Read The Story of Astronomy Online
Authors: Peter Aughton
quasar
A powerful “quasi-stellar radio source” with a very large
REDSHIFT
.
radio galaxy
A galaxy that emits most of its radiation in the radio part of the
SPECTRUM
.
radio waves
Long wavelength
ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION
, used for radio and TV communication.
radius vector
A variable line drawn to a curve from a fixed point as origin: in astronomy the origin is usually at the Sun or a planet round which a satellite revolves.
red dwarf
A low-mass star on the main sequence of the
HâR DIAGRAM
.
red giant
A large cool star with a high luminosity.
redshift
The shifting of light to longer wavelengths. It can be caused by gravitational fields or by high speeds of recession. The shifting of light to shorter wavelengths is called blueshift.
reflection nebula
A dense cloud of gas in interstellar space, illuminated by the light of stars lying behind it.
relativity
The theory of time and space in the universe as developed by Albert Einstein.
satellite
A body in orbit around a larger astronomical body.
Seyfert galaxy
A
SPIRAL
GALAXY
with a bright nucleus and with emission lines in its spectrum.
solar system
The system of all the astronomical objects subjected to the Sun's gravity.
solar wind
A flow of
PROTONS
and
ELECTRONS
emitted by the Sun.
spectrum
The result of passing light through a prism to spread out the various colors. The spreading out of other parts of
ELECTROMAGNETIC
RADIATION
by similar means.
spiral arms
Arms of gas, dust and stars associated with
SPIRAL GALAXIES
.
spiral galaxy
A flattened and rotating galaxy with two spiral arms winding out from the nuclear bulge at the center of the galaxy.
star
A sphere of gas giving out radiation in the
ELECTROMAGNETIC SPECTRUM
.
starburst
A place where there is an exceptionally high rate of star formation.
stellar wind
Equivalent to
SOLAR WIND
, but applied to any star.
supergiant
A star with very high luminosity.
supernova
A rare stellar explosion when a star can increase its brightness by a millionfold.
supernova remnant
The remnant left over when a
SUPERNOVA
loses its brightness.
transit
The passage of one astronomical body across the face of another, for example the planet Venus on the face of the Sun.
ultraviolet
The part of the
ELECTROMAGNETIC SPECTRUM
beyond the violet end of visible light.
universe
The whole of space, consisting of matter, energy and radiation.
visible light
The part of the
ELECTROMAGNETIC SPECTRUM
that can be seen with the naked eye.
white dwarf
A stellar remnant that has exhausted all its thermonuclear fuel and can no longer shine.
X-ray radiation
High-frequency radiation between the gamma ray spectrum and
ULTRAVIOLET
light.
X-ray star
A
NEUTRON STAR
in a binary system that emits bursts of X-rays.
zenith
The point of the sky directly overhead. The highest
point of the celestial sphere viewed from any particular place. The opposite to a
NADIR
.
zodiac
The 12 sections of the sky recognized by astronomers and astrologers. Astrologers lay great store by which planets appear in which signs of the zodiac.
Armitage, A.,
Edmond Halley
(Nelson 1966)
Aughton, P.,
Newton's Apple
(Weidenfeld & Nicolson 2002)
Aughton, P.,
Transit of Venus
(Weidenfeld & Nicolson 2004)
Buttman, G.,
William Herschel
(WVG Stuttgart 1961)
Comins, N.F. and Kaufmann, W.J.,
Discovering the Universe
(W.H. Freeman 2005)
Donahue, W.H.
