Stellar atmospheres
STELLAR ATMOSPHERES
HARVARD OBSERVATORY MONOGRAPHS HARLOW SHAPLEY, EDITOR
No. 1
A CONTRIBUTION TO THE OBSERVATIONAL STUDY OF HIGH TEMPERATURE IN THE REVERSING LAYERS OF STARS
CECILIA H. PAYNE
PUBLISHED BY THE OBSERVATORY CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS 1925
COPYRIGHT, 1925 BY HARVARD OBSERVATORY
PRINTED AT THE HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS CAMBRIDGE, MASS., U.S.A.
THE most effective way of publishing the results of astronomical investigations is clearly dependent on the nature and scope of each particular research. The Harvard Observatory has used various forms. Nearly a hundred volumes of Annals contain, for the most part, tabular material presenting observational results on the positions, photometry, and spectroscopy of stars, nebulae, and planets. Shorter investigations have been reported in Circulars, Bulletins, and in current scientific journals from which Reprints are obtained and issued serially.
It now appears that a few extensive investigations of a somewhat monographic nature can be most conveniently presented as books, the first of which is the present special analysis of stellar spectra by Miss Payne. Other volumes in this series, it is hoped, will be issued during the next few years, each dealing with a subject in which a large amount of original investigation is being carried on at this observatory.
The Monographs will differ in another respect from all the publications previously issued from the Harvard Observatory—they cannot be distributed gratis to observatories and other interested scientific institutions. It is planned, however, to cover a part of the expenses of publication with special funds and to sell the volumes at less than the cost of production.
The varied problems of stellar atmospheres are particularly suited to the comprehensive treatment here given. They involve investigations of critical potentials, spectral classification, stellar temperatures, the abundance of elements, and the far-reaching theories of thermal ionization as developed in the last few years by Saha and by Fowler and Milne. Some problems of special interest to chemists and physicists are considered, and subjects intimately bound up with inquiries concerning stellar evolution come under discussion.