The name for a number
of faults that occur in telescopes including the colour defects of refractors
(chromatic aberration), spherical aberration, coma, distortion, astigmatism and
field curvature.
ABSOLUTE MAGNITUDE.
A measure of the
intrinsic brightness of objects. The apparent magnitude of the object [fit were
at a distance of ten parsecs. The absolute magnitude of Sirius is +1.4.
ACHROMATIC LENS.
Two lenses made from
different glasses, reducing, but not eliminating, the problem of chromatic
aberration. The colour defect can be further reduced by using more lenses to
produce an apochromatic lens.
ACTIVE GALAXY.
A galaxy emitting
intensely at optical and/or radio and/or X-ray wavelengths from a small central
core. Examples are Seyfert galaxies, EL Lac objects, and quasars. Most
explanations of active galaxies involve material falling into a gigantic black
hole at their centres.
ALBEDO.
Another name for the
reflectivity of a planet, satellite or asteroid, i.e. the ratio between the
amount of light that the object receives from the Sun, and the amount that is
reflected directly back into space.
ALTITUDE.
The angular distance
of an object above (or below) the horizon. It forms a positional coordinate
system for objects in the sky along with azimuth.
ANGSTROM (Å).
The unit of length
often used for giving the wavelengths of light. It has a value of 10-10m.
Although still widely used in astronomy, it is gradually being superseded by
the standard SI unit of a nanometre (1Nm = 10Å).
APERTURE.
The diameter of the
objective of a telescope.
APPARENT MAGNITUDE.
The measure used for
the brightness of astronomical objects as seen in the sky. The smaller the
value of the magnitude, the brighter the object. The faintest stars visible to
the naked eye from a good site are around magnitude +6. Sirius is magnitude
-1.45.
ASHEN LIGHT.
The apparent faint
illumination of the dark side of the Moon.
ASTRONOMICAL UNIT.
A unit of distance
equal to the mean distance between the Earth and the Sun. 1AU = 1.496 x 1011m.
A-type star A star with a temperature in the region 8000 to 10000K.
AURORA.
Also known as the
northern or southern lights (Aurora Borealis and Aurora Australis). Caused by
the influx of charged particles from the Sun into the Earth's upper atmosphere.
AZIMUTH.
A measure of the
position of an object. It is the angular distance in degrees from the north
direction towards the east. Combined with the altitude it provides the
instantaneous position of an object in the sky.
Parts of the
intensely bright photosphere of the Sun shining through valleys at the edge of
the Moon at the start and end of totality in a solar eclipse. When only one
part of the photosphere shines through, it is known as the 'diamond ring'.
BALMER SERIES
The series of
spectral lines due to hydrogen running from Ha in the red at 656nm, through Hb
at 486nm and 434nm, down to the series limit at 365nm. Similar series of lines
occur for hydrogen in the ultraviolet (the Lyman series), and the infrared (the
Paschen, Pfund; and Brackett series).
BARNARD'S STAR
The star with the
largest known proper motion across the sky. It moves at a rate of about 10 arc
seconds per year.
BARRED SPIRAL
A spiral galaxy in
which the arms originate from the ends of linear extensions to the nucleus,
rather than from the nucleus itself.
BAYER NAMES
Names for the stars
derived from the system used in the Uranometria star catalogue (published In
1603). letters of the Greek alphabet are used, with a usually a for the
brightest star in a constellation, b for the second brightest etc- For example,
Sirius is 'a' Canis Majoris.
BIG BANG THEORY
The most widely
accepted group of models for the way in which the Universe came into being.
BINARY STAR
Two stars which are
physically close together in space, held together gravitationally, and are
orbiting their common centre of mass. They are to be distinguished from double
stars which are two stars seen close together in the sky, but may be physically
very distant from each other.
BLACK BODY
An imaginary object
which absorbs with 100% efficiency at all wavelengths. It is quite well
approximated by a hole in box. The energy emitted by a black body has a
characteristic shape (the black body spectrum), which may be predicted
theoretically and whose shape is given by Planck's equation. The overall
spectra of stars and many other astronomical objects are quite close in shape
to those of black bodies of various temperatures. The temperature of a black
body which emits the same total energy as an object is the effective
temperature of that object.
BLACK HOLE
An object with so
much mass compressed into such a small volume that the escape velocity equals
or exceeds the speed of light. The centres of many galaxies and quasars etc.
are thought to contain black holes with masses many millions of times that of
the Sun. Smaller black holes may be formed when a massive star ends its life
BODE'S LAW
A mathematical
relationship giving the distances in astronomical units of the planets (plus
the asteroids) out to Uranus from the Sun. At one time thought to have physical
significance, it is now regarded as a mnemonic only. The law is (0.3n + 0.4),
with n = 0, 1, 2,4,8, etc.
B-TYPE STARS
A star with a
temperature in the region 10,000 to 25,000K.
One of the two main
routes whereby hydrogen is converted into helium inside stars.. The carbon
cycle is the main source of energy in stars more massive than the Sun.
CARBON STAR
A group of cooler
stars in which carbon is over-abundant.
CASSEGRAIN TELESCOPE
One of the most
widely used designs for telescopes. It is a reflecting telescope with a concave
parabolic primary mirror and a convex hyperbolic secondary mirror. The secondary
mirror is placed before the focus of the primary and reflects the light out
through a hole in the centre of the primary to the Cassegrain focus at the back
of the telescope.
CASSINI DIVISION
A narrow gap in the
rings of Saturn caused by the gravitational perturbations from Saturn's
satellites.
CATACLYSMIC VARIABLE
A variable star in
which the change in brightness is very rapid and of large amplitude. The class
includes novae, dwarf novae and supernovae.
CELESTIAL SPHERE
An imaginary sphere,
centred on the Earth. Positions of objects in the sky are obtained from their
projected positions on the celestial sphere.
CEPHEID
A very bright
supergiant variable star expanding and contracting because of lonisation and
recombination of helium in its atmosphere. The cepheids are subdivided into the
Classical Cepheids, the W Virginis stars and RR Lyrae stars.
CHANDMSEKHAR LIMIT
An upper limit to the
mass of a white dwarf. It has a value of about 1.4 times the mass of the Sun.
If a white dwarf exceeds this mass, then it will collapse to a neutron star.
CHROMOSPHERE
The layer in the
Sun's surface immediately above the photosphere, and below the corona. It is
about 5,000km thick, and its temperature ranges from 4,000K to 10,000K.
CIRCUMPOLAR STAR
A star which is high
enough in the sky never to set.
COLOUR INDEX
The difference
between two measurements of the magnitude of an object obtained at two
different wavelengths. The most widely encountered colour index is obtained by
measurements in the B band (centred on 440nm in the blue) and the V band
(centred on 550nm in the yellow-green), and is known as the B-V colour index.
COLOUR TEMPERATURE
The temperature
obtained by assuming that an object radiates like a black body and then
measuring its intensity at two different wavelengths.
COMA
Aberration in optics
and the head of a comet.
COMET
A minor body of the
Solar System, usually in a highly elliptical orbit.
COMET NUCLEUS
The solid core -
usually small (a few kilometres across) in comparison with the comet's head and
tail, but contains almost all the mass of the comet. It is thought to be
composed of small particles of dust and pebbles cemented together by frozen
gases such as water, carbon dioxide and ammonia.
CONSTELLATION
A group of stars that
has, for convenience, been given a name.
CORONA
The outer atmosphere
of the Sun. It extends from the top of the chromosphere outwards until it
merges with the interstellar medium some tens of astronomical units out from
the Sun. The corona is a very rarefied plasma (mixture of ions and electrons)
whose temperature can reach two or three million degrees.
COSMIC BACKGROUND RADIATION
Radiation mostly in
the microwave region (and hence also known as the microwave background) which
pervades the whole of space. It is thought to be the remnant of the radiation
from the big bang.
COSMIC RAYS
Very high energy
particles which pervade at least the whole of the galaxy, and possibly the
whole of space. Most of the particles are protons and helium nuclei, with small
numbers of nuclei of heavier atoms, and a few electrons.
A relatively dense
cloud of interstellar material containing dust particles. The dust particles
absorb light from the more distant stars etc, so that the region appears dark
compared with its surroundings. The clouds are often of low temperature and
contain many molecules.
DARK MATTER
Material in the
Universe which has so far not been directly observed (also called missing
mass).
DECLINATION
One of the measures
used to determine position in the sky. Together with right ascension it forms
the most widely used coordinate system in astronomy. Declination is the angular
distance up or down from the equator on the celestial sphere.
DIFFRACTION GRATING
A device used to
produce the spectrum in astronomical spectroscopes consisting of many narrow
parallel apertures or mirrors.
