Since 1963, the Texas Symposia have been a biennial, peripatetic forum for forefront developments on a wide range of topics in relativistic astrophysics, from pulsars to string theory, from the birth of the universe to the death of stars. The 26 plenary lectures, 230 parallel session talks and 265 poster presentations attest to the scientific vitality of this interdisciplinary field.
Plenary talks; AGNs, QSOs and jets; big bang nucleosynthesis; cosmic microwave background; cosmological parameters; dark matter; early universe; future projects and instruments; high energy cosmic and gamma rays; galaxy clusters; galaxy formation; gamma ray bursts; gravitational lensing; gravitational waves; large-scale structure; nuclear astrophysics; numerical relativity; pulsars and neutron stars; QSO absorption lines; quantum gravity and general relativity; solar neutrino; supernova session; X-ray binaries; X-ray and gamma-ray timing and broad-band; spectroscopy.