Hubble-Sandage classification radebandi-ye Hubble-Sandage Fr.: classification de Hubble-Sandage Same as the → Hubble classification. → Hubble; → Hubble-Sandage variable; → sequence. |
Hubble-Sandage variable vartande-ye Hubble-Sandage Fr.: variable de Hubble-Sandage A type of highly luminous → blue supergiant star with variable light, first discovered in the M31 and M33 galaxies; also called → S Doradus stars. They are now believed to be part of the class of → Luminous Blue Variable stars. → Hubble; Allan Rex Sandage (1926-2010), American cosmologist. |
sand mâsé (#) Fr.: sable Hard granular powder, consisting of fine grains of rock or minerals, usually quartz fragments, found on beaches, in deserts, and in soil. O.E. sand; cf. O.N. sandr, O.Fris. sond, M.Du. sant, Ger. Sand; PIE base *samatha- (cf. Gk. psammos "sand," L. sabulum). Mâsé "sand," of unknown origin. |
sandstone mâse-sang (#) Fr.: grès Variously colored → sedimentary rock composed mainly of sand-like quartz grains cemented by calcite, clay, or iron oxide. The sand accumulated originally underwater in shallow seas or lakes, or on the ground along shorelines or in desert regions. |
sandstorm mâse-bâd (#) Fr.: tempête de sable A strong wind carrying sand through the air. |
Sanduleak catalog kâtâlog-e Sanduleak Fr.: catalogue de Sanduleak A deep → objective prism survey of the → Large Magellanic Cloud carried out with the Curtis Schmidt telescope on Cerro Tololo in Chile. A total of 1272 stars, generally brighter than → photographic magnitude ~ 14, are listed in the catalog as proven or probable LMC members. The stars are identified on the charts in the LMC Atlas of Hodge & Wright (1967). By Nicholas Sanduleak (1933-1990), American astronomer, published in 1970 as Contribution No. 89 of the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory; → catalog. |