DIFFUSE NEBULA
A general name for
any concentration of gas and dust in the interstellar medium.
DIRECT MOTION
The movement across
the sky, around an orbit, or the rotation of an object which follows the normal
pattern of motion within the Solar System. In the sky, the movement is from
west to east.
DISTANCE MODULUS
The difference
between the absolute and apparent magnitudes of an object used to calculate its
distance in the absence of any interstellar absorption.
DOBSONIAN
The design of telescope
developed by the American astronomer John Dobson and used by many amateur
astronomers. It comprises a Newtonian tube design mounted on a simple
Altazimuth mounting.
DOPPLER SHIFT
The change in
wavelength of a wave motion arising from the motion of the emitting object
and/or The observer along the line of sight. The wavelength is increased when
the relative motion is away, and decreased when the relative motion is towards
each other.
DOUBLE STAR
Two stars seen close
together in the sky.
DWARF NOVA
A close binary star
containing a white dwarf and a main sequence or post-main sequence star, in
which regular explosions occur on the surface of the white dwarf.
DWARF STAR
A star like our Sun
which is on the main sequence portion of the Hertzsprung Russell (HR) Diagram.
This is a stable star burning hydrogen in the normal way which it will do for
the vast majority of its life. It will remain a dwarf until it has used most of
its Hydrogen fuel then it will expand and become a Red Giant.
The reflected light from the Earth which may be seen as a faint
illumination of the dark side of the Moon.
ECCENTRICITY
The degree to which an ellipse deviates from circularity. It is usually
used in connection with orbits,. and is denoted by e.
ECLIPSE
When one object passes in front of another as seen from the Earth. The
term is usually used when the two objects are of roughly the same angular size,
as in an eclipse of the Sun by the Moon.When the angular sizes are very different the phenomenon is called an
occultation or a transit.
ECLIPSING BINARY
A binary star system with the orbital plane
close to the line of sight from the Earth. The stars therefore alternately pass
in front of each other. The binary is usually detected from the periodic
reductions in brightness arising from the eclipses.
ECLIPTIC
The path of the Sun across the sky throughout the year. Since the Sun's
apparent motion is actually due to the Earth's orbital motion the ecliptic is
also the plane of the Earth's orbit.
EFFECTIVE TEMPERATURE
The temperature of a black
body that would radiate the same amount of energy per unit area as the object
in question.
ELECTRON
One of the subatomic particles which, along with protons and neutrons,
make up atoms. It has a negative charge of 1.6 x 1O-19C, equal and
opposite to the charge on the proton. Its mass of 9.1 x 10-31kg is
only about 1/2000 of the mass of the proton.
ELLIPTICAL GALAXY
One of the major classes of galaxy:
Elliptical in shape and generally containing old and relatively cool
(and therefore reddish) stars, with little interstellar gas and dust.
ELONGATION
The angle between the Sun and a planet in the sky.For anouter planetthe elongation can range from 0° (conjunction}to180° (opposition).For Venus
and Mercury it can range from 0° (superior or inferior conjunction) to a
maximum of 47° (Venus) or 28° for (Mercury).
EMISSION NEBULA
A hot mass of thin gas in interstellar space.
The nebula is usually heated by stars embedded in it.
ENCKE’S DIVISION
A narrow gap in the outer (or A) ring of Saturn. It is about 900km wide.
ENERGY LEVEL
The energy of an electron within an atom.Movement of electrons between energy levels results in the emission or
absorption of photons, and produces spectral lines
EPHEMERIS
A listing of the successive positions in the sky
of a moving object.
EQUATION OF TIME
The difference between the true solar time (as given by a sundial) and
civil or clock time (ignoring any summer time adjustments).
EQUINOX
The two times of the year when the Sun is on the equator, or the two positions in the sky where the equator and ecliptic intersect. The
vernal equinox occurs on or around March 21 each year and the autumnal equinox
on or about September 21. The position in the sky of the vernal equinox is also
known as the first point of Aries, and is the zero point for right ascension
measurements. Despite its name, it is actually to be found in Pisces, having
moved due to precession since it was originally identified some two and a half
thousand years ago.
ESCAPE VELOCITY
The minimum velocity needed to escape completely from the surface of an
object. The escape velocity of Earth is 11.2km/s
EVENT HORIZON
The boundary of a region
surrounding a black hole from where the escape velocity equals the speed of
light. It is usually regarded as the surface of the black hole though it is not
a solid surface in any way.
EYEPIECE
An optical device used to produce images visible to the eye.
Small regions of the solar photosphere that are a few hundred degrees hotter than average, and
which therefore appear as slightly brighter regions.
F CORONA
A component of radiation from the corona which
is lightfrom the solar
photosphere scattered by interplanetary dust.
FIELD STARS(galaxies etc.)
Stars (or galaxies etc.) which are in the same field of view as the
object of interest, but which are not physically associated.
FILAMENT
An elongated dark region on the surface of the Sun.They are solar prominences seen
silhouetted against the photosphere.
FINDER
A smaller telescope attached to an astronomical telescope, used to
locate an object which is to be observed.Large telescopes have a very small field of view so the wider field of
the finder allows more of the sky to be seen.
FLARE
Sudden brightening of a region of the Sun's surface, almost invariably
within or near complex sunspot groups.
FLARE STAR
A star which suddenly
brightens by about half a
magnitude.The brightening is
attributed to flares on the surface of the star.
FLUX
The total amount of a quantity (usually radiation) passing through a
surface.
FOCAL LENGTH
The distance from a lens
or mirror to its focal point when the object being imaged is at a large
(infinite) distance.
FOCAL RATIO (f-ratio)
The ratio of the focal length of a lens or mirror to its diameter.
FORBIDDEN LINE
A spectrum line which normally has a very low
probability of occurrence.
FRAUNHOFER LINES
Strong spectral lines in the solar spectrum labelled with the letters A
to K by Joseph Fraunhofer in early nineteenth century.The sodium D lines and the calcium H
and K lines are the most commonly encountered examples of this usage today.
FREQUENCY
The number of cycles per second of a wave, measured in hertz (Hz).
Optical radiation has a frequency of around 5 x 10>Hz.
F-TYPE STAR
A star with a surface temperature between about
6,000 and 7,500K.
FUSION
An atomic reaction in which two or more
lighter elements combine to form a heavier element,forexamplethe formation of
helium from hydrogen.
A collection of stars
physically close together and bound into a stable group by gravity.
GALACTIC COORDINATE
A system of coordinates
for the positions of objects in the sky based upon the plane of the Milky Way
Galaxy and the direction to the centre of the Galaxy in Sagittarius. Galactic
latitude is the angle up or down from the plane of the galaxy, galactic
longitude. the angle eastward from the galactic centre.
GALAXY
A large group of
stars, nebulae, etc. bound together by gravity.
GALILEAN SATELLITES
The four largest
satellites of Jupiter, discovered by Galileo. They are named after the mythical
companions of Jove and are, in order of increasing distance from Jupiter; lo,
Europa, Ganymede and Callisto.
GAMMA RAYS
Photons at the Flare
stars A faint cool dwarf high frequency end of the spectrum with wavelengths of
0.0lnm or less
GENERAL RELATIVITY
The very powerful
theory developed by Einstein in 1915 of how things behave when accelerations
are involved. In it, the three dimensions of space, plus time, are combined
into the space-time continuum.
GIANT MOLECULAR CLOUD (GMC)
A gaseous nebula
containing some hundreds of thousands of solar masses of cold gas, and
occupying a volume of space some tens of parsecs across. The gas is
predominantly molecular hydrogen.
GIBBOUS
A phase of the Moon,
Mercury, Venus, etc. between half and full.
GLOBULAR CLUSTER
A spherical
collection of about 1,000,000 stars tightly bound together gravitationally, and
orbiting as a satellite of a galaxy.
GRANULATION
The second-of-arc
scale mottled pattern in the solar photosphere. Individual granules last for a
few minutes and are thought to be the tops of convection cells.
GRAVITATIONAL COLLAPSE
The collapse of an
object when its internal forces are no longer able to support it against the
force of gravity.
GRAVITATIONAL LENS
Light passing near a
massive object has its path bent by the local distortion of the space-time
continuum. The massive object therefore can act like a lens, and focus light
from more distant objects behind it.
GRAVITATIONAL RADIATION
When an object which
has mass is accelerated or otherwise disturbed, it is predicted to radiate
gravitational waves.
GREAT RED SPOT
When an object which
has mass is accelerated or otherwise disturbed.It is predicted to radiate
gravitational waves.
