Thirty-three years have passed since the first edition of Astrophysical Concepts appeared. During this time astrophysics has undergone major revolutions. We have gained new perspectives on the Universe with the aid of powerful gamma-ray, Xray, and infrared telescopes, whose sensitivities could not have been imagined three decades earlier. We have become expert at snaring neutrinos to gain insight on nuclear processes at work in the Sun and supernovae. We have direct evidence for the existence of neutron stars and gravitationalwaves, and persuasive arguments for the detection of black holes on scales of individual stars as well as galactic nuclei. Primordial fluctuations, remnants from the first moments in the expansion of the Universe have revealed themselves in the faint ripples marking the microwave sky. These ripples also document the first appearance of dark matter now known to have dominated the formation and evolution of all cosmic structure. And dark energy has gradually had to be acknowledged to be the dominant factor driving the expansion of the Universe today.