Astronomy, ENE-GRA
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
Energia, Soviet heavy-lift launch vehicle. In 1976 approval was given for development of Energia (named for the......
Ensisheim meteorite, meteorite whose descent from the sky onto a wheat field in Alsace (now part of France) in......
ephemeris, table giving the positions of one or more celestial bodies, often published with supplementary information.......
Epsilon Aurigae, binary star system of about third magnitude having one of the longest orbital periods (27 years)......
equinox, either of the two moments in the year when the Sun is exactly above the Equator and day and night are......
precession of the equinoxes, motion of the equinoxes along the ecliptic (the plane of Earth’s orbit) caused by......
Equuleus, constellation in the northern sky at about 21 hours right ascension and 10° north in declination. Its......
Eratosthenes was a Greek scientific writer, astronomer, and poet, who made the first measurement of the size of......
Eridanus, constellation in the southern sky at about 4 hours right ascension and that stretches from the celestial......
Eris, large, distant body of the solar system, revolving around the Sun well beyond the orbits of Neptune and Pluto......
Eros, first asteroid found to travel mainly inside the orbit of Mars and the first to be orbited and landed on......
Eta Carinae, peculiar red star and nebula about 7,500 light-years from Earth in the southern constellation Carina......
Eudoxus of Cnidus was a Greek mathematician and astronomer who substantially advanced proportion theory, contributed......
Leonhard Euler was a Swiss mathematician and physicist, one of the founders of pure mathematics. He not only made......
Europa, the smallest and second nearest of the four large moons (Galilean satellites) discovered around Jupiter......
European Southern Observatory (ESO), astrophysical organization founded in 1962. Its activities are financially......
European Space Agency (ESA), European space and space-technology research organization founded in 1975 from the......
event horizon, boundary marking the limits of a black hole. At the event horizon, the escape velocity is equal......
John Evershed was an English astronomer who, in 1909, discovered the horizontal motion of gases outward from the......
expanding universe, dynamic state of the extragalactic realm, the discovery of which transformed 20th-century cosmology.......
Explorer, any of the largest series of unmanned U.S. spacecraft, consisting of 55 scientific satellites launched......
extrasolar planet, any planetary body that is outside the solar system and that usually orbits a star other than......
extraterrestrial intelligence, hypothetical extraterrestrial life that is capable of thinking, purposeful activity.......
extraterrestrial life, life that may exist or may have existed in the universe outside of Earth. The search for......
Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer (EUVE), U.S. satellite that operated from 1992 to 2001 and surveyed the sky for the......
Johannes Fabricius was a Dutch astronomer who may have been the first observer of sunspots (1610/1611) and was......
facula, in astronomy, bright granular structure on the Sun’s surface that is slightly hotter or cooler than the......
Falcon, privately developed family of three launch vehicles—Falcon 1, Falcon 9, and Falcon Heavy—built by the U.S.......
Fang Lizhi was a Chinese astrophysicist and dissident who was held by the Chinese leadership to be partially responsible......
Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE), U.S. satellite observatory that observed the universe in far-ultraviolet......
Muhammed Faris was a Syrian pilot and air force officer who became the first Syrian citizen to go into space. After......
Bertalan Farkas is a Hungarian pilot and cosmonaut, the first Hungarian citizen to travel into space. Farkas graduated......
FAST, astronomical observatory in the Dawodang depression, Guizhou province, China, that, when it began observations......
Konstantin Feoktistov was a Russian spacecraft designer and cosmonaut who took part, with Vladimir M. Komarov and......
Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, U.S. satellite, launched June 11, 2008, that was designed to study gamma ray-emitting......
Fermi paradox, contradiction between the seemingly high likelihood for the emergence of extraterrestrial intelligence......
John Flamsteed was the founder of the Greenwich Observatory, and the first astronomer royal of England. Poor health......
flare star, any star that varies in brightness, sometimes by more than one magnitude, within a few minutes. The......
flash spectrum, array of wavelengths detectable in the emissions from the limb of the Sun during the flash periods......
Williamina Paton Stevens Fleming was an American astronomer who pioneered in the classification of stellar spectra.......
Fomalhaut, the 18th star (excluding the Sun) in order of apparent brightness. It is used in navigation because......
Forbush effect, in geophysics, an occasional decrease in the intensity of cosmic rays as observed on Earth, attributed......
Fornax, constellation in the southern sky at about 3 hours right ascension and 30° south in declination. Its brightest......
