Mass Transport Processes and their Roles in the Formation, Structure, and Evolution of Stars and Stellar Systems
Kenneth G. Carpenter (NASA-GSFC), Margarita Karovska (CfA), Carolus J., Schrijver (LMATC), Carol A. Grady (Eureka Scientific), Ronald J. Allen, (STScI), Alexander Brown (UColo), Steven R. Cranmer (CfA), Andrea K. Dupree, (CfA), Nancy R. Evans (CfA)

TL;DR
This paper discusses the potential of advanced space-based interferometry to dramatically improve understanding of star formation, structure, and evolution through high-resolution UV/Optical imaging.
Contribution
It proposes two mission concepts, NASA's Stellar Imager and ESA's Luciola, capable of providing unprecedented angular resolution for stellar studies.
Findings
Long-baseline interferometers can resolve detailed stellar processes.
Space-based UV/Optical observations are essential for these resolutions.
Technological development for these missions is feasible within a decade.
Abstract
We summarize some of the compelling new scientific opportunities for understanding stars and stellar systems that can be enabled by sub-mas angular resolution, UV/Optical spectral imaging observations, which can reveal the details of the many dynamic processes (e.g., variable magnetic fields, accretion, convection, shocks, pulsations, winds, and jets) that affect their formation, structure, and evolution. These observations can only be provided by long-baseline interferometers or sparse aperture telescopes in space, since the aperture diameters required are in excess of 500 m - a regime in which monolithic or segmented designs are not and will not be feasible - and since they require observations at wavelengths (UV) not accessible from the ground. Two mission concepts which could provide these invaluable observations are NASA's Stellar Imager (SI; http://hires.gsfc.nasa.gov/si/)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
