Type II burst belk-e gune-ye II Fr.: sursaut de type II A burst of → X-rays observed toward → low-mass X-ray binary (LMXB)s and characterized by quick succession of bursts with recurrence intervals as short as ~ 7 s. Type II X-ray bursts look similar to → Type I bursts, but they are thought to be related with spasmodic episodes of → accretion. |
Type II error irang-e gune-ye II Fr.: erreur de type II Statistics: An error made if a → hypothesis is accepted when it should be rejected. → Type I error. |
Type II migration kuc-e gune-ye II Fr.: migration de type II The → orbital migration of forming → planets that → accrete enough disk material to exceed the critical mass. This type migrates in a gap created in the → protoplanetary disk. Compare with → Type I migration. |
Type II supernova abar-now-axtar-e gune-ye II Fr.: supernova de type II A supernova type whose spectrum contains hydrogen lines. Compared with → Type I supernovae, its → light curve has a broader peak at maximum and dies away more rapidly. The magnitudes are smaller, ranging from MV = -12 to -13.5, and the ejecta have lower velocities (about 5,000 km/sec). These supernovae, which result from the final evolution of → massive stars, have three main divisions: → Type II-P, → Type II-L, and → Type II-n. Type II initially introduced by R. Minkowski (1941, PASP 53, 224); → type; → supernova. |
Type II tail dom-e gune-ye II Fr.: queue de type II |
Type II-L supernova (SN II-L) abar-now-axtar-e gune-ye II-L Fr.: supernova de type II-L A → Type II supernova which displays a linear decrease in its → light curve. → Type II supernova; L short for → linear. |
Type II-n supernova (SN II-n) abar-now-axtar-e gune-ye II-n Fr.: supernova de type II-n A → Type II supernova which shows intermediate or very narrow width hydrogen → emission lines in the spectra. → Type II supernova; n short for → narrow. |
Type II-P supernova (SN II-P) abar-now-axtar-e gune-ye II-P Fr.: supernova de type II-P A → Type II supernova which reaches a plateau in its → light curve. The vast majority of Type II SNe are characterized by a fast (few days) rise to a flat light curve, most pronounced in the reddest optical bands, with a duration of 80-100 days. This plateau phase is interpreted as the recession of the photosphere as the ejecta expand and cool. The spectra of SNe II-P are typically dominated by strong → P Cygni profiles of hydrogen lines, as well as iron absorption features (for a review, e.g., see Filippenko 1997, ARA&A 35, 309). → Type II supernova; P short for → plateau. |