William Fowler was an American nuclear astrophysicist who, with Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, won the Nobel Prize......
Fra Mauro, crater on the Moon that appears to be heavily eroded; it was named for a 15th-century Italian monk and......
Girolamo Fracastoro was an Italian physician, poet, astronomer, and geologist, who proposed a scientific germ theory......
Fraunhofer lines, in astronomical spectroscopy, any of the dark (absorption) lines in the spectrum of the Sun or......
Ken Freeman is an Australian astronomer known for his work on dark matter and the structure and evolution of the......
Friedmann universe, model universe developed in 1922 by the Russian meteorologist and mathematician Aleksandr Friedmann......
Dirk Frimout is a Belgian astrophysicist and astronaut, and the first Belgian citizen to travel into space. Frimout......
Christer Fuglesang is a Swedish physicist and astronaut, the first Swedish citizen in space. Fuglesang earned a......
full moon, one of eight lunar phases, in which the entire round illuminated face of the Moon is visible from Earth.......
Gacrux, third brightest star in the constellation Crux (after Acrux and Mimosa) and the 25th brightest star in......
Gaganyaan, crewed spacecraft being developed by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). The first uncrewed......
Yuri Gagarin was a Soviet cosmonaut who in 1961 became the first man to travel into space. The son of a carpenter......
Gaia, European Space Agency (ESA) satellite that provided highly accurate position and velocity measurements for......
galactic coordinate, in astronomy, galactic latitude or longitude. The two coordinates constitute a useful means......
galactic halo, in astronomy, nearly spherical volume of thinly scattered stars, globular clusters of stars, and......
galaxy, any of the systems of stars and interstellar matter that make up the universe. Many such assemblages are......
Galilean telescope, instrument for viewing distant objects, named after the great Italian scientist Galileo Galilei......
Galilean transformations, set of equations in classical physics that relate the space and time coordinates of two......
Galileo was an Italian natural philosopher, astronomer, and mathematician who made fundamental contributions to......
Galileo, in space exploration, robotic U.S. spacecraft launched to Jupiter for extended orbital study of the planet,......
Johann Gottfried Galle was a German astronomer who on Sept. 23, 1846, was the first to observe the planet Neptune.......
gamma-ray astronomy, study of astronomical objects and phenomena that emit gamma rays. Gamma-ray telescopes are......
gamma-ray burst, an intense, nonrepeating flash of high-energy gamma rays that appears unpredictably at arbitrary......
gamma-ray telescope, instrument designed to detect and resolve gamma rays from sources outside Earth’s atmosphere.......
George Gamow was a Russian-born American nuclear physicist and cosmologist who was one of the foremost advocates......
Ganymede, largest of Jupiter’s satellites and of all the satellites in the solar system. One of the Galilean moons,......
Marc Garneau is a Canadian naval officer, astronaut, and politician who was the first Canadian citizen to go into......
Owen Garriott was an American astronaut, selected by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) as......
Carl Friedrich Gauss was a German mathematician, generally regarded as one of the greatest mathematicians of all......
gegenschein, oval patch of faint luminosity exactly opposite to the Sun in the night sky. The patch of light is......
Geminga, isolated pulsar (a rapidly rotating neutron star) about 800 light-years from Earth in the constellation......
Gemini, any of a series of 12 two-man spacecraft launched into orbit around Earth by the United States between......
Gemini, in astronomy, zodiacal constellation lying in the northern sky between Cancer and Taurus, at about 7 hours......
Gemini Observatory, observatory consisting of two 8.1-metre (27-foot) telescopes: the Frederick C. Gillett Gemini......
Genesis, U.S. spacecraft that returned particles of the solar wind to Earth in 2004. Genesis was launched on Aug.......
Reinhard Genzel is a German astronomer who was awarded the 2020 Nobel Prize for Physics for his discovery of a......
geocentric model, any theory of the structure of the solar system (or the universe) in which Earth is assumed to......
Geographos, an Apollo asteroid (one that passes inside Earth’s orbit). Geographos was discovered on September 14,......
Andrea Ghez is an American astronomer who was awarded the 2020 Nobel Prize for Physics for her discovery of a supermassive......
giant star, any star having a relatively large radius for its mass and temperature; because the radiating area......
Edward Gibson is a U.S. astronaut who was the science pilot for the Skylab 4 mission, which established a new manned......
Sir David Gill was a Scottish astronomer known for his measurements of solar and stellar parