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  • articleNo Access

    FEATURES

      Scanning the Future of Medical Imaging

      Putting Numbers into Biology: The Combination of Light Sheet Fluorescence Microscopy

      and Fluorescence Spectroscopy

      Abyss Processing – Exploring the Deep in Medical Images

    • chapterNo Access

      HOW INTERSTELLAR CHEMISTRY (AND ASTROCHEMISTRY MORE GENERALLY) BECAME USEFUL

      In 1986 Alex Dalgarno published a paper entitled Is Interstellar Chemistry Useful?1 By the middle 1970s, and perhaps even earlier, Alex had hoped that astronomical molecules would prove to: possess significant diagnostic utility; control many of the environments in which they exist; stimulate a wide variety of physicists and chemists who are at least as fascinated by the mechanisms forming and removing the molecules as by astronomy. His own research efforts have contributed greatly to the realization of that hope. This paper contains a few examples of: how molecules are used to diagnose large-scale dynamics in astronomical sources including star forming regions and supernovae; the ways in which molecular processes control the evolution of astronomical objects such as dense cores destined to become stars and very evolved giant stars; theoretical and laboratory investigations that elucidate the processes producing and removing astronomical molecules and allow their detection.