High Energy Astrophysics
Abstract
High energy astrophysics is one of the most active branches in contemporary astrophysics. It studies astrophysical objects that emit X-ray and gamma-ray photons, such as accreting super-massive and stellar-size black holes, and various species of neutron stars. With the operations of many space-borne and ground-based observational facilities, high energy astrophysics has enjoyed a rapid development in the past decades. It is foreseen that the field will continue to advance rapidly in the coming decade, with possible ground-breaking discoveries of astrophysical sources in the high-energy neutrino and gravitational wave channels. This Special Issue of Frontiers of Physics is dedicated to a systematic survey of the field of high energy astrophysics as it stands in 2013.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1401.6613,
title = {High Energy Astrophysics},
author = {Bing Zhang and Peter Meszaros},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1401.6613},
year = {2014}
}
Comments
Preface for Special Issue of Frontiers of Physics dedicated to High Energy Astrophysics, 3 pages