The formation and evolution of planetary systems : proceedings of the Formation and Evolution of Planetary Systems Meeting, Baltimore, 1988 May 9-11
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The formation and evolution of planetary systems : proceedings of the Formation and Evolution of Planetary Systems Meeting, Baltimore, 1988 May 9-11
(Symposium series / Space Telescope Science Institute, 3)
Published for the Space Telescope Science Institute [by] Cambridge University Press, 1989
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Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Spring 1988 workshop at the Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, reviewed the rapid progress now being made on our understanding of how planetary systems form. This volume reviews our present knowledge, summarizes outstanding problems and provides a focus for future theoretical work.
Table of Contents
1. The formation of the solar system: consensus, alternatives and missing factors G. W. WETHERILL 2. The evolution of protostellar disks R. B. LARSON 3. On the relationship between early solar activity and the evolution of terrestrial planet atmospheres R. O. PEPIN 4. Implications of the giant planets for the formation and evolution of planetary systems D. J. STEVENSON 5. Constraints on the properties and environment of primitive stellar nebulae from the astrophysical record provided by young stellar objects S. E. STROM, S. EDWARDS and K. M. STROM 6. Molecular disks and their link to planetary systems A. I. SARGENT 7. The physics of planetesimal formation S. J. WEIDENSCHILLING, B. DONN and P. MEAKIN 8. Circumstellar material around nearby stars: clues to the formation of planetary systems C. A. NORMAN and F. PARESCE 9. Solar nebula chemistry: implications for volatiles in the solar system B. FEGLEY, JR. and R. G. PRINN 10. Primitive bodies: molecular abundances in comet Halley as probes of cometary formation environments J. I. LUNINE 11. The impact of stellar evolution on planetary system development P. BODENHEIMER 12. Major issues in planetary system formation C. A. NORMAN ET AL 13. Instrumentation for the study of planetary systems H. W. MOOS ET AL
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