GREENHOUSE EFFECT
The increased
temperatures at the surface of planets because of the presence of their
atmospheres. Some of the constituents of the atmosphere, especially carbon
dioxide and methane allow the solar energy in, but then blanket the long wave
radiation back from the surface.
G TYPE STAR
A star with a surface
temperature of 5000 to 6000K. The Sun is a Type G Star.
A well
known short period comet, named after Edmund Halley who first determined its
orbit.Its period is just over 76
years, and it last came into the inner solar system in 1986.
HALO
The outer
regions of a galaxy extending well beyond the normally visible galaxy (galactic
halo); roughly spherical in shape and containing isolated stars and globular
clusters. A luminous ring occasionally to be observed around the moon in the
sky (lunar halo) due to ice crystals high in the Earth's atmosphere.
HAYASHI TRACK
A part of the path of a protostar on
the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram.
HELIUM FLASH
The
explosive start of nuclear reactions converting helium into carbon in the core
of an aging star.
HELIUM PROBLEM
The problem of trying to explain why the
basic form of matter throughout the Universe is about three-quarters hydrogen
and one quarter helium. Although helium is produced during nucleosynthesis in
stars, there has not been enough time to have converted 25% of the hydrogen
into helium. The problem is solved in big bang cosmologies because of the
formation of helium early in the big bang itself.
HENYEY TRACK
A part of
the path ofa protostar onthe Hertzsprung-Russell diagram.
HERBIG-HARO OBJECTSSmall, molecular clouds often occurring
in pairs.They are thought to be
where jets from young stars or protostars are colliding with the surrounding interstellar
material.
HERTSPRUNG-RUSSELL (HR) DIAGRAM
A plot of
the luminosity or absolute magnitude of a star against its temperature or
spectral type.
HI REGIONA cool gaseous nebula containing mostly
atomic hydrogen.
HII REGION
A hot
gaseous nebula heated by recently formed stars embedded within it: most of it
is ionised.
HORSEHEAD NEBULA
A cool
gaseous nebula in Orion about 350pc away, also known as NG02024
HOUR ANGLE
The angle
to an object measured westward from the prime meridian (the great circle for a
particular observer which goes through the celestial poles and the zenith). It
is measured in hours, minutes and seconds, and may be calculated for a
particular object from its right ascension and the sidereal time: (HA = ST - RA)
HUBBLE CLASSIFICATION OF
GALAXIES
A
classification of the elliptical and spiral galaxies based on their appearance.
HUBBLE CONSTANT
The
constant which determines the relationshipbetweenthe
distance of a galaxy and its cosmological recessional velocity.Its value is important because it
determines the length of time that has elapsed since the big bang, i.e. the age
of the Universe.
HUBBLE LAW
Thelinear relationship between the
distance of a galaxy (D) and its cosmological recessional velocity (V); V =
HxD, where H is Hubble’s constant.
An alignment of the Earth, Sun, and
either Mercury or Venus. The planet is at its closest to the Earth, but is also
at its worst for observations as it shows only its un-illuminated side
INFLATION
A period very early on in the big bang
origin of the Universe when the expansion rate was many times the speed of
light.
INFARED
The part of the electromagnetic
radiation spectrum with wavelengths somewhat longer than those in the visible,
the radiation we know as heat.
INSOLATION
The amount of energy per unit area
received from the Sun. At the top of the Earth's atmosphere it is about
1.4kWm-2.
INSTABILITY
STRIP
A region of the Hertzsprung-Russell
diagram wherein a large number of variable stars are to be found.
INTENSITY
The amount of radiant energy received
per unit time, per unit solid angle, per unit area of the receiver oriented
perpendicularly to the line of sight to the source.
INTERFEROMETER
One of a number of different devices
which achieve higher sensitivity and/or resolution than any of their
constituent telescopes through interference between the outputs to two or more
telescopes.
INTERSTELLAR
ABSORPTION
The absorption of light from distant
stars and galaxies by the material in the interstellar medium.
INTERSTELLAR
DUST
Particles
ranging from a few tens of nanometres to a few hundreds of nanometres in size,
present in the interstellar medium to the extent of about one percent or two
percent by mass. The particles are thought to have cores of graphite and/or of
silicates, and to be covered in a layer of solidified gases frozen from the
interstellar medium. The cores may originate in the outer atmospheres of cool
red giants. The dust particles produce interstellar absorption and, when
aligned by the interstellar magnetic field, polarisation of the light from
distant stars. the long wave radiation back from the surface.
INTERSTELLAR
MOLECULES
About
a hundred different molecules have been found existing in the interstellar
medium, mostly in the giant molecular clouds. They range from simple diatomic
molecules like ON and OH, to complex organic molecules with a dozen or more
atoms.
IONISATION
The loss, or less frequently the gain,
of an electron by an atom or molecule to give it a net electric charge. Atoms
may be Ionised as many times as they have electrons. Thus hydrogen can be
Ionised only once, but iron has twenty six different stages of lonisation.
Ionised atoms are often symbolised by their chemical symbols and a roman
numeral which is one larger than the number of electrons that have been lost.
Thus neutral hydrogen is HI, and Ionised hydrogen, HII. An alternative notation
uses superscript pluses (pr minuses when the atom gains an electron) as in N-+,
H- etc.
IONOSPHERE
A layer in a planet's atmosphere with
a higher than average level of lonisation. On the Earth, the ionosphere is at a
height between 50 and 400km, and is produced by lonisation of the Earth's
atmospheric gases by ultraviolet radiation from the Sun and by solar cosmic
rays.
IRON
PEAK
A peak in the cosmic abundance of
elements near to iron. It arises from the high stability of the iron nucleus which
makes it the end point for normal nucleosynthesis reactions.
IRREGULAR
GALAXY
A
galaxy which has no obvious shape or structure.
ISOTOPE
The identity of an element
is determined by the number of protons in its nucleus. The
number of neutrons in the nucleus can vary without changing
the element, producing different isotopes of that element.
The size of a condensation within an
interstellar or intergalactic gas cloud at which it will start to collapse
under its own gravitational forces. For a typical interstellar nebula it has a
value of a few parsecs.
JEANS'
MASS
The mass of a condensation whose size
is given by the Jeans' length.
JET
Material expelled from an object in
the form of a collimated stream (like water from a hose pipe). Often two jets
are emitted in opposite directions leading to bi-polar outflows.
JULIAN
DAY
A calendar based upon counting the
days elapsed since January 1, 4713BC on the Julian calendar. The Julian day
(JD) starts at midday. Thus midday on January 1, 2000 is the start of
JD2451545.
JUPITER
The fifth planet
from the Sun in our Solar System. It is a gas giant and the
largest of the Planets
A
component in the spectrum of the solar corona characterised by a continuum. It
is due to solar radiation that has been scattered by the electrons in the
corona.
KELVINUnit of
the measurement of temperature. The unit is the same as Centigrade
but zero it taken as the temperature at absolute zero minus
273°C. Centigrade has its zero at the freezing point of water
at sea level.
KELVIN
CONTRACTION
The
contraction of a star or other object as a result of energy being lost by
radiation and not being replaced from sources such as nucleosynthesis
reactions. Kelvin contraction probably occurs during the formation of a star
and during the collapse of a star to a white dwarf.
KELVIN
TIME
The
time taken for a star or other object to collapse from an infinite size to its
present size by Kelvin contraction. It is roughly the lifetime for any object
which is shining because of the release of gravitational energy. For the Sun
its value is about twenty five million years.
KEPLERLAN
ORBIT
The orbit of one mass around another
when the sizes of the objects are small compared with their
separation, and there are no forces other than gravity involved
nor any other objects around to produce perturbations.
KEPLER'S
LAWS
The
three laws of planetary motion and of any objects following Keplerian orbits.
1. Each planet moves in an ellipse with the Sun at
one focus.
2. The line from the Sun to the planet sweeps out
area at a constant rate.
3. The square of the orbital period is proportional
to the cube of the semi-major axis of the orbit
KERR
BLACK HOLE
A black hole that is rotating.
KIRKWOOD
GAPS
Regions of the asteroid belt which are
largely devoid of asteroids.
KRUSKAL
DIAGRAM
A diagram that enables the properties
of space and time to be correctly represented near a black hole.
K-TYPE
STAR
A star with a temperature
in the region 3600K to 5000K.
LAGRANGIAN
POINTSPoints near
two objects which are in orbit around each other where a much
smaller object can remain in equilibrium.
LATE TYPE STARSThe cooler stars (spectral types K and
M). The term dates from the late nineteenth century when it was thought that
hot stars evolved into cooler stars.
LAUNCH WINDOW
The period when a rocket or spacecraft has to be launched in order to
achieve the desired orbit.
