Preface.
1 Introduction and Technical Notes.
References.
2 Origin and Development of the Universe.
2.1 The Big Bang.
2.2 Cosmic Evolution: Dark Matter–the First Stars.
Cosmo-Chronometry.
Summary.
References.
3 The Evolution of Stars.
3.1 Formation, Classification, and Evolution of Stars.
3.1.1 General.
3.1.2 Neutron Stars and Black Holes.
3.1.3 Accretion and Hydrogen Burning.
3.1.4 Nuclear Fusion Sequences Involving He, C, O, Ne, and Si.
3.1.5 The r-, s- rp- and Related Processes.
3.1.5.1 General.
3.1.5.2 Rapid Processes.
3.1.5.3 Slow Processes.
3.2 Chemistry in AGB Stars.
3.3 Galaxies and Clusters.
Summary.
References.
4 The Interstellar Medium.
4.1 General.
4.2 Chemistry in Interstellar Clouds.
4.2.1 Reaction Types.
4.2.2 Reaction Networks.
4.2.3 Detection of Basic Interstellar Species.
4.2.3.1 Hydrogen.
4.2.3.2 Other Basic Molecules.
4.2.4 Complex Molecules.
4.2.5 Chemistry on Grains.
4.2.5.1 The Hydrogen Problem.
4.2.5.2 Grain Structure, Chemical Composition, and Chemical Reactions.
Summary.
References.
5 The Solar System.
5.1 Overview.
5.2 Earth’s Moon and the Terrestrial Planets: Mercury, Venus, and Mars.
5.2.1 The Moon.
5.2.2 Mercury.
5.2.3 Venus.
5.2.3.1 General, and Geological and Orbit Features.
5.2.3.2 Venus’ Atmosphere.
5.2.3.3 Chemical Reactions.
5.2.4 Mars.
5.2.4.1 General.
5.2.4.2 Orbital Features, and the Martian Moons and Trojans.
5.2.4.3 Geological Features, Surface Chemisty and Mars Meteorites.
5.2.4.4 Methane.
5.2.4.5 Carbonates, Sulfates, and Water.
5.2.4.6 Chemistry in the Martian Atmosphere.
Summary Section 5.2.
5.3 Ceres, Asteroids, Meteorites, and Interplanetary Dust.
5.3.1 General and Classification.
5.3.2 Carbon-Bearing Components in Carbonaceous Chondrites.
5.3.3 Interplanetary Dust Particles (Presolar Grains).
5.4 Comets.
5.4.1 General.
5.4.2 Comet Chemistry.
5.5. Kuiper Belt Objects.
Summary Sections 5.3–5.5.
5.6 The Giant Planets and Their Moons.
5.6.1 Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
5.6.2 The Galilean Moons.
5.6.3 The Moons Enceladus, Titan and Triton.
Summary Section 5.6.
References.
6 Exoplanets.
Summary.
References
7 The Origin of Life.
7.1 What is Life?
7.2 Putative Non-Carbon and Nonaqueous Life Forms; the Biological Role of Silicate, Phosphate, and Water.
7.3 Life Under Extreme Conditions.
Summary Sections 7.1–7.3.
7.4 Scenarios for the Primordial Supply of Basic Life Molecules.
7.4.1 The Iron–Sulfur World (“Pioneer Organisms”).
7.4.2 The Miller–Urey and Related Experiments.
7.4.3 “Clay Organisms.”
7.4.4 Extraterrestrial Input.
7.5 Extraterrestrial Life?
Summary Sections 7.4 and 7.5.
References.
Index.