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El. knyga: First Galaxies: Theoretical Predictions and Observational Clues

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New observations of the period between the cosmic recombination and the end of reionization are posing intriguing questions about where the first generations of stars were formed, how the first galaxies were assembled, whether these galaxies have low redshift counterparts, and what role the early galaxies played in the reionization process. Combining the new observational data with theoretical models can shed new light on open issues regarding the star formation process, its role in the reionization of the Universe, and the metal enrichment in galaxies at those early epochs.

This volume brings together leading experts in the field to discuss our current level of understanding and what may come in the near future as our observational as well as theoretical tools improve. The book confronts the theory of how the first stars, black holes, and galaxies formed with current and planned observations. This synthesis is very timely, just ahead of the establishment of major new facilities, such as the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), a next-generation, millimeter/sub-millimeter observatory in the Atacama desert (ALMA), and ground-based Extremely Large Telescopes (ELT). Together, they will revolutionize the study of the most distant objects in the Universe.

This volume is aimed at beginning graduate students but can also serve as a reference work for active researchers in the field. Apart from presenting the fundamental concepts involved, it also provides an introduction to the methods and techniques used. The book will also be useful to anyone with an astrophysical background who needs an effective starting point for learning about the first stars and galaxies.



Exploring intriguing questions about where the first generations of stars were formed, book discusses how the first galaxies were assembled, whether early galaxies have low redshift counterparts and what role early galaxies played in the reionization process.

Recenzijos

From the reviews:

 

The First Galaxies is one of several recent books which attempt to review our current understanding of the rapidly changing research area of astrophysics dealing with the formation, evolution, and impact of the first stars and galaxies to form in the early history of the Universe. this volume will serve as an excellent research resource for advanced undergraduate and post-graduate researchers studying high-redshift galaxy formation, either from a theoretical or observational standpoint. (Ross McLure, The Observatory, Vol. 133 (1237), December, 2013)

Part I The First Sources of Light
The Basic Theoretical Framework
3(42)
Abraham Loeb
The Epoch of Reionization
45(58)
Saleem Zaroubi
The First Stars
103(74)
Simon Glover
Part II The First Galaxies and Normal Stellar Populations
Formation of the First Galaxies: Theory and Simulations
177(46)
Jarrett L. Johnson
Observing the First Galaxies
223(70)
James S. Dunlop
The Formation of the First Massive Black Holes
293(52)
Zoltan Haiman
Part III Tools & Techniques
Evolutionary Synthesis Models as a Tool and Guide Towards the First Galaxies
345(32)
Daniel Schaerer
Exploring the Universe with Metal-Poor Stars
377(36)
Anna Frebel
The Potential Impact of Future Observatories
413(14)
Massimo Stiavelli
Index 427
Tommy Wiklind (ESO/Joint ALMA Observatory), Bahram Mobasher (UCLA, Riverside) and Volker Bromm (University of Texas, Austin) are leaders in the field of first stars and first galaxies.