Astronomy, NEU-POI
Human beings have long been fascinated by the celestial sphere above, whose twinkling lights have inspired not only scientific theories but also many artistic endeavors. Humankind's fascination with the world beyond Earth has led to many landmark moments in history, as when space exploration took a giant step forward with the advent of technology that allowed humans to successfully travel to the Moon and to build spacecraft capable of exploring the rest of the solar system and beyond.
Astronomy Encyclopedia Articles By Title
neutron star, any of a class of extremely dense, compact stars thought to be composed primarily of neutrons. Neutron......
New Horizons, U.S. space probe that flew by the dwarf planet Pluto and its largest moon, Charon, in July 2015.......
Simon Newcomb was a Canadian-born American astronomer and mathematician who prepared ephemerides—tables of computed......
Isaac Newton’s calculus actually began in 1665 with his discovery of the general binomial series (1 + x)n = 1 +......
Isaac Newton was an English physicist and mathematician who was the culminating figure of the Scientific Revolution......
Newton’s law of gravitation, statement that any particle of matter in the universe attracts any other with a force......
Newton’s laws of motion, three statements describing the relations between the forces acting on a body and the......
NGC catalog, basic reference list of star clusters, nebulas, and galaxies. It was compiled in 1888 by Danish astronomer......
Seth Barnes Nicholson was an American astronomer best known for discovering four satellites of Jupiter: the 9th......
Claude Nicollier is a Swiss test pilot and astronaut, the first Swiss citizen to travel into space. Nicollier qualified......
Andriyan Nikolayev was a Soviet cosmonaut, who piloted the Vostok 3 spacecraft, launched August 11, 1962. When......
Nimbarka was a Telugu-speaking Brahman, yogi, philosopher, and prominent astronomer who founded the devotional......
node, in astronomy, the intersection of the orbit plane of some celestial body, such as the Moon, a planet, or......
Norma, constellation in the southern sky at about 16 hours right ascension and 50° south in declination. Its brightest......
North American Nebula, (catalog number NGC 7000), ionized-hydrogen region in the constellation Cygnus. The nebula......
north polar sequence, group of 96 stars near the north celestial pole, used from about 1900 to 1950 as standards......
nova, any of a class of exploding stars whose luminosity temporarily increases from several thousand to as much......
Nova Herculis, one of the brightest novas of the 20th century, discovered Dec. 13, 1934, by the British amateur......
Nova Persei, bright nova that attained an absolute magnitude of −9.2. Spectroscopic observations of the nova, which......
Nozomi, unsuccessful Japanese space probe that was designed to measure the interaction between the solar wind and......
Oberon, outermost of the five major moons of Uranus and the second largest of the group. Oberon was discovered......
Hermann Oberth was a German scientist who is considered to be one of the founders of modern astronautics. The son......
observable universe, the region of space that humans can actually or theoretically observe with the aid of technology.......
occultation, complete obscuration of the light of an astronomical body, most commonly a star, by another astronomical......
Ellen Ochoa is an American administrator and former astronaut who was the first Hispanic woman to travel into space......
Wubbo Ockels was a Dutch physicist and astronaut, the first Dutch citizen to travel into space. Ockels studied......
Octans, constellation in the southern sky that covers the south celestial pole. Its brightest star is Nu Octantis,......
Odin, Swedish-French-Canadian-Finnish satellite that carried a 1.1-metre (43-inch) radio telescope as its main......
Wilhelm Olbers was a German astronomer and physician who discovered the asteroids Pallas and Vesta, as well as......
Olbers’ paradox, in cosmology, paradox relating to the problem of why the sky is dark at night. If the universe......
Omar Khayyam was a Persian mathematician, astronomer, and poet, renowned in his own country and time for his scientific......
Omega Centauri, (catalog number NGC 5139), the brightest globular star cluster. It is located in the southern constellation......
Omīd, first satellite orbited by Iran. Omīd (Farsi for “hope”) was launched on February 2, 2009, by a Safīr rocket......
Oort cloud, immense, roughly spherical cloud of icy small bodies that are inferred to revolve around the Sun at......
Jan Oort was a Dutch astronomer who was one of the most important figures in 20th-century efforts to understand......
open cluster, in astronomy, any group of young stars held together by mutual gravitation. See star...
Ophiuchus, constellation at about 17 hours right ascension and on the celestial equator in declination. Its brightest......
opposition, in astronomy, the circumstance in which two celestial bodies appear in opposite directions in the sky.......
Orbiting Astronomical Observatory (OAO), any of a series of four unmanned U.S. scientific satellites developed......
Orbiting Geophysical Observatory (OGO), any of a series of six unmanned scientific satellites launched by the United......
Orgueil meteorite, meteorite that fell on the village of Orgueil, near Toulouse, France, in May 1864 and that is......
Orion, in astronomy, major constellation lying at about 5 hours 30 minutes right ascension and 0° declination,......
Orion Nebula, (catalog numbers NGC 1976 and M 42), bright diffuse nebula, faintly visible to the unaided eye in......
orrery, mechanical model of the solar system used to demonstrate the motions of the planets about the Sun, probably......
Outer Space Treaty, (1967), international treaty binding the parties to use outer space only for peaceful purposes.......
Project Ozma, attempt undertaken in 1960 to detect radio signals generated by hypothetical intelligent beings living......
Gerard K. O’Neill was an American physicist who invented the colliding-beam storage ring and was a leading advocate......
