circumstellar envelope puše-ye pirâsetâre-yi Fr.: enveloppe circumstellaire A very extensive envelope of cold gaseous materials surrounding evolved cool stars, notably → red giants, → red supergiants (→ Mira variables), or → asymptotic giant branch stars. The typical size of such envelopes is several thousands times that of the stellar radius and their temperature ranges from 1000 to10 K. Circumstellar envelopes result from mass loss from the central star (10-7 to 10-4→ solar masses per year) and expand with moderate velocities (10 to 15 km sec-1). The low temperature of the envelope is at the origin of the formation of molecules, which in certain conditions provide → maser emission (H2O, OH, SiO). Similarly, dust grains form in the envelope produce an → infrared excess emission. → circumstellar; → envelope. |
convective envelope puše-ye hambazi Fr.: enveloppe convective 1) A → convective zone situated beneath the surface
of solar type stars. → convective; → envelope |
envelope pušé (#) Fr.: enveloppe A shell of dust or gas expanding out from an astronomical object such as a star or a comet's nucleus. From Fr. enveloppe, from O.Fr. envoloper "to envelop," from en- "in" + voloper "wrap up," of obscure origin, perhaps related to M.L. aluppa "a very thin piece or slice of wood" and influenced by L. volvere "to roll." Pušé, noun from pušidan "to cover; to put on;" Mid.Pers. pôšidan, pôš- "to cover; to wear;" cf. Mid.Pers. pôst; Mod.Pers. pust "skin, hide;" O.Pers. pavastā- "thin clay envelope used to protect unbaked clay tablets;" Skt. pavásta- "cover," Proto-Indo-Iranian *pauastā- "cloth." |
radiative envelope puše-ye tâbeši Fr.: envelope radiative A → radiative zone occupying the outer parts of a star. |