Johannes Kepler's New Astronomy
(Cambridge University Press 1992)
Gribbin, J.,
In Search of the Big Bang
(Heinemann 1986)
Hall, A.S.,
The Scientific Revolution 1500â1800
(Longman 1954)
Hawking, S.,
A Brief History of Time
(Bantam 1988)
Hawking, S.,
The Universe in a Nutshell
(Transworld 2001)
Hoffmann, B.,
Einstein
(Paladin 1975)
Hogben, L.,
Science for the Citizen
(George Allen 1938)
Longair, M.S.,
Our Evolving Universe
(Cambridge University Press 1996)
Mitton, S.,
The Cambridge Encyclopaedia of Astronomy
(Jonathan Cape 1977)
Moore, P.,
Watchers of the Stars
(Michael Joseph 1974)
Roos, M.,
Introduction to Cosmology
(Wiley 2003)
Sagan, C.,
Cosmos
(Abacus 1980)
Skeat, W.W.,
Chaucer, the Complete Works
(Oxford University Press 1912)
Weinberg, S.,
The First Three Minutes
(André Deutsch 1977)
Westfall, R.S.,
Never at Rest
(Cambridge University Press 1980)
White and Gribbin,
Stephen Hawking, A Life in Science
(Penguin 1992)
Wolf, A.,
A History of Science, Technology and Philosophy
2nd edn. (Allen Unwin 1950)
Wright, W.A. (ed.),
The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam
(Macmillan 1973)
Abell, George,
351
Abul Wala,
57
Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres,
147
Académie Royale d'Architecture,
147
â8
Académie Royale des Sciences,
147
â8,
149
â50
active optics,
321
Adams, John Couch,
192
â3
adaptive optics,
321
Adelard of Bath,
65
â6
al-Birini,
57
â8
al-Hakim, Caliph,
59
Al Sufi Abd al-Rahman (Azophi),
56
â7
Alexander the Great,
24
Alexandria (Egypt),
24
,
36
,
37
â8,
53
Lighthouse,
35
Alhazen,
58
â9
Allen Telescope Array,
274
â5
amateur astronomers: role,
325
Andromeda Galaxy,
57
,
233
â4,
237
â8
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
,
68
angular measurement: origin of degrees and minutes,
18
Antikythera instrument,
51
â2
Apollo
missions,
306
â7
Apollonius of Perga,
45
,
48
,
62
,
93
Arabian and Persian astronomy,
53
â66
arc of the meridian,
159
Archimedes,
98
Aristarchus,
25
â31
Armstrong, Neil,
306
â7
Arrest, Heinrich Louis d,'
193
Arzachel,
59
â60
astrolabes,
51
â2,
54
â5,
60
,
70
â1,
162
astrology
Arab,
57
â8
beginnings,
12
in Renaissance,
72
,
73
,
82
â3,
84
,
87
,
88
,
94
â5
astrophotography,
203
â5
atmospheric refraction,
34
atomic weapons,
225
â6
Augustus, Roman emperor,
42
Azophi
see
Al Sufi Abd al-Rahman
Aztecs,
13
â14
Babbage, Charles,
188
Babylonians,
18
â20
Barberini, Cardinal
see
Urban VIII, Pope
Barrow, Isaac,
135
Bell, Jocelyn,
261
â3
Ben Sabbah,
60
â1
Bessel, Friedrich W.,
200
Besso, Michele,
211
Betelgeuse,
252
â3
Big Bang
and black holes,
302
Hubble's contribution,
240
â1
origins of theory,
222
overview,
326
â39
and singularities,
299
situation,
289
black holes
first suggestion of existence,
155
â6
overview,
269
â73,
276
â9,
298
â303
supermassive,
352
â3
theory universe is contained inside,
287
â9
Bohr, Niels,
248
â9
Brahe, Tycho,
81
â8,
90
,
95
,
116
,
258
Brown, Michael,
318
brown dwarfs,
349
Brunowski, Johann,
91
Burbidge, Geoffrey,
298
Burbidge, Margaret,
298
Byzantines,
52
â3
Caccini, Tommaso,
103
tensor calculus,
224
calendars
ancient,
13
â14
Arab,
61
Babylonian,
18
â20
Chinese,
49
â50
Egyptian,
20
â1
Julian,
41
â2
Sumerian,
17
â18
Cambridge University,
112
â14,
129
â30,
135
,
261
â2,
292
â3
Camden, William,
110
Canopus,
33
â4
Cassini, Gian-Domenico,
151
â2,
158
Cassini, Jacques,
159
Cassini, Jean-Dominique, comte de,
160
Cassini de Thury (Cassini III),
159
â60
Cassini division,
158
â9
Castelli, Benedetto,
104
Centurion
(ship),
173
Cepheid variables,
230
â1,
237
â8,
341
Ceres,
318
CERN,
333
Chaldeans,
33
Challis, James,
192
â3
Chandra Observatory and Telescope,
322
,
324
Chandrasekhar, Subrahmanyan,
256
,
324
Charles II, king of Great Britain and Ireland,
165
Charon,
318
Chaucer, Geoffrey,
70
â1
Cheever, Ezekiel,
114
chemical compounds: notation system,
198
Chinese astronomy,
12
,
49
â50,
258
Christian IV, king of Denmark,
87
Chwolson, Orest,
223
El Cid,
65
clocks and watches
17th-century manufacture,
111
at Greenwich,
167
radium clocks,
249
regulation by pendulum,
96
â7,
99
shipboard,
172
â6
CMB (cosmic microwave background),
327
â30,
335
â6,
339
Colbert, Jean-Baptiste,
147
,
151
collimators,
322
Columbus, Christopher,
162
comets
and amateur astronomers,
325
discovered by SOHO,
323
Halley's,
68
â9
Helvelius' observations,
126
â7
Kuiper Belt,
319
mentions in
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
,
68
Oort Cloud,
319
supposed influence on life on Earth,
11
,
49
Tempel 1's contrived collision with spacecraft,
324
â5
compasses,
194
Compton Telescope,
322