book provides a comprehensive account of spectrographs from an historical perspective, from their theory and development over the last two hundred years, to the recent advances of the early twenty-first century. The author combines the theoretical principles behind astronomical spectrograph design with their historical development. Spectrographs of all types are considered, with prism, grating or grism dispersing elements. Included are Cassegrain, coudé, prime focus, échelle, fibre-fed, ultraviolet, nebular, objective prism, multi-object instruments and those which are ground-based, on rockets and balloons or in space. The book contains several tables listing the most significant instruments, around 900 references, and over 150 images, making it an indispensable reference for professional astronomers, graduate students, advanced amateur astronomers, and historians of science.


Retrieved from:Cambridge University Press

محمدرضا صادقیان
11-02-2010, 01:19 PM
Astronomical
Spectrographs and
their History

John B. Hearnshaw
University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New
Zealand

An indispensable reference for

advanced amateur and professiona
l
astronomers, graduate students

and historians of science, this book

provides a comprehensive account

of spectrographs from their theory

and development over the last

two hundred years, to the recent

advances of the early twenty-first

century.





Contents
1. The historical development of astronomical spectroscopes and spectrographs;
2. The theory of spectroscopes and spectrographs;
3. High resolution spectrographs;
4. Solar spectrographs and the history of solar spectroscopy;
5. Objective prism spectrographs;
6. Ultraviolet and nebular spectroscopy;
7. Multi-object spectrographs;
8. Ten pioneering spectrographs of the late twentieth century; Subject index; Name index.



Review



“…concise and comprehensive … a most valuable resource…”



Retrieved from:Cambridge University Press

محمدرضا صادقیان
11-02-2010, 02:33 PM
Introduction to
Astronomical
Photometry

Second edition


Edwin Budding
Carter Observatory, Wellington
and Osman Demircan
اanakkale University, Turkey


Review of astronomical photometry

for graduate students, researchers

and advanced amateurs in practical

and observational astronomy.

Cambridge Observing Handbooks for


Research Astronomers, 6

2007



Book link is available on clay for the public and those interested in astronomy:
http://books.google.com/books?id=g_K3-bQ8lTUC&lpg=PP1&ots=P1HRQPY3JG&dq=Introduction%20to%20Astronomical%20Photometry&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false

محمدرضا صادقیان
11-03-2010, 07:56 AM
Hello.
Why no one is supporting this topic? :pissed off:
It's introducing interesting resources. :thumbsup: 

gandom
02-04-2011, 01:25 AM
i can't belive why no body wants to support this issue? it's unbelivable! if u wanna makes it alive, i'm volunteer :focus:

Sunrise
02-04-2011, 01:41 AM
i can't belive why no body wants to support this issue? it's unbelivable! if u wanna makes it alive, i'm volunteer :focus:




! every thing is believable
?? why u can't belive it?
:pacman:
ok dear
get start and go on

good luck:thumbsup:

هانیه امیری
05-15-2012, 10:02 PM
Hello dear friends:have a nice day:


I come to make this topic alive after 15 months :wink:

My favorite book that I want to introduce is " Introduction to cosmology by Barbara Ryden "




This book contains 12 chapters and 239 pages.

This book is based on the writer's lecture notes for an upper-level undergraduate cosmology course at the Ohio State University. This book is good for primarily juniors and seniors majoring in physics and astronomy.


Contents

1- Introduction

2- Fundamental Observation

3- Newton versus Enistein

4- Cosmic Dynamics

5- Single-Component Universes

6- Multiple- Component Universes

7- Measuring Cosmological Parameters

8- Dark matter

9- The cosmic Microwave Background

10- Nucleosynthesias and The Early Universe

11- Inflation and the Very Early Universe

12- The Formation of Structure

رخساره روشنی
05-30-2012, 10:54 AM
Hi my dear friend I put this article Because you know that we are close to the transit of Venus
This resource is also helpful for the amateur astronomer wishing to gain a better understanding of parallax, transit geometry and how the Astronomical Unit can be measured.

link : http://spacemath.gsfc.nasa.gov/SED12/VenusMath.pdf
source : http://spacemath.gsfc.nasa.gov

gandom
10-18-2012, 03:46 PM
http://amateurastronomy.org/books/ob...able_stars.jpg


this book is the best source for the one how wants to start observing even without any optical object!
in this book we read about the basic laws of physics and astronomy and then we learn about variable stars professionally!
the language of this book is so easy and by simplifing the hardest laws it give us information about this kind of stars!:)
enjoy it....a member of this forum gave us link to DL it before in here (http://dytufarixe.blog.com/2012/05/23/observing-variable-stars-book-download/)