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sonic point noqte-ye sedâyi Fr.: point sonique The point where the → stellar wind makes a transition from → subsonic to → supersonic flow. In the particular case of a spherically symmetric wind (thus with no magnetic field), the distance from star, at which the sonic point occurs, is given by: rs = (GM*)/2cs2, where G is the → gravitational constant, M* is the stellar mass, and cs the → sound speed at the sonic point. |
sorption šameš Fr.: sorption The process of sorbing. The state of being sorbed. → absorption; → adsorption. Verbal noun of → sorb |
sound horizon ofoq-e sedâ Fr.: horizon sonore The maximum distance a → sound wave could have traveled through the ionized plasma from the → Big Bang until the → recombination era. It is 150 → Mpc, or bout 500 million → light-years. Sound horizon is the equivalent of the concept of → cosmic horizon, where one replaces → electromagnetic wave by → sound wave. The sound horizon is a fixed physical scale at the → last scattering surface. Cosmological models relate the value of sound horizon to the angle it subtends on the sky today. Same as acoustic horizon and sonic horizon. See also → CMB angular power spectrum. |
sounding balloon bâlon-e gamâne-zani Fr.: ballon-sonde A small, free balloon sent into the upper atmosphere to measure, record, and transmit meteorological reports to a ground station. |
source function karyâ-ye xan Fr.: fonction source For a radiating material, the ratio of emissivity to opacity. |
space mission gosilân-e fazâyi Fr.: mission spatiale A manned or unmanned space flight outside the Earth's atmosphere. → space; mission, from L. missionem (nominative missio) "act of sending," from mittere "to send," of unknown origin. Gosilân, from gosil, variant gosi "sending away, dismission;" Mid.Pers. wisé "to despatch" (Parthian Mid.Pers. wsys- "to despatch;" Buddhist Mid.Pers. wsydy "to despatch;" Sogdian 'ns'yd- "to exhort"), from Proto-Iranian *vi-sid- "to despatch, send off," from prefix vi- "apart, away, out," + *sid- "to call" + -ân nuance suffix; fazâyi adj. of fazâ, → space. |
space motion jonbeš-e fazâyi Fr.: mouvement spatial The velocity and direction of motion of a star or celestial object with respect to the Local Standard of Rest. Same as → peculiar velocity. |
Space Situational Awareness (SSA) âgâhi az siteš-e fazâyi Fr.: surveillance de l'environnement spatial A program aimed at monitoring the near-Earth environment for recognizing and preventing space hazards by means of radar and optical observations from either space or the ground. The objective of the → European Space Agency initiative is to support the European independent utilization of, and access to, space for research or services, through the provision of timely and quality data, information, services and knowledge regarding the space environment, the threats and the sustainable exploitation of the outer space surrounding our planet Earth. The SSA Program was authorized at the November 2008 Ministerial Council and formally launched on 1 January 2009. The mandate was extended at the 2012 and 2016 Ministerial Councils, and the program is funded through to 2020. The program comprises three segments: 1) Space Surveillance and Tracking (SST), which is the monitoring and tracking of every object orbiting the Earth, such as satellites, space stations and debris. The objective is the prediction and warning of collisions and re-entry events. 2) → Space Weather (SWE), which aims at detection and forecasting of space weather and its effects through monitoring of the Sun, solar wind, magnetosphere, radiation belts, ionosphere and disturbances in the geomagnetic field. 3) → Near-Earth Objects (NEOs), which provides warning services against potential asteroid impact risks, including discovery, identification, orbit prediction and civil alert capabilities. |
space station istgâh-e fazâyi Fr.: station spatiale A large satellite equipped to support a human crew and designed to remain in orbit around Earth for an extended period and be used for a variety of purposes (conducting research, repairing satellites, performing other space-related activities). |
spallation tarišeš Fr.: spallation A nuclear reaction in which a high energy particle that collides with a nucleus causes the target to eject several particles, thus changing both its mass number and its atomic number. From → spall + -ation. Verbal noun from terišidan, → spall. |
spatial resolution vâgošud-e fazâyi Fr.: résolution spatiale The smallest detail that can be seen in an image. Same as → angular resolution. → spatial; → resolution. |
specific star formation rate (sSFR) nerx-e âbize-ye diseš-e setâregân Fr.: taux de formation d'étoiles spécifique Star formation rate per unit → mass. More specifically, the → star formation rate in a galaxy divided by the → stellar mass of the galaxy. Observations of galaxies over a wide range of → redshifts suggest that the slope of the SFR-M* relation is about unity, which implies that their sSFR does not depend strongly on stellar mass. Specific star formation rates increase out to z ~ 2 and are constant, or perhaps slowly increasing, from z = 2 out to z = 6, though with a large scatter, sSFR ~ 2-10 Gyr-1 (Lehnert et al., 2015, A&A 577, A112, and references therein). |
specification âbizeš Fr.: précision, spécification 1) The act of specifying. Verbal noun of → specify. |
spectral classification radebandi-ye binâbi (#) Fr.: classification spectrale A system that assigns a → spectral type to a star according to characteristics of its spectrum. The earliest attempt to divide stars on the basis of their spectra was the → Secchi classification in the 1860s. This scheme paved the way for the → Harvard classification that led to the current → Morgan-Keenan classification of spectral types. In the Harvard system stars were originally thought to follow an evolutionary sequence from the "early" O and B types to the "late" K and M types. Although this is now known to be wrong, the terms → early-type star and → late-type star are still in use. In the Morgan-Keenan system stars are classified as type O, B, A, F, G, K, or M in order of decreasing → effective temperature, and each type further subdivided into subclasses from 0 (hottest, except for → O-type stars) to 9 (coolest). They are also accompanied by a → luminosity class. In the late 1990s, spectral types L and T were added to the sequence to accommodate the coolest stars and → brown dwarfs (with class Y reserved for the coolest brown dwarfs of all, as yet unobserved). → spectral; → classification. |
spectral dispersion pâšeš-e binâbi Fr.: dispersion spectrale → dispersion. → spectral; → dispersion. |
spectral energy distribution (SED) vâbâžeš-e kâruž-e binâbi Fr.: distribution de l'énergie spectrale A plot showing the energy emitted by a source as a function of the radiation
wavelength or frequency. It is used in many branches of astronomy to characterize
astronomical sources, in particular mainly in → near infrared
and → middle infrared to study
→ protostars or
→ young stellar objects. The SED of these objects is
divided in four classes. → spectral; → energy; → distribution. |
spectral region nâhiye-ye binâbi Fr.: région spectrale An extent of wavelengths into which the electromagnetic spectrum is divided; e.g. infrared or ultraviolet region. |
spectral resolution vâgošud-e binâb, ~ binâbi Fr.: résolution spectrale The capacity of a spectrograph to separate two adjacent spectral lines. The theoretical spectral resolution depends on the grating dispersion, grating position, pixel size, collimator and camera focal length, and the entrance slit-width. → spectral; → resolution. |
spectral response pâsox-e binâbi Fr.: réponse spectrale Domain of the electromagnetic spectrum over which a detector is sensitive. Same as spectral sensitivity. |
Spectro-Polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet (SPHERE) Fr.: Spectro-Polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet (SPHERE) The → extreme adaptive optics system and → coronagraphic facility at the → European Southern Observatory (ESO) → Very Large Telescope (VLT) (UT3) available from May 2014. Its primary science goal is imaging, low-resolution spectroscopic, and polarimetric characterization of → exoplanetary system at → visible and → near-infrared wavelengths (0.5-2.32 μm). SPHERE is capable of obtaining → diffraction-limited images at 0''.02 to 0''.08 resolution depending on the wavelength. Its → spectral resolution is 30 to 350, depending on the mode. → spectro-; → polarimetric; → high; → contrast; → exoplanet. |
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