LEPTON
A family of sub-atomic particles which includes electrons, neutrinos and
muons.
LIBRATION
A phenomenon allowing about 59 percent of the surface of the Moon to be seen
from the Earth.
LIGHT CONE
The volume of space time through which a light signal can travel towards or
away from an event.
LIGHT GRASP
The increase in the amount of light received from point sources like stars
when they are viewed through a telescope compared with looking at them with
unaided eye. Light grasp is given by 20,000 D2, where D is the diameter of the
telescope in metres.
LIMB
The edge of an object as seen against the sky.
LIMB DARKENING
The reduction in surface brightness of the limbs of the Sun or other stars
compared with the centres of their visible discs.
LINE PROFILE
A graphical plot of the variation of intensity across a spectrum line.
LITHIUM STARS
Stars with an over abundance of lithium compared with normal. They include
peculiar cool giants known as carbon stars, and I Tauri stars. The significance
of the excess of lithium is that this element is very quickly destroyed during
nucleosynthesis reactions, so its presence indicates either a very young star,
or one with unusual processes occurring within it.
LOCAL GROUP
The small cluster of galaxies which includes the Milky Way Galaxy, the
galaxy in Andromeda (M31), the Magellanic clouds and about another 25 small
nearby galaxies.
LONG PERIOD VARIABLES
Variable stars with periods ranging from several months to a few years. The
change in optical brightness can be up to ten magnitudes (a factor of x
10,000). They are cool red giants or supergiants. Mira (o Cet) is one example.
LUMINOSITY
The total amount of energy radiated by a star or any other object. For the
Sun it is 4 x 1026 W
LUNATION
The synodic period of the Moon. It has a value of 29.53 days and is the
interval over which a complete cycle of the lunar phase occurs.
LYMAN LINES
A regular series of lines in the ultraviolet part of the hydrogen
spectrum.
Two small satellite galaxies of the Milky Way, visible from
the southern hemisphere and named to commemorate Ferdinand Magellan's
expedition which first circumnavigated the Earth(1519 -1522).
MAGNETIC FIELD
The region
around a permanent magnet Pr flowingelectricalcurrent
throughoutwhichanother magnet will experience a measurable
force.The Earth's magnetic field
has a strength of about 0.00001 tesla (T).
MAGNETIC STARS
Stars with
unusually intense magnetic fields. They are often Ap stars. The fields can
reach strengths of 1T and are often highly variable.White dwarfs and neutron stars have much more intense
magnetic fields, sometimes exceeding lO8 T.
MAGNETOPAUSET
he interface
between a region containing a magnetic field and the outside.Most frequently used in connection with
the Earth's and other planet's magnetic fields.The solar wind compresses the field on the sunward side and
drags it out into the magnetotail on the opposite side.
MAGNETOSPHERE
The region
within the magnetopause where the magnetic field of the object is dominant.
MAGNIFICATION
The increase
in linear or angular size of the image of an object when compared with the
original.
MAGNITUDE
A measure of brightness.Astronomers measure stars in units
called magnitudes but this is not a unit like a meter or a kilogram.Each magnitude is two and a half times
brighter than the previous magnitude which is in turn is two and a half times
brighter than the previous magnitude to that. The larger the magnitude number
the dimmer the star will appear.Very bright stars have negative (minus) numbers.There are two kinds of magnitude
measurements used :-
APPARENT
MAGNITUDE
This is how bright a star
appears to be in our sky.
ABSOLUTE
MAGNITUDE
This is how bright stars would appear if
they were all the same distance away from us. The standard distance for
measuring absolute magnitude is 10 parsecs or 32.6 Light Years.
It
can be seen that a star two magnitudes brighter than another star will be 2.5 x
2.5 = 6.25 times brighter.Three
magnitudes will be 2.5 x 2.5 x 2.5 = 15.6 times brighter.So a star with a magnitude of 13 will
be 156250 times fainter than a star of magnitude 0.Very bright stars have a magnitude less than 0 and therefore
have negative magnitudes for example Sirius in Canis Major which is the
brightest star visible from Britain, has an apparent magnitude of –1.47. Venus
has a maximum apparent magnitude of –4.5 and the Sun is -27.
MAIN SEQUENCE
The spectral
class which contains the majority of the stars. Stars spend most of their lives
on the main sequence and change very little during that time.The Sun has a main sequence lifetime of
about 1010 years.Whilst on the main sequence, stars obtain their energy by conversion of
hydrogen to helium in their cores.
MAKSUTOV
TELESCOPE
A telescope
which uses both a mirror and a lens as its main light gathering optics. The
mirror is spherical and thePens
ameniscus with -spherical
surfaces. The secondary mirror is aluminised onto the rear surface of the lens.
It gives very high quality images- but is Limited to small sizes because of the
thick lens required.
MARE
A large area on a satellite or planet which is distinctly smoother
in appearance than the rest of the surface- The name derives from the Latin for
"sea"The circular
maria, such as Mare Imbrium on the Moon are the largest forms of impact crater
subsequently flooded by lava flows resulting from the impact.The irregular maria are low-lying areas
also flooded by Lava, but from some other source.
MASCON
A region of
increased gravitational attraction on the Moon.Mostmasconsare associated with
circular maria and are due to increased densities of the subsurface rocks.
MASER
A highly
intense source of microwave radiation occurring when metastable states in atoms
or molecules become over-populated.Naturally occurring masers are found in some giant molecular clouds and
around red giants.
MASS EXCHANGE
The exchange
of material between two objects. This usually occurs in close binary stars,
when one component evolves and expands to fill its Roche lobe. Material then
flows through the inner Lagrangian pointtowardsthesecondstar.Usuallythe materialorbitsthe accreting star as an accretion disc
before turbulence and viscosity cause it to fall to the star's surface.
MAUNDER MINIMUM
A period of
about seventy years from 1645 to 1715 when the sunspot cycle ceased and there
were almost no sunspots visible on the Sun. It coincided with a period of lower
than average temperatures on Earth, but the causal link is not certain.
MERIDIAN
A great
circle on the Earth or the celestial sphere passing through the north and south
poles.On the Earth it is a line
of constant longitude, on the celestial sphere a line of constant hour angle or
right ascension.The meridian
passing through the zenith for a particular observer is called the prime
meridian and from it is measured the hour angle of an object.
MESOSPHERE
A layer in
the Earth's atmosphere from about 50 to 90km in height.
MESSIER
CATALOGUE
A catalogue
of just over one hundred fuzzy objects to avoid (if you are a comet hunter)
compiled by Charles Messier in 1784.
METEOR
The streak of
light produced high in the Earth's atmosphere by the impact of a
meteorite.Sporadic meteors may be
seen at a rate of about five to ten per hour from an average site.Meteor showers occur when the Earth
passes through debris left by a disintegrating comet.Very large meteors are called fireballs or bolides if they
explode.
METEORITE
The fragment
of a meteoroid which has survived passage through a planet's atmosphere to
reach the surface.Most meteorites
are of rocky composition but about six percent are almost pure Nickel aan
Iron.About two percent are formed
from mixtures of rock and iron.Two subgroups are the carbonaceous chondrites which contain some simple
organic molecules and are thought to pre-date the formation of the solar system
and the SNO meteorites which may have come from Mars.
METEOROID
A small body
independently orbiting the Sun.The meteoroids merge into the asteroids at the larger end and into the
inter-planetary dust at the smaller end of the scale.
METEOR SHOWER
A series of
meteors lasting from a few hours to several days which have parallel paths
through space.Perspective means
that the meteor tracks appear to diverge from a point in the sky called the
radiant.The position of the
radiant is often used to give the shower a name: thus the Leonids have their
radiant in Leo.The particles
producing the meteors are thought to be debris from a comet the Leonids for
example originate from comet TempleTuttle.
METONIC CYCLE
Period of 19
years when the Moon's phases repeat themselves on the same days of the month.
MILKY WAY
The faint
irregular glowing band which circles the sky.It is a small part of our own galaxy and comprises tens of
millions of stars, each too faint to be seen with the naked eye individually,
but clearly seen in aggregate.It
gives its name to our galaxy.
MIRA VARIABLE
Long period
variable stars.
M-TYPE STAR
A star with a
temperature of about 3500K.
MUON
A sub-atomic particle which
is similar to the electron but with a mass 207 times greater
The direction directly underneath
the observer, the opposite of the zenith.
NASMYTH FOCUS
One of two focal points available
for telescopes mounted on alt-azimuth mountings which are fixed as the
telescope moves in altitude.The
light is reflected down the hollow altitude axis to emerge at the side of the
telescope.
