Qingde Wang
Qingde "Daniel" Wang (ηιεΎ·) 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:
- 1994 Lindheimer Fellowship
- 1992 Robert J. Trumpler Award for outstanding Ph.D. thesis
- 1990-1993, Hubble Postdoctoral Fellowship
- 1985 Nanjing University New Star Award
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
References
- β 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.