An Etymological Dictionary of Astronomy and Astrophysics
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فرهنگ ریشه شناختی اخترشناسی-اخترفیزیک

M. Heydari-Malayeri    -    Paris Observatory

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Number of Results: 3 Search : jelly
jelly
  ژله   
želé (#)

Fr.: gelée   

1) A soft somewhat elastic food product made usually with gelatin or pectin; especially, a fruit product made by boiling sugar and the juice of fruit.
2) A substance resembling jelly in consistency (Merriam-Webster.com).

M.E. gely, from O.Fr. gelee "a jelly," from L. gelare "to freeze, congeal, stiffen," from PIE *gel- "cold; to freeze."

Želeh, loan from Fr., as above.

jellyfish
  مدوسا، عروس ِ دریایی   
medusâ, arus-e daryâyi

Fr.: méduse   

Any of various marine coelenterates of a soft, gelatinous structure, especially one with an umbrella like body and long, trailing tentacles; medusa (dictionary.com).

jelly; → fish.

Medusâ, from Gk. Medousa, literally "guardian," from medein "to protect, rule over."

jellyfish galaxy
  کهکشان ِ مدوسا   
kahkešên-e medusâ

Fr.: galaxie méduse   

A type of galaxy exhibiting "tentacles" (tails) of material that appear to be stripped from the main body of the galaxy, making it resemble a jellyfish. Such type of galaxies occur in → galaxy clusters and are produced by a process called → ram pressure stripping. The mutual → gravitational attraction between galaxies causes them to fall at high speed into the clusters, where they encounter a hot → intracluster medium (ICM) with dense gas. The falling galaxy feels a powerful wind, forcing tails of gas out of the galaxy's disk and triggering → starbursts within it. Jellyfish galaxies have mainly been observed in nearby clusters (e.g., Virgo, Coma, A1367, A3627, Shapley). A few examples have been identified in clusters at → redshifts z ~ 0.2-0.4, and there is accumulating evidence for a correlation between the efficiency of the stripping phenomenon and the presence of shocks and strong gradients in the X-ray → intergalactic medium (Poggianti et al., 2016, AJ 151, 78).

jellyfish; → galaxy.