NEBULA
Clouds of rarefied gas in space
such as emission nebulae, giant molecular clouds, HII regions, planetary
nebulae and supernova remnants.
NEUTRINO
A sub-atomic particle which is
produced in huge numbers during supernovae and is one of the products of
nuoleosynthesis The neutrino has a rest mass
of zero or very close to it and so moves at or near the speed of light.Neutrinos interact very weakly with
ordinary matter and so can escape directly from the centre of the Sun.
NEUTRON
One of the constituents of atomic
nuclei. It is a subatomic particle
with zero electric charge and a mass of 1.67 x 10-27kg.
NEUTRON STAR
A star composed largely of
neutrons.The neutrons form from
the combination of protons and electrons as the density of the material rises
above 4 x 1014kg m-3.Such conditions can occur during the later stages of a
star's life when its internal pressure is no longer sufficient to support the
weight of the star's outer layers leading to a catastrophic collapse. all novae
are recurrent on time scales of 10,000 years or more.
NEW GENERAL CATALOGUE
(NGC)
A catalogue containing some 7840
nebulae, star clusters and galaxies. The catalogue number is frequently used as
the name for an object.
NEWTONIAN TELESCOPE
A design for areflectingtelescope invented by Sir Isaac Newton in 1668 which uses a
parabolic mirrorasthetelescope's objective, and a secondary flat mirror, set at
450 to the optical axis and placed just before the focus of the primary mirror,
to reflect the light out through the side of the instrument.
NODE
The points in space where the orbit of a Solar System object
intersects the plane of the Earth's orbit (the ecliptic). Solar and lunar
eclipses can only occur when the Moon is at or close to one of the nodes of its
orbit around the Earth.
NOISE
Variations in any form of signal
which are not due to the originating object of that signal.
NONTHERMAL RADIATION
Radiation originating through processes other than
the heat of the source.
NOVA
A star which brightens by 12 to
15 magnitudes in a few days, fading back to its pre-outburst condition over the
following year or two.Novae occur
close to binary stars where one component is a white dwarf and the other is a
star just evolving off the main sequence.Mass is exchanged between the two stars and is accumulated on the
surface of the white dwarf.Eventually the layer of material from the main sequence star becomes hot
enough to undergo a runaway nuclear fusion reaction which is seen as the nova
outburst.Some nova have been
observedto explode two or more
times at intervals of several decades and are known as recurrent novae.It is likely that all novae are
recurrent on time scales of 10,000 years or more.
N TYPE GALAXY
An active galaxy somewhere
between a quasar and a Seyfert galaxy in its properties. The nucleus is very
small and bright, and sometimes variable in its intensity. The remainder of the
galaxy is very faint.
N-TYPE STAR
A star with a similar temperature
to the M-type stars, but with very strong features in its spectrum due to
carbon-based molecules such as 02, OH and ON. Also known as a carbon star.
NUCLEON
One of the primary subatomic
particles making up an atomic nucleus. The two types of nucleon are protons and
neutrons.
NUCLEOSYNTHESIS
The processes whereby elements
heavier than hydrogen are built upfromhydrogen.Most nucleosynthesis occurs inside stars,
but some occurred during the early stages of the big bang, converting about 24
percent of the hydrogen to helium and some occurs during supernova explosions
producing the elements heavier than Iron.
NUTATION
A small cyclic variation
in precession arising from the gravitational effect of the
Moon. Its amplitude varies but is typically about 9"
and its period is 18.6 years
A group of
hot stars (spectral types 0 and B) in a region from a few to a few hundred
parsecs across. The starsaregenerallynot gravitationally bound together and so the associations
are dispersing. They are the remnant of recent star formation in a large H II
region.
OBJECTIVE
The main
light gathering optical component(s) of a telescope.
OBJECTIVE PRISM
A large thin
prism placed before the objective of a telescope. Each star or other object is
then seen as a short spectrum at the focus.
OBLIQUITY
The angle
between the plane of a planet's orbit and its equator. The obliquity of the
Earth is currently about 23.50.
OBSERVATORY
Any type of
permanent or semi-permanent shelter for a telescope, or a group of telescopes.
OCCULTATION
When an angularly
large celestial object passes in front of an angularly small object.
OORT CLOUD
The outermost
part of the Solar System thought to contain large numbers of nuclei of comets.
OORT'S CONSTANTS
Two numbers
which appear in the formulae which describe the rotational motions of the stars
around the Milky Way galaxy in the region of the Sun.
OPACITY
The ability
of a medium to absorb radiation.
OPEN CLUSTER
An
alternative name for a galactic cluster.
OPPOSITION
A straight
line alignment of the Sun, Earth and an outer planet. The planet is then
usually at or near its closest approach to the Earth, andsobestplacedfor observing.
OPTICAL PAIR
A double star
in which there is no physical connection between the stars.
ORBIT
The path of
an object moving in a gravitational field. If there are no perturbations, the
shape of an orbit is one of the conic sections, usually an ellipse.
ORRERY
Originally a
clockwork mechanical model of the Solar System showing the planets moving
around the Sun and sometimes the satellites around their parent planets.
O-Type Star
A star with a surface temperature of
30000K or more.
OZONE LAYER
A layer of the Earth's atmosphere at a height of about 20 to
50km containing small amounts of ozone (a molecule composed
of three oxygen atoms). The ozone absorbs the solar ultraviolet
radiation at wavelengths shorter than 330nm protecting life
from its harmful effects
The angular displacement of an object when viewed from
two different points in space. The parallax motion of nearby
stars caused by the Earth motion around the Sun is the basis
for measuring the distances of these stars.
P CYGNI STAR
A hot variable star with peculiar emission and absorption
lines in its spectrum.
PENROSE PROCESS
A mechanism for extracting rotational energy from a
black hole.
PERIOD-LUMINOSITY RELATION
The relationship between the mean luminosity of a Cepheid
variable star and the period of its changes.
PHASE
Most widely used in astronomy in connection with the
fraction of a disc of the Moon or a planet which is illuminated
by the Sun. Phase is also used in connection with lunar and
solar eclipses, where it is the fraction or percentage of
the disc that is in umbral shadow (lunar eclipse) or that
is obscured (solar eclipse).
PHOTOMETRY
The science, craft and practice of measuring the intensity
of radiation from celestial objects.
PHOTOMULTIPLER
A widely used detector working in the optical region.
PHOTON
Light has a dual nature, sometimes behaving like a wave,
at other times behaving like a particle. The photon, also
known as the quantum, is the 'particle' of light.
PHOTOSPHERE
One of the outer layers of the Sun or similar stars
within which the bulk of the radiation from the star originates.
The solar photosphere is about 500km thick and ranges from
a temperature of about 9,000K at its base to 4,400K at the
top, with the bulk of the radiation coming from a 100km thick
region at a temperature of about 6,000K.
PIXEL
A term derived from 'picture element'. It refers to
images obtained by array type detectors, such as CCD's and
to the detectors and is one element of the image or detector.
PLAGE
A brightening of the solar chromosphere usually to be
found near a sunspot region.
PLANETARY NEBULAE
An emission nebula which results from the loss of surface
material from a star near the end of its life. The ultraviolet
radiation from thematerial, and recombination of the ions
and electrons results in the visible light emission by which
The nebulae are seen.
PLANISPHERE
A device for showing the constellations to be seen at
a given time of night and time of year.
PLASMA
A gas in which the atoms have been completely ionised
so that it is composed of bare atomic nuclei and free electrons
only.
POLARISATION
The property of a beam of light (or any other electro-magnetic
radiation) whereby the direction of vibration of the waves
is not random.
POPULATIONS I AND II
A division of the stars on basis of age. Population
I stars are younger and generally hotter and bluer than population
II stars. Population I stars predominate in the spiral arms
of galaxies, while population II stars are found in the nuclei
of spiral galaxies and in elliptical galaxies
POSITION ANGLE
The angle on the sky between two objects, such as the
components of a double star. It is measured north - east and
south - west, from 0 to 360º.
POSITRON
The anti-particle of the electron. It has a positive
charge equal in magnitude to the negative charge of an electron.
PRECESSION
The phenomenon whereby the rotational axis of the Earth
itself rotates through space. The effect arises from an imbalance
between the gravitational forces from the Sun acting on the
near and far sides of the Earth. The axis rotates in a period
of 25,700 years. The position of the north and south poles
in the sky therefore changes over the same time. Precession
also causes the intersection of the equator and the ecliptic
known as the first point of Aries, to move completely around
the ecliptic over the same period. Since the positions of
stars (right ascension and declination) are based upon the
positions of the equator and the first point of Aries, these
also change with time by up to 50" per year. Star catalogues
and atlases are therefore only correct at a specific time,
known as the epoch, and for accurate work, the effects of
precession have to be corrected if observing at a different
date.
