Astronomy 822: Electromagnetic Radiation
Winter Quarter 2010
Department of Astronomy
The Ohio State University
Instructor :
Todd Thompson
Contact Information :
- email: thompson [at] astronomy.ohio [dash] state.edu
- office phone: 614 292-7971
- 4019 McPherson Laboratory
Time : MW 1:30 - 2:48pm
Location : 4054 McPherson Laboratory
Office Hours :
- Official: Monday from 3pm - 4pm.
- Unofficial: Stop by my office or send me an email anytime.
Notes :
- No class Monday, Jan 18, Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
Description : Radiative processes in astrophysics. Primary
topics include radiation transport, absorption, emission, and
scattering processes, radiative transitions, diffusion, select
topics in relativistic classical electromagnetic theory, cyclotron
and synchrotron radiation, Compton/Inverse-Compton/Thomson scattering,
and bremsstrahlung. Astrophysical applications will be emphasized.
Organization : Weekly lectures and homework (70%),
and a written final exam (30%).
Text :
Radiative Processes in Astrophysics, by Rybicki and Lightman.
Other Reading :
- Professor Barbara Ryden has a set of notes online for Astronomy 822 available here.
- See F. Shu's The Physics of Astrophysics I: Radiation for a development somewhat similar to Rybicki and Lightman.
- See Chapters 6 and 7 of Foundations of Radiation Hydrodynamics, by Mihalas and Mihalas, for a more detailed development of the equations of radiation transport.
- Chapter 3 of Spitzer's Physical Processes in the Interstellar Medium gives a quick introduction to radiation transport, as well as the physical interactions (emission and absorption processes) most relevant to the ISM.
- Chapters 1 and 2 of Stellar Atmospheres, by D. Mihalas, give a lucid and concise introduction to the problem of radiation transport and the model problem of the gray atmosphere (the "thermalization depth problem"), respectively.
- Chapters 2, 3, and 4 of High Energy Astrophysics Volume I, by M. S. Longair, treat ionization losses, electron ionization and bremsstrahlung, and Comptonization. Chapter 18 of Volume II provides a useful secondary reference on synchrotron radiation.