Qingde Wang

Qingde "Daniel" Wang (王青德) is a professor of astronomy at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. His research focuses on the hot interstellar medium and intergalactic medium. He received his Ph.D. at Columbia University[1] in 1990.

Wang has won the following honors:

Bibliography

A sampling of his recent publications includes:

  • A Faint Discrete Source Origin for the Highly Ionized Iron Emission from the Galactic Centre Region, 2002, Nature 415, 148
  • Ultraluminous X-ray Source 1E 0953.8+6918 (M81 X-9): An Intermediate-Mass Black Hole Candidate and its Environs, 2002, MNRAS 332, 764
  • Chandra Observation of the Edge-on Galaxy NGC 3556 (M108): Violent Galactic Disk-Halo Interaction Revealed, 2003, ApJ 598, 969
  • Detection of X-ray-Emitting Hypernova Remnants in M101, 1999, ApJL, 517, 27
  • An Ultra Deep High Resolution X-ray Image of M101: X-ray Source Population in a Late-type Spiral, 1999, ApJ, 523, 121
  • Structure and Evolution of Hot Gas in 30 Doradus, 1999, ApJL, 510, 139
gollark: Essentially.
gollark: It uses this mildly hellish JSON syntax (`!["Protected or Pinned", "ignored", "or", [["content.protected", "=", true], ["pinned", "=", true]]]`) but I figure you could make them SQL or Lua or something/
gollark: https://docs.standardnotes.org/usage/tags
gollark: Notably, you can have tags with some amount of logic in them for filtering based on various predicates.
gollark: Now, while very ææææ in some ways (they say stuff about keeping notes around for 100 years, but run on a subscription model, and do their stuff as a clientside webapp?!), some of the features there ARE very cool.

References

  1. Wilford, John Noble (4 April 1989). "Is Star Spinning or Vibrating? Is It Even Real?". The New York Times. p. 13. Retrieved 27 May 2011.


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