Johann Palisa was a Silesian astronomer best known for his discovery of 120 asteroids. He also prepared two catalogs......
Pallas, third largest asteroid in the asteroid belt and the second such object to be discovered, by the German......
Palomar Observatory, astronomical observatory located on Mount Palomar, about 40 miles (65 km) north-northeast......
parallax, in astronomy, the difference in direction of a celestial object as seen by an observer from two widely......
Paris Observatory, national astronomical observatory of France, under the direction of the Academy of Sciences.......
Viktor Ivanovich Patsayev was a Soviet cosmonaut. He served as design engineer on the Soyuz 11 mission, in which......
Pavo, constellation in the southern sky at about 20 hours right ascension and 65° south in declination. Its brightest......
Julie Payette is a Canadian astronaut and engineer who was named the 29th governor-general of Canada (2017–21).......
Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin was a British-born American astronomer who discovered that stars are made mainly of hydrogen......
Tim Peake is a British astronaut and military officer who in 2016, while on a mission to the International Space......
James Peebles is a Canadian-born American physicist who was awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize for Physics for his work......
Pegasus, any of a series of three U.S. scientific satellites launched in 1965. These spacecraft were named for......
Pegasus, constellation in the northern sky at about 23 hours right ascension and 20° north in declination. Its......
Benjamin Peirce was an American mathematician, astronomer, and educator who computed the general perturbations......
Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc was a French antiquary, humanist, and influential patron of learning who discovered......
penumbra, (from Latin paene, “almost”; umbra, “shadow”), in astronomy, the outer part of a conical shadow cast......
Arno Penzias was a German American astrophysicist who shared one-half of the 1978 Nobel Prize for Physics with......
Saul Perlmutter is an American physicist who was awarded the 2011 Nobel Prize for Physics for his discovery of......
Charles Dillon Perrine was a U.S. astronomer who discovered the sixth and seventh moons of Jupiter in 1904 and......
Perseus, constellation in the northern sky at about 4 hours right ascension and 40° north in declination. With......
perturbation, in astronomy, deviation in the motion of a celestial object caused either by the gravitational force......
Georg von Peuerbach was an Austrian mathematician and astronomer instrumental in the European revival of the technical......
phase, in astronomy, any of the varying appearances of a celestial body as different amounts of its disk are seen......
Pherecydes of Syros was a Greek mythographer and cosmogonist traditionally associated with the Seven Wise Men of......
Phobos, the inner and larger of Mars’s two moons. It was discovered telescopically with its companion moon, Deimos,......
Phobos-Grunt, Russian spacecraft that was designed to land on the Martian moon Phobos and bring some of its soil......
Phoebe, midsize irregular moon of Saturn, discovered by the American astronomer William Henry Pickering in 1899......
Phoenix, constellation in the southern sky at about 1 hour right ascension and 50° south in declination. Its brightest......
Phoenix, U.S. space probe launched by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) on Aug. 4, 2007;......
photometry, in astronomy, the measurement of the brightness of stars and other celestial objects (nebulae, galaxies,......
photosphere, visible surface of the Sun, from which is emitted most of the Sun’s light that reaches Earth directly.......
Giuseppe Piazzi was an Italian astronomer who discovered (January 1, 1801) and named the first asteroid, or “minor......
Jean Picard was a French astronomer who first accurately measured the length of a degree of a meridian (longitude......
Edward Charles Pickering was a U.S. physicist and astronomer who introduced the use of the meridian photometer......
William Hayward Pickering was a New Zealand-born American engineer, physicist, and head of the team that developed......
William Henry Pickering was a U.S. astronomer who discovered Phoebe, the ninth satellite of Saturn. In 1891 Pickering......
Pictor, constellation in the southern sky at about 6 hours right ascension and 60° south in declination. Its brightest......
Pioneer, any of the first series of unmanned U.S. space probes designed chiefly for interplanetary study. Whereas......
Pisces, in astronomy, zodiacal constellation in the northern sky between Aries and Aquarius, at about 1 hour right......
Piscis Austrinus, constellation in the southern sky at about 22 hours right ascension and 30° south in declination.......
Planck, a European Space Agency satellite, launched on May 14, 2009, that measured the cosmic microwave background......
planet, (from Greek planētes, “wanderers”), broadly, any relatively large natural body that revolves in an orbit......
Planet Nine, hypothetical ninth planet in the far reaches of the solar system, further from the Sun than Neptune,......
planetarium, theatre devoted to popular education and entertainment in astronomy and related fields, especially......
planetary nebula, any of a class of bright nebulae that are expanding shells of luminous gas expelled by dying......
planetary ring, a disklike aggregation of particles and larger objects that orbit a planet’s equator. The planetary......
planetesimal, one of a class of bodies that are theorized to have coalesced to form Earth and the other planets......
John Stanley Plaskett was a Canadian astronomer remembered for his expert design of instruments and his extensive......
Pleiades, (catalog number M45), open cluster of young stars in the zodiacal constellation Taurus, about 440 light-years......
Pleione, star in the Pleiades, thought to be typical of the shell stars, so called because in their rapid rotation......
Pluto, large, distant member of the solar system that formerly was regarded as the outermost and smallest planet.......
Henri Poincaré was a French mathematician, one of the greatest mathematicians and mathematical physicists at the......
Siméon-Denis Poisson was a French mathematician known for his work on definite integrals, electromagnetic theory,......