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- magnetic dynamo
- a mechanism thought to produce magnetic fields in a planet by the
swirling, or circulation, of liquid conducting material in or near the
planet's core.
- magnifying power
- the ability of telescope to enlarge images. Can be increased by using an
eyepiece with a shorter focal length.
- magnitude
- used to quantify brightness. Based on the ancient system of Hipparchus but
refined and quantified for measurements today such that a ratio of
100 in brightness corresponds to a magnitude difference of 5. Fainter
objects have larger, positive magnitudes (closer to positive infinity), while
brighter objects have lower magnitudes (closer to negative infinity).
- main sequence
- the narrow diagonal band in the Hertzsprung-Russell
diagram going from upper left to lower right describing the
characteristics of 90% of the stars. Stars spend about 90% of their lives in
this stage and are fusing hydrogen to create helium.
- main sequence turnoff
- the mass of the most massive main sequence star remaining in a star
cluster. Stars more massive than the turnoff have already evolved beyond the
main sequence stage. The turnoff mass can be used to determine the age of the
star cluster (it equals the lifetime of the most massive star still in the
main sequence stage).
- mass
- an intrinsic property of an object that measures its resistance
to an acceleration. Mass is measured in units of kilograms.
- mathematical models
- a set of equations describing the structure and interaction of material in
an object or group of objects.
- mean Sun
- imaginary object that moves uniformily eastward along the celestial
equator such that it completes one 360° circuit of the sky in one year. The
average solar day is the time between successive meridian crossings of the
mean Sun.
- meridian
- great circle on the sky that goes through the celestial poles and
the zenith point. It separates the daytime motions of the Sun into ``a.m.''
and ``p.m.''. The azimuth of an object on the meridian in the northern sky =
0° and the azimuth of an object on the meridian in the southern sky = 180°.
- metals
- what astronomers call all of the elements heavier than helium (like
carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, sodium, aluminum, chlorine, calcium, iron, etc.).
- meteor shower
- what happens when the Earth passes through the dust trail left by a comet
in its orbit. The dust grains are the size of a grain of sand or smaller and
produce a large number of meteors in a short time that appear to come from a
particular point in the sky.
- meteorite
- a small rock from space that makes it to the surface of a planet without
burning up in the planet's atmosphere. This distinguishes it from when it is
passing through the atmosphere, glowing hot from the friction with the
atmosphere and is called a meteor.
- Milky Way Galaxy
- the large spiral galaxy in which our Sun and planets reside. Our Sun is
one star of several hundred billion in the Milky Way.
- model
- an abstract construct or idea that is a simplified view of reality. It
must enable you to make testable predictions of what will happen under new
circumstances.
Glossary links (select a letter for definitions of astronomy terms beginning
with that letter):
A -
B -
C -
D -
E -
F -
G -
H -
I -
J -
K -
L -
M
- N -
O -
P -
Q -
R -
S -
T -
U -
V -
W -
X -
Y -
Z
last update: 06 August 1999
Nick Strobel -- mailto:strobel@lightspeed.net
(661) 395-4526
Bakersfield College
Physical Science Dept.
1801
Panorama Drive
Bakersfield, CA 93305-1219