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."
From a spacecraft, crescents of the Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn have also been seen.
The declination is the celestial coordinate analogous to latitude that is usually measured in degrees, minutes, and seconds of arc north (+) or south (-) of the celestial equator. 3.
The symbol for this term is the Greek letter δ or delta.
An "epicycle" is a circular orbit of a body around a point that is itself in a circular orbit round a parent body.
Such a system was formulated to explain some planetary orbits in the solar system before they were known to be elliptical.
Density is also the thickness of consistency or is impenetrable.
Density can be the complexity of structure or content.
In addition,density is a measure of how tightly mass is packed into a given space.
Stars orbiting the center of the galaxy spend a considerable amount of time in the higher density regions before moving out, with the higher density also favoring the formation of young stars by fragmentation within it.
The diamond-ring effect also refers to the equivalent phase at the end of totality.
The Doppler effect is also the shift of spectral lines due to a body's motion toward or away from an observer.
Astronomers can tell by the Doppler effect if a distant star is moving toward or away from us.
2. Etymology: named after Christian J. Doppler (1803-1853), an Austrian physicist and mathematician who first described the principle known as the Doppler effect in 1842.
Doppler observed that the frequency of light and sound waves is affected by the relative motion of the source and the detector.
Another example is that of a train which approaches an observer, and a lower pitch after it passes by. The Doppler effect applies to all types of waves, including light.
2. A system containing two or more stars: In a true double,star the stars are physically close to each other in an "optical double". They lie in approximately the same direction from the planet Earth and so appear close to each other, but are actually far apart.
Also check out the Index of other Scientific and Technological Topics.