Astronomy and related astronomical terms
(the science of the celestial bodies: the sun, the moon, and the planets; the stars and galaxies; and all of the other objects in the universe)
As he raised his cup,
"Thank heavens my business
Is looking up."
2. A table listing the future positions of the sun, moon, and planets over a given period of time.
3. An annual publication containing astronomical tables that give the positions of the celestial bodies throughout the year.
The deferent is the large circular orbit around which a planet was thought to orbit, in one or many epicycles.
Epicycles are circular orbits within orbits that were used to (incorrectly) describe the orbits of objects in the Ptolemaic system (about A.D. 150).
Epicycles and deferents were used to predict orbits until Kepler discovered the elliptical nature of orbits (early in the 1600's).
This enables the telescope, once locked onto a star's position, to track or to follow the star using a motor drive to compensate for the earth's rotation.
Most large telescopes are mounted in this way, but the altazimuth mount, with its simpler construction, is becoming more popular.
An altizimuth mount is a mounting for astronomical telescopes that has separate axes for horizontal and vertical rotation.
Because celestial objects move in arcs across the sky, tracking their motions with an altazimuth mount requires adjustments of both axes.
2. One of two points at which the ecliptic cuts the celestial equator.
The vernal equinox is the point in which the sun, traveling on the ecliptic, crosses the celestial equator from south to north.
Eridanus is represented as a river. Its brightest star is Achernar, a corruption of Arabic for "the end of the river".
To effectively escape the gravitational field of a star, planet, or other celestial body, a projectile must have a minimal velocity which has been worked out in a special formula.
2. The total loss of water from a particular area, equal to the sum of the amount of water lost by evaporation from the soil and other surfaces and the amount lost by transpiration from plants.
2. A star near the end of its lifetime when most of its fuel has been used up.
This period of the star's existence is characterized by loss of mass from its surface in the form of a stellar wind or the ejection of gas off the surface of a star.
Many different types of stars, including our sun, have stellar winds; however, a star's wind is strongest near the end of its existence when it has consumed most of its fuel.
Exoplanets are detected by observing their star's "wobble" which the exoplanet's gravitational attraction causes.
Scientists have spied a new exoplanet and not only is it the biggest one yet, but it’s also moving in the wrong direction
Unlike other planets, which orbit in the same direction as their stars rotate, "WASP-17" moves in the opposite way, according to a study published in Astrophysical Journal.
Instead of traveling around its host star in the same direction the star spins, like all other known planets, but this abnormal planet is orbiting backwards. Scientists think the renegade orb, named WASP-17, got flipped around during a near collision with another planet during its early development.
Planets are born from the same ball of rotating gas that creates their parent star, which is why they usually orbit, and spin, in the same direction as their "mother star". While WASP-17 is the first planet known to orbit backwards, some planets in our own solar system; such as, Venus, are spinning backwards. Like WASP-17, Venus may have experienced some kind of collision during its early history, which threw it into an unusual spin.
Researchers at South African Astronomical Observatory discovered the new exoplanet 1,000 light years away from Earth. In addition to its surprising orbit, the exoplanet stands out because of its size; in that, being only half the mass of Jupiter but twice its volume, the researchers claim WASP-17 is now the largest known planet.
WASP-17 marks the 17th exoplanet discovered by the Wide Angle Search for Planets, or WASP project, conducted by eight universities in the U.K.
Because exoplanets don’t give off any light of their own and are usually obscured by their super-bright host stars, the scientists find exoplanets by scanning hundreds of thousands of stars, looking for the subtle dimming that occurs when a planet passes in front its parent star.
The exosphere goes from about 400 miles (640 km) high to about 800 miles (1,280 km). The lower boundary of the exosphere is called the "critical level of escape", where atmospheric pressure is very low (the gas atoms are very widely spaced) and the temperature is very low.
Observations so far have not succeeded in determining whether the universe is open (of infinite extent in space) or closed (of finite extent) and whether the universe in the future will continue to expand indefinitely or will eventually collapse back into an extremely dense, congested state.
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