Cambridge Science Classics
Description
This book is an expanded version of a public letter delivered at the meeting of the International astronomical union at Cambridge (Massachusetts) in September 1932.-Pref.
How the series evolves
Books in this Series
The expanding universe
This book is an expanded version of a public letter delivered at the meeting of the International astronomical union at Cambridge (Massachusetts) in September 1932.-Pref.
The Internal Constitution of the Stars
The publication of The Internal Constitution of the Stars by Arthur Eddington in 1926 was a major landmark in the development of modern theoretical astrophysics. Not only did Eddington effectively create the discipline of the structure, constitution, and the evolution of the stars, but he also recognised and established the basic elements of our present understanding of the subject. The influence of the book is indicated by the remark by H. N. Russell in 1945: "This volume has every claim to be regarded as a masterpiece of the first rank."