PRESSURE BROADENING
An increase in the widths of spectrum lines as the pressure
in the gas from which they originate increases.
PRIME MERIDIAN
The meridian passing through the north and south points
on the horizon and the zenith. It divides the sky into the
eastern and western halves, and is reference point from where
hour angle is measured.
PROGRADE MOTION
The 'normal' direction of motion of Solar System objects.
In space this is anti-clockwise around the Sun as seen from
above the north pole of the Sun. In the sky it is from west
to east.
PROMINENCE
A feature of the lower part of the solar corona which
when observed in the red line of hydrogen at 653nm (Ha), look
like flames leaping up from the surface of the Sun. In fact
they are cool (10,000ºK) dense condensations in the bottom
layer of the corona. They are the same phenomenon as solar
filaments but seen at the edge of the solar disc where they
appear bright against the darker sky. Their sizes can range
from a few thousand kilometres to millions of kilometres,
and their lifetimes from a few hours to a year or more.
PROPER MOTION
The movement of a celestial object across the sky due
to its actual motion through space. For stars proper motions
range downwards from a maximum of a few seconds of arc per
year.
PROTON
One of the constituents of atomic nuclei. It is a subatomic
particle with unit positive electric charge and a mass of
1.67 x 10-27kg.
PROTON-PROTON CHAIN
The main series of nucleosynthesis reactions whereby
the Sun and other low mass stars generate their energy.
PROTOSTAR
A star in the process of being born from an interstellar
gas cloud.
PULSAR
A rapidly pulsating radio source. Pulsars are thought
to be rotating neutron stars with the radio emission being
beamed out along their magnetic axes. The periods range from
a millisecond to a few seconds and are very highly stable.
A few pulsars may be observed at visible and shorter wavelengths.
The position of an outer planet when the Planet -Sun
- Earth angle is 90°
QUANTUM
Appertaining to the behaviour of sub-atomic particles
as described by quantum theory. Also used as an alternative
name for the photon.
QUANTUM EFFICIENCY
The ratio between the number of photons picked up by
a radiation detector to the number arriving at that detector.
QUASAR
The most extreme form of active galaxy. The most widely
accepted model for a quasar has a massive (1000-solar mass)
black hole surrounded by an accretion disc at its centre.
Material from the accretion disc spirals into the black hole
releasing up to 40 percent of its rest mass energy in the
process.
Normally the component of the velocity of a celestial
object along the line of sight from the Earth. It is positive
when the object is moving away from the Earth, and negative
when it is moving towards us. The term is also used for the
velocity of material towards or away from some other object,
such as the surface layers of an oscillating star like a Cepheid
or the expanding nebula around a nova or supernova.
RADIAN
A unit for measuring angles. A complete circle (360º)
has 2o radians (6.283r), so one radian is about 57.296º.
RADIANT
The point In the sky from which meteors in a meteor
shower appear to diverge. It is the direction in space of
the relative velocity of the meteors with respect to the Earth.
RADIATION PRESSURE
The pressure exerted by light or other forms of electromagnetic
radiation.
RADIO GALAXY
A Galaxy emitting much more than the normal amount of
radio energy. The optically visible galaxies are often giant
elliptical galaxies with the radio emission coming from pairs
of regions on either side and well outside the visible part
of the galaxy. The radio emission can reach a million times
that of a normal galaxy. They am classed as active galaxies
and their peculiarities may be due to super-massive central
black holes as with Seyfert galaxies and quasars.
RADIO TELESCOPE
A telescope designed for receiving long wave radiation.
Many radio telescopes operate on similar principles to optical
telescopes and use a parabolic mirror to focus the radio waves.
The minors of such radio telescopes however have to be huge:
up to 300m in diameter, in order to gather sufficient energy
and to resolve close sources. Greater resolution and sometimes
sensitivity is obtained by using two or more such basic radio
telescopes in an interferometer. Large versions of such systems
can provide the resolution equivalent to a telescope thousands
of kilometres across, though not the sensitivity of such an
instrument, via Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI).
RAYLEIGH LIMIT
The measure conventionally used for the angular resolution
of a telescope or other instrument.Recombination The recapture
of an electron by an ionised atom.
RED GIANT
A cool star of large physical size. They are stars in
the late stages of their lives, having consumed the hydrogen
in their cores and evolved off the main sequence.
REDSHIFT OF THE GALAXIES
The general shift of lines in the spectra of galaxies
towards longer wavelengths. The shift is greater the further
away the galaxy is from us, and it is generally taken to be
a Doppler shift due to the motion of the galaxy. The redshift,
or rather the underlying velocities, are remnants of the explosive
origin of the universe in the big bang.
REFLECTING TELESCOPE
A telescope which uses a mirror as its objective. The
main designs currently in use are the Cassegrain, its variant
the Ritchey - Chrétien, and the Newtonian telescopes.
REFLECTION NEBULA
An interstellar nebula whose presence is revealed by
reflected (scattered) light from one or more nearby stars.
REFRACTING TELESCOPE
A telescope which uses a lens as its objective. The
lens is usually achromatically corrected.REGOLITH The layer
of soil on the surface of an airless planet or satellite.
Mostly composed of rock and meteorite fragments.
RESOLUTION
The ability of an instrument to separate two close features.
REST MASS
The mass of an object when it is at rest with respect
to the observer. Special relativity tells us that the mass
of an object increases as its velocity increases with respect
to the observer, becoming infinite as the object reaches the
speed of light.
RETROGRADE MOTION
The 'unusual' direction of motion of Solar System objects.
In space this is clockwise around the Sun as seen from above
the north pole of the Sun. In the sky it is from east to west.
RIGHT ASCENSION
One of the measures used to determine position in the
sky. Together with declination it forms the most widely used
coordinate system in astronomy. Right ascension is the angular
distance around the equator to the meridian through the object,
measured from the first point of Aries in an easterly direction.
RITCHEY - CHRÉTIEN TELESCOPE
A variation on the Cassegrain telescope which has improved
images over a relatively wide field of view. The parabolic
primary mirror of the Cassegrain design is deepened to an
hyperbola in the Ritchey - Chrétien, and the secondary mirror
is a stronger hyperbola than that of the equivalent Cassegrain.
The design is now widely used for modern large telescopes.
ROCHE LIMIT
The closest point which a satellite held together only
by gravity can approach its primary without being disrupted
by the tidal effect of the primary. Its value is about 2.5
to 3 times the radius of the primary depending upon the densities
of the two objects. Smaller real satellites can approach closer
to their primaries than the Roche limit because of the tensile
strength of the material from which they are formed. Larger
satellites (greater than a hundred kilometres or so), where
the tensile strength is negligible, would break up at about
the Roche limit.
ROCHE LOBE
One of two volumes in the space around a pair of mutually
orbiting bodies wherein the gravitational field of one of
the bodies predominates. Within the Roche lobe another smaller
object will be gravitationally bound to the body at the centre
of the lobe. Outside the lobes, a small particle may swap
between the bodies, or even be lost entirely to the system.
R-PROCESS
A set of reactions in nucleosynthesis where neutrons
are added to nuclei more rapidly than those nuclei can undergo
radioactive decay. The process is thought to occur during
supernova explosions and to produce many of the heavier elements.
RR LYRAE STARS
Variable stars similar to the cepheids. They are blue
giants with periods of about ten to fifteen hours and they
change in brightness by about one magnitude.
R TYPE STARS
These stars are similar to those of spectral types G
and K, but with an apparent over abundance of carbon. Their
spectra therefore contain intense bands due to carbon-rich
molecules such as C2, CH and CN.
A complex radio source at the centre of the Milky Way
Galaxy. At least a part of the energy is thought to originate
from interactions in an accretion disc around a black hole
with a mass a few million times that of the Sun. SAROS A period
of about 18 years after which a sequence of similar solar
or lunar eclipses is repeated. Since the saros is not an exact
number of days, the new set of eclipses occurs about 1200
west of the preceding set.
SATURN'S RINGS
The spectacular aggregation of countless billions of
small rocky and icy particles that surround and orbit Saturn
in its equatorial plane. Three main rings can be seen even
in small telescopes from Earth. Despite their enormous width,
the rings are very thin, perhaps less than a kilometre thick.
SCATTERING
The interaction of radiation with matter in which the
photon's direction is changed. but its energy (or wavelength
or frequency) remains the same as before the interaction,
or is changed by only a very small proportion. The blue light
from the daytime sky is due to sunlight scattered in the Earth's
atmosphere. The colour occurs not because the white light
from the Sun is changed in wavelength, but because the scattering
process involved here (known as Rayleigh scattering) is much
more effective at the shorter wavelengths. Red light from
the Sun is thus scattered to a much lesser extent than the
blue light.
SCHMIDT CAMERA
An astronomical camera with a relatively wide field
of view, designed by Bernhard Schmidt in 1930.
SCHMIDT-CASSEGRAIN TELESCOPE
The Schmidt camera cannot be used visually. An adaptation
of the design however can be used to look through and now
forms one of the most popular designs for small telescopes.
The Schmidt Cassegrain telescope is similar to the Cassegrain
telescope in having a pierced primary mirror and secondary
mirror and in having the light beam coming to a focus at the
back of the telescope through the hole in the primary- It
differs in using spherical mirrors and through the addition
of a complex thin correcting lens placed close to the secondary
mirror.
SCHWANSCHILD BLACK HOLE
A non-rotating, electrically neutral black hole. Since
most real black holes are expected to be rotating, a pure
Schwarzschild black hole is unlikely to be found, Schwarrschild
black holes are relatively easy to deal with mathematically,
and so are still studied theoretically.
SCLNWARZSCHILD RADIUS
The radius of the event horizon of a Schwarzschild
black hole.
SCINTILLATION
The twinkling of stars caused by inhomogeneities in
the Earth's atmosphere.
SECONDARY COSMIC RAYS
High energy photons and sub atomic particles produced
30 to 60km up in the Earth's atmosphere by the impact of a
primary cosmic ray particle. The main particles in secondary
cosmic rays am nucleons, and pions which decay to produce
gamma rays, muons and electrons.
SEEING
A component of scintillation which arises from low altitude
turbulence in the Earth's atmosphere. The effects can often
be reduced by careful design of the observatory building,
by equating the observatory and telescope temperatures to
the ambient temperature and by planting low growing shrubs
around the observatory.
SEMI-MAJOR/SEMI-MINOR AXES
The longest and shortest radii of an ellipse. Usually
used in respect of the orbits of planets and other objects.
SERN-REGULAR VARIABLE
A variable star whose changes are more-or-less repetitive
but where the intervals between the changes can vary irregularly.
The variables are usually medium to cool giants or supergiants,
and their periods can average from 20 days to five or more
years. The brightness changes can be by up to four magnitudes,
and they arise from pulsations of the star.
SEYFERT GALAXIES
A class of spiral and barred spiral galaxies with small
but very bight nuclei whose spectra show emission lines. The
Seyfert galaxies are subdivided into two types depending on
their emission lines. The phenomena in Seyfert galaxies are
widely thought to be due to interactions in an accretion disc
surrounding a massive black hole at the centre of the galaxy.
It is possible that Seyfert galaxies are less energetic versions
of quasars.
SHELL STAR
A star which is surrounded by an extensive shell of
gas. The majority of shell stars are of spectral class B,
and may be at the stage of just evolving away from the main
sequence.
SIDEREAL PERIOD
The period of something with respect to The stars (or
to the rest of the Universe). Most often used for the orbital
motion and rotation of the planets and other Solar System
objects, hence sidereal orbital periods and sidereal rotation
periods. The sidereal orbital period of the Earth is one year.
The sidereal rotation period of the Earth is about 23 hours
56 minutes. The Earth's orbital motion over a day means that
an extra four minutes is required for the Sun to return to
the same position in the sky.
SIDEREAL TIME
A measure of time based upon the motion of the stars
and other fixed objects in the sky. not upon the motion of
the Sun. Sidereal time enables the hour angle of an object
to be found from its right ascension (hour angle sidereal
time - right ascension).
SIGNAL TO NOISE RATIO
The ratio of the intensity of the desired signal to
the intensity of the background noise. A minimum S/N ratio
pf one is normally needed in order to have detected the object
being measured, but S/N ratios of five or better are needed
for reliable measurements.
SINGULARITY
A point in space, such as at the centre of a black hole,
where the density of matter is theoretically infinite according
to the current laws of physics.
SOLAR APEX
The direction in space towards which the Sun, and the
rest of the Solar System, is moving. It is in the constellation
of Hercules, about 12 southwest of Vega (a Lyr).
SOLAR CONSTANT
The amount of energy per square metre received from
the Sun at the top of the Earth's atmosphere. Its value is
about 1.37kw m<.
SOLAR NEUTRINO PROBLEM
The difference, by a factor of three, between the observed
intensity of neutrinos from the Sun and their theoretically
predicted intensity.
SOLAR WIND
A stream of particles such as protons, electrons and
ions moving radially outwards from the Sun.
SOLSTICE
The points on the ecliptic with the most northerly and
southerly declinations, also the times of year when the Sun
is at those points. The summer solstice, when the Sun is highest
in the sky for northern observers, occurs on or about June
21 and the winter solstice on or about December22.
SPACE-TIME
The combination of the three normal dimensions of physical
space with time as a fourth dimension that is used to describe
the properties of the Universe in the special and general
relativity theories.
SPECIAL RELATIVITY
The theory which describes the laws of physics applying
to observers and systems that are in relative motion with
respect to each other at constant velocities
SPECTRAL CLASSIFICATION
A classification of stars based upon the appearance
of their spectra. The spectrum lines present in a spectrum
depend upon the surface temperature of the star, so spectral
classification is also a temperature classification of the
stars. The classes are labelled with upper case letters, in
the order: 0, B, A, F, O,K, M.
SPECTRAL INDEX
For astronomical radio sources the intensity often varies
with frequency in an exponential fashion. The power of the
frequency, 0, is the spectral index. It takes values around
+1 for thermal radio sources and around -1 for synchrotron
and other non-thermal origins for the radiation.
SPECTROHELIOGRAM
A narrow band image of the Sun obtained using a spectrohelioscope.
The spectrohelioscope is a spectroscope in which a second
slit is used at its focus to isolate a small part of the spectrum,
usually centred on the hydrogen Ha line or the calcium H or
K lines. Spectroheliograms show a layer of the Sun in the
chromosphere some 2,000 to 4,000km above the photosphere.
Features such as flares, filaments, prominences and plages.
which are very difficult or impossible to observe in white
light, are clearly revealed on spectroheliograms.
SPECTROPHOTOMETRY
The study of brightness variations over a spectrum.
SPECTROSCOPE
A device for splitting light up into its component wavelengths
(colours). The terms spectrograph and spectrometer may also
be encountered.
SPECTRUM
The electromagnetic spectrum is the full range of electromagnetic
radiation. This comprises, going from the longest observed
wavelengths to the shortest: radio waves, microwaves, infrared,
visible, ultraviolet, X-rays and y rays.
SPECTRUM LINES
The dark, or occasionally bright, very narrow features
to be seen in a spectrum - They arise from absorption or emission
of photons by atoms, ions and molecules in the object.
SPHERICAL ABERRATION
A fault in the image produced by an optical instrument
in which the light rays towards the edge of a light beam passing
through the instrument come to a focus at a different point
from those near the centre of the beam.
SPICULE
A needle-like feature of the solar chromosphere projecting
upwards into the corona. They are typically 1,000km wide and
10,000km long, and last for 10 to 20 minutes They may be seen
projected against the solar disc on spectroheliograms where
they have a netlike distribution, which probably arises from
the pattern of convection some distance below the photosphere.
SPIRAL GALAXIES
A galaxy with a prominent spiral shape - In ordinary
spirals two or three spiral arms emerge directly from the
nucleus, in barred spirals there is a linear extension to
the nucleus (the bar) and the arms extend out from the ends
of the bar.
STEADY STATE THEORY
A theory of cosmology due to Herman Rondi, Tommy Cold
and Fred Hoyle which they proposed in 1948. The theory was
unable to give credible explanations for modern discoveries
such as the microwave background radiation, and so has now
generally been superseded by the big bang theories.
STEFAN'S LAW
A law giving the energy emitted by a black body as a
function of its temperature, also known as the Stefan Boltzmann
law.
S-TYPE STARS
A giant star with a surface temperature of about 3,500K.
This is the same temperature range as for the M type stars,
and S type stars are differentiated by the presence of zirconium
band in their spectra in place of titanium oxide bands.
SUB-DWARF
A star that has about 20 to 40 percent of the luminosity
of a main sequence (dwarf) star of the same temperature. They
are old stars (population II), with low abundances of the
heavier elements and the latter is the cause of their low
luminosities.
SUB GIANT
A star found between the main sequence and the giant
region of the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. They are evolving
towards becoming giants.
