blue hook star ستارهی قلاب آبی setare-ye qollab-e abi
Fr.: étoile du crochet bleu A rare class of → horizontal branch (HB)
stars that so far have been
found in only very few Galactic → globular clusters.
These stars are such called because they
form a blue hook at the hot end of the HB in
→ far ultraviolet
(FUV) → color-magnitude diagrams.
The physical mechanism that produces blue hook populations
is still uncertain. At least two scenarios have been proposed.
In the first scenario these stars are explained as a consequence of extreme
→ mass loss during the
→ red giant branch phase
and late helium flashing while descending the
→ white dwarf cooling track.
Due to the thin residual hydrogen envelope, helium is mixed into
the envelope and hydrogen is
mixed into the core during the late → helium flash.
As a result, the
stars are hotter and UV-fainter than canonical
→ extreme horizontal branch stars (EHB).
By contrast, in the He self-enrichment scenario the
EHB and blue hook stars are produced via the normal evolution
of He-enriched sub-populations in globular clusters.
These sub-populations might have formed from the ejecta
of intermediate-mass → asymptotic giant branch (AGB)
stars of the first generation of stars. For the same age and
→ metallicity, He-enriched HB stars have
smaller masses than
normal HB stars, resulting in bluer
→ zero age horizontal branch star (ZAHB)
locations. They are also brighter in the FUV, but this
effect is reversed for very hot He-enriched HB stars with
→ effective temperatures
larger than 19000 K.
See Dieball A., et al., 2013, arXiv:0901.1309v1, and for blue hook stars
in ω Cen cluster, M. Tailo et al., 2015, Nature 523, 318. → blue; → hook;
→ star. |
hook قلاب qollâb
Fr.: crochet 1) A curved or bent piece of metal or other hard material for catching,
holding, or hanging something.
2) Something curved or bent like a hook. M.E. hoke, O.E. hoc "hook, angle;" cf.
M.Du. hoek, Du. haak, Ger. Haken "hook." Qollab "a hook, a hooked device," probably ultimately from Proto-Ir.
gart- "to turn;" cf. Pers. gard-, gardidan, gaštan
"to turn, to wind;" cognate with dialectal qellidan "to roll." |
Hooke's law قانون ِ هوک qânun-e Hooke (#)
Fr.: loi de Hooke The law stating that if a body is deformed the → strain
produced is directly proportional to the applied → stress.
If the elastic limit is not exceeded, the material returns to its original shape and
size on the removal of the stress. Hooke's law forms the basis of the theory of
→ elasticity.
More specifically, within certain limits, the force required to stretch an elastic
object such as a metal spring is directly proportional to the extension of
the spring. It is commonly written: F = -kx,
where F is the force, x is the length of extension/compression and
k is a constant of proportionality known as the spring constant. Named after Robert Hooke (1635-1703), British scientist who described the
relationship in 1676; → law. |