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."
Because the earth moves in its own orbit, the synodic period differs from the sidereal period, which is measured relative to the stars.
The synodic period of the moon, which is called the lunar month, or lunation, is 29 1/2 days long which is longer than the sidereal month.
The moon's synodic period is the time between successive recurrences of the same phase; that is, the period between one full moon and the next full moon.
The stars characteristically have rapid rotation and throw off much material in stellar winds.
2. Any of a class of very young stars having a mass of the same order as that of the sun.So called after a prototype identified in a bright region of gas and dust known as the Hind’s variable nebula, the T Tauri stars are characterized by erratic changes in brightness.
They represent an early stage in stellar evolution, having only recently been formed by the rapid gravitational condensation of interstellar gas and dust.
These young stars are relatively unstable, though contracting more slowly than before, and will remain in that condition until their interior temperatures become high enough to support thermonuclear reactions for energy generation.
More than 500 T Tauri stars have so far been observed. The sun is thought to have gone through the T Tauri stage in its beginning.
Such movements produce fold mountains and other surface features.
Tektites are probably the scattered drops of molten rock thrown out by the impact of a large meteorite.
If the satellite and primary body are of similar composition, the theoretical limit is about two and a half times the radius of the larger body.
The rings of Saturn lie inside Saturn's Roche limit and may be the debris of a demolished moon.
The limit was first calculated by the French astronomer Édouard Roche (1820–83). Artificial satellites are too small to develop substantial tidal stresses.
Such a force is responsible for the tides, and for the breakup of a body straying within the Roche limit of a planet.
When comets pass close to a massive body like the sun or Jupiter, they may break up due, at least in part, to the tidal forces encountered.
This usually manifests itself in the distortion of the shape of the body; especially, the surface layers.
2. Periodic changes in the shape of a planet, moon, or star caused by the gravitational attraction of a body near it.The moon tugs on earth's oceans, causing high and low tides; while Jupiter's gravitational attraction on its moon Io causes ground tides; and when two stars are very close together, they pull each other's atmospheres into distorted shapes.
It was discovered in 1655 by the Dutch mathematician and astronomer Christian Huygens, and is the second largest moon in the solar system. Ganymede, of Jupiter, is larger.
It was first announced in 1766 by the German astronomer Johann Daniel Titius but was popularized only from 1772 by his countryman Johann Elert Bode.
Once thought to have some significance regarding the formation of the solar system, Bode’s law is now generally regarded as a numerological curiosity with no known justification.
2. An empirical law that generates the distances of planets and the position of the minor planet belt from the sun in astronomical units.A magnetic field inside the orbit is always twice as strong as the magnetic field on the orbit, the radius of the orbit remains constant, so that the acceleration chamber can be made in the shape of a torus, or doughnut.
The poles of the magnet are tapered to cause the field near the orbit to weaken with increasing radius.
The light of totality is much brighter than that of the full moon but is quite different in color. The duration of totality is brief, typically lasting two to five minutes.
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