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collective star formation diseš-e gerdâmdi-ye setâregân Fr.: formation collective d'étolies Formation of stars, especially → massive stars, in group as opposed to individual formation. → collective; → star; → formation. |
compact binary star system râžmân-e dorin-e hampak Fr.: système binaire compact A binary star system which is composed of a collapsed object
(→ degenerate dwarf, → neutron star,
or → black hole) in orbit with a low-mass (≤ 0.5 Msol)
secondary star, wherein the collapsed star → accretes
matter from its → companion.
These two objects form a binary system of overall dimensions
106 km with an orbital period of only hours or less.
See also:
→ X-ray binary. |
compact planetary nebula B[e] star (cPNB[e]) setâre-ye B[e]-ye miq-e sayyâre-yi-ye hampak Fr.: étoile de nébuleuse planétaire compacte A star whose spectrum shows striking similarities to → B[e] stars and is evolving into a → planetary nebula (→ preplanetary nebula). |
comparison star setâre-ye hamsanješ Fr.: étoile de comparaison A non-variable star used to monitor the variations of another nearby star. → comparison; → star. |
cosmic star formation peak cakâd-e keyhâni-ye diseš-e setâregân Fr.: pic de formation stellaire cosmique A crucial period in the history of the → Universe, when the bulk of stars in massive galaxies were likely formed. Observations of young stars in distant galaxies at different times in the past have indicated that the → star formation rate peaked at the → redshift of z ~ 2, some 10 billion years ago, before declining by a factor of around ten to its present value (P. Madau & Dickinson, 2014, arXiv:1403.0007). |
CP star setâre-ye CP Fr.: étoile CP |
dark star setâre-ye târik Fr.: étoile noire, ~ sombre A hypothetical stellar object whose structure or evolution has been affected by → dark matter. Dark matter models predict that in the → early Universe dark matter (in the form of → WIMPs) should congregate and annihilate in the cores of → Population III stars. The result would be dark stars with properties very different from ordinary stars. The reason is that the presence of large amounts of dark matter during the formation of a star inhibits the collapse and can partially prevent further cooling of the gas beyond a certain critical point, well before a → main sequence object has formed. As a consequence, dark matter stars should be more massive, more luminous, and live longer than Pop. III stars, but would be cooler. The formation of dark stars could have had an impact on the → reionization history of the Universe (see, e.g., P. Scott, 2011, astro-ph/1101.1029, and references therein). |
disk star setâre-ye gerdé, ~ disk Fr.: étoile de disque A star that lies within the → galactic disk of a → spiral galaxy. Stars belonging to the → thin disk, such as the Sun or Alpha Centauri, lie at a typical distance of about 1,000 → light-years from the galactic midplane. There are also → thick disk stars, such as Lalande 21185, that lie at an average distance of about 3,500 light-years from the midplane. |
donor star setâre-ye dahandé Fr.: étoile donneuse In a → binary system, a star whose gas is → accreted by a compact companion. The donor may be a → giant or a → supergiant with an enormously distended atmosphere and a significant → stellar wind, or a star filling its → Roche lobe in a → close binary. |
double star setâre-ye dotâyi (#) Fr.: étoile double An apparently single star which better observational resolution shows it to be a pair of closely lying stars. They may or may not be physically related. |
dwarf star setâre-ye kutulé (#) Fr.: étoile naine A star that burns its hydrogen content to produce its energy and therefore belongs to the main-sequence luminosity class. |
dwarf starburst galaxy kahkešân-e kutule-ye setâre-belk Fr.: galaxie naine à flambée d'étoiless A → starburst galaxy that is a → dwarf galaxy. Examples include: the → dwarf irregular galaxy IC 10, the compact dwarf irregular Henize 2-10, and the dwarf irregular galaxy NGC 5253. |
early spectral class star setâré bâ rade-ye binâbi-ye âqâzin Fr.: étoile de type spectral précoce A star near the beginning of the → spectral classification sequence. A star of → spectral type O, B, A, or F0 to F5. Same as → early-type star. |
early-type star setâre-ye gun-ye âqâzin (#) Fr.: étoile de type précoce Hot, luminous stars of → spectral type O, B, A, and F0 to F5. They were originally thought, wrongly, to be at an earlier stage of evolution than → late-type stars. See also → spectral classification. |
EHB star setâre-ye EHB Fr.: étoile EBH Same as → extreme horizontal branch star. |
electroweak star setâre-ye barqânezâr Fr.: étoile électrofaible A postulated type of star that could form toward the end of a → massive star's life, after → nuclear fusion has stopped in its → core, and before the star → collapses into a → black hole. In those → extreme conditions, when → temperature and → density inside the star are very high, → quarks could convert into → leptons. Hence huge amounts of energy can be released, much of which would be in the form of → neutrinos. → electroweak; → star. |
embedded star setâre-ye forupušidé Fr.: étoile enfouie A newborn star which is tightly enveloped by a surrounding cloud of gas and dust. Ebedded p.p. of embed, from en- + bed from O.E. bed "bed," from P.Gmc. *badjam "sleeping place dug in the ground" (O.H.G. betti; Ger. bett); PIE base *bhedh- "to dig, pierce;" cf. Gk. bothyros "pit;" L. fodere "to dig," fossa "ditch;" → star. Setâré, → star; forupušidé, p.p. of forupušidan, from foru- "below; beneath; down, downwards;" Mid.Pers. frôt "down, downwards;" O.Pers. fravata "forward, downward;" Skt. pravát- "a sloping path, the slope of a mountain" + pušidan "to cover, conceal, clothe; to wear clothes;" Mid.Pers. pôšidan, pôš- "to cover, put on, wear;" cf. Mid.Pers. pôst; Mod.Pers. pust "skin, hide;" O.Pers. pavastā- "thin clay envelope used to protect unbaked clay tablets;" Skt. pavásta- "cover;" Proto-Indo-Iranian *pauastā- "cloth." |
evening star setâre-ye šâmgâh (#) Fr.: étoile du soir Any bright → planet, often → Venus, seen low in the western sky after → sunset. → Hesperus. |
evolved star setâreye fargašté Fr.: étoile évoluée A star that has left the → main sequence. |
exciting star setâre-ye barangizandé Fr.: étoile excitatrice A star associated with an interstellar ionized nebula (→ H II region or → planetary nebula) whose energetic → ultraviolet, → photons → ionize the nebula. |
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