| Extrasolar Planets and Astrobiology |
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Early chapters of Extrasolar Planets and Astrobiology deal with the astrophysical theory of star and planet formation and the basics of different exoplanetary detection techniques. As a textbook, Extrasolar Planets provides key mathematical derivations in the flow of the narrative. For example, Scharf demonstrates how to model the balance of forces acting on a spherical cloud of interstellar gas and how this collapses and fragments into stellar-mass clumps to trigger star formation. Supplementing this mathematical treatment for the classroom, each chapter ends with a few pages of example problem questions and exercises suitable for student study or assessment. These tasks range from mathematical analysis of a key process, to journal research and essay-style discussion of a topic to greater depth, or critical review of a paper. Extrasolar Planets is also very effectively illustrated with well-chosen images and diagrams, most of which have often been carefully adapted by the author to more perfectly complement the text.
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| Last Updated on Thursday, 12 March 2009 12:27 |