SUPERNOVA
A star brightening to between 10,000,000 and 1,000,000,000
times the luminosity of the Sun over a few weeks. Type I supernovae
are the brightest and originate from close binary stars where
one component is a white dwarf which is accreting material
from its companion. The supernova is caused by the collapse
of the white dwarf to a neutron star when its mass exceeds
the Chandrasekhar limit. Type II supernovae are the end points
in the evolution of stars with masses seven more times that
of the Sun.
SUPERNOVA REMNANT
The nebulous remains of a supernova explosion, abbreviated
as SNR. The nebula originates as the outer layers of the star
and is blasted out into space during the explosion.
SYNCHROTRON RADIATION
Radiation, usually but not always at long wavelengths,
which originates from very fast moving( electrons spiralling
around magnetic fields.
SYNODIC PERIOD
The period (orbital or rotational) as observed from
the Earth. Since the Earth is moving around the Sun, the synodic
period differs from the true (or sidereal) period. Thus the
synodic period, of the Moon (i.e. the lunar month) is 29.5
days whereas its orbital period is 27.3 days.
A glassy pebble which often shows signs of atmospheric
ablation and of having been molten whilst travelling through
space or the Earth's atmosphere. They are almost certainly
debris from meteorite impacts with the Earth.
TELESCOPE
Any device which gathers radiation and improves angular
resolution.
TELESCOPE MOUNTING
Any device to hold, point and move a telescope. For
terrestrial telescopes most mountings are either equatorial
or alt-azimuth.
TERMINATOR
The line dividing The light and dark halves of a planet
or satelife. The term is per)culark used with reference to
the Earth's Moon.
TERRESTRIAL PLANET
A small rocky planet like the Earth. The terrestrial
planets are Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars.
THERMAL ENERGY
The energy of a substance due to the random thermal
motions of its constituent atoms, ions or molecules.
THERMAL RADIATION
Electromagnetic radiation originating from any substance
whose temperature is above absolute zero, by reason of its
temperature. The spectrum of thermal radiation is often very
close to that of black body radiation.
TIDE
An effect arising from the gravitational differences
across an object caused by a second object.
TRANSFER ORBIT
An orbit which enables a spacecraft to move (transfer)
from one object to another. The lowest energy transfer orbit,
called a Hdhmann transfer orbit, is an ellipse which is tangential
to the orbits of the two objects between which the spacecraft
is travelling.
TRANSIT
The passage of an angularly small object in the sky
in front of an angularly larger object. Also the passage,
during its daily motion, of any object in the sky across the
prime meridian.
TRIPLE a PROCESS
The nucleosynthesis reaction in which three helium nuclei
(a particles) are converted to a single carbon nucleus. The
reaction powers the later stages of stars of the Sun's mass
or greater. It requires temperatures in excess of 100,000,000K
before it becomes a significant source of energy.
TWIAN POINTS
Two points in the orbit of Jupiter (and theoretically
other planets as well) where small objects such as asteroids
have stable positions. The points are 600 ahead and behind
Jupiter.
TROPCSPHERE
The lowest layer in the atmospheres of the Earth and
other planets. For the Earth it extends to a height of about
15km.
T TAURI STARS
Cool, young, irregularly variable stars, often associated
with gaseous nebulae such as the Orion nebula (M42). The stars
have formed relatively recently from within the nebulae and
are evolving towards the zero age main sequence.
A widely used system for defining the wavelengths at
which star's magnitudes are measured. The letters stand for
ultraviolet, blue and visual.
ULTRAVIOLET.
The part of the electro-magnetic radiation spectrum
with wavelengths just shorter than those in the visual range.
It extends from about 380nm to 100nm..
UMBRA
The central and darkest part of a shadow. Within the
umbra the light source is totally obscured. Outside the umbra
is the penumbra wherein the light source is partially visible.
During solar eclipses, the eclipse can only be seen as total
from within the umbral part of the Moon's shadow. During lunar
eclipses, the eclipse is normally only detectable to the eye
when the Earth's umbra shadow is on the Moon. Also the central
and darkest part of the sunspot is called the umbra, and the
outer region, the penumbra.
UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE
The principle, due to Werner Heisenberg, that there
is a limit to the precision with which two related quantities
can be measured simultaneously. It becomes important at atomic
and smaller scales.
UNIVERSAL TIME (UT)
Time based upon the Earth's rotation and the basis for
civil time keeping. It is essentially the same as Greenwich
Mean Time.
UNIVERSE
Everything there is, both known and unknown. As well
as obvious components like matter and radiation, the Universe
includes the fabric of space itself.URCA PROCESS A process
whereby neutrinos are produced in large numbers within supernovae.
Two regions within the Earth's magnetosphere where energetic
charged particles are trapped. The regions are shaped like
ring doughnuts with the holes aligned with the Earth's magnetic
poles.
VARIABLE STAR
A star, one or more of whose properties changes with
time. The most widespread use of the term is for photometric
variables, where the brightness of the star changes. This
can arise from changes to the star itself external factors
such as eclipsing binary stars (extrinsic variables). Changes
can also occur within the spectrum and/or to the polarisation
of the light from the star, resulting in spectroscopic and
polarimetric variables etc.
VERNAL EQUINOX
A synonym for first point of Aries.
VERY LONG BASE LINE INTERFEROMETRY (VLBI)
Interferometry, so far only at radio wavelengths, where
the component aerials of the interferometer are separated
by 1000's of kilometres. The large separation enables observations
to be made at resolutions of 0.001" or better, but also means
that the signals cannot be mixed directly as in a conventional
interferometer. Instead the signals are recorded along with
time signals from an atomic clock, and the recordings then
combined afterwards.VIGNETTING Shadowing of the image plane
due to components within the optical system.
VISUAL MAGNITUDE
The magnitude of an object measured in the visual part
of the spectrum. This may be estimated by eye, or as in the
UBV system, filters used to define the waveband..
The linear distance between two crests or troughs in
a set of waves. It is most usually applied to electromagnetic
radiation and sound.
WHITE DWARF
One of a group of stars found in the bottom left of
the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram; This corresponds to high
surface temperatures and low luminosities, implying very small
sizes for the stars. White dwarfs represent the end points
of the lives of solar type stars. There is a maximum mass
for a star to remain as a white dwarf of about 1.4 times the
mass of the Sun. This is known as the Chandrasekhar limit.
If a white dwarf should exceed that mass, then it will collapse
to a neutron star.
WIDMANSTATTEN PATTERN
A regular pattern with in some types of iron meteorite
arising from the intergrowth of crystals of nickel-iron which
have slightly differing compositions.
WIISON-BAPPU EFFECT
An effect whereby the absolute magnitude of the cooler
stars correlates with the strength of the emission core of
the ionised calcium at 393nm. The cause of the effect is not
understood, but it can be used to determine the star's distance
by comparing its absolute and apparent magnitudes.
WOLF NUMBER
A parameter used to estimate the strength of sunspot
activity.
WOLF-RAYET STAR
A very hot, large star with apparent compositional peculiarities.
The stars are losing mass very rapidly in the form of a high
velocity stellar wind. They may be the cores of massive stars,
revealed by the loss of their outer layers to the stellar
wind and where their abundance peculiarities are just
Electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength between
about 0.0lnm to 10nm.
X-RAY BINARY
A binary star that is a strong X-ray source. The binaries
are thought to contain a neutron star or black hole as one
component, and the X-rays to originate from material accreting
onto the compact object from its companion.
X-RAY BURSTER
A strong outburst of X-rays lasting a few seconds appearing
to originate from an X-ray source at the edge of the known
universe.
The period of the Earth's orbit around the Sun or of
the Sun around the sky. The sidereal year is taken relative
to the stars and is 365.2564 days. The tropical year is the
interval between two successive passages of the Sun through
the Vernal Equinox. Since the latter is changing its position
slowly due to precession, the tropical year is 365.2422 days
long. The tropical year is related to the seasons and so is
the basis of the calendar. For convenience the calendar or
Gregorian year is taken to be 365.2425 days long.
The splitting of spectrum lines into two, three or more
components when the atoms or ions emitting or absorbing the
radiation are in the presence of a magnetic field. The effect
can be used to measure the strengths of magnetic fields in
sunspots and magnetic stars.
ZENITH
The point in the sky directly overhead (the opposite
of nadir).
ZERO AGE MAIN SEQUENCE (ZAMS)
The line in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram occupied
by stars which have just completed their formation processes.
It forms the bottom edge of the main sequence strip.
ZODIAC
The constellations through which the Sun passes during
its yearly movement.
ZODIACAL LIGHT
A faint band of light concentrated along the ecliptic
and therefore running through the zodiac. It is solar light
scattered back towards the Earth by small dust particles lying
in the plane of the planetary system.