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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Dr. William Keel, professor of astronomy in
The University of Alabama’s department
of physics and astronomy, recently published a book “The
Road to Galaxy Formation,” that will be of use to those who
love to look at the stars, as well as undergraduate and beginning
graduate students.
Keel will give a talk about some of the information in his book
on the UA campus at Rodgers Library for science and engineering
on April 22 at 3 p.m. Rodgers Library is on the corner of Hackberry
Lane and Campus Drive.
Keel has completed considerable work on both the Hubble Space
Telescope and major ground based telescopes all over the world.
In the past, he has served on the committee that makes decisions
about allocating Hubble Space Telescope viewing time. He also has
completed work in the area of image improvement for objects seen
through the space telescope.
“Technological developments in the last decade are giving
us serious glimpses of how galaxies formed, one of the three “Origins”
questions that have turned into an organizing theme in NASA science
programs, for example,” Keel said. “This may be the
first book at this level to deal with the first start in the Universe,
the growth of black holes at the centers of galaxies and the connection
of stars’ history to the tenuous gas between galaxies, which
we’ve only recently been able to observe.”
The book received a favorable review in the Feb. 2003 issue of
“Nature” magazine. “Keel’s own research
has covered a wide range of topics, which is reflected in the richness
and variety of subjects covered in this book,” the reviewer
wrote. “It is refreshing, in a market dominated by theorists,
to come across a book on galaxy formation written from an observational
perspective.”
“The Road to Galaxy Formation” published by Springer-Praxis
Publishers, 2002, is designed to appeal to undergraduate students,
graduate students, theoreticians and other stargazers. The department
of physics and astronomy is in the College
of Arts and Sciences, UA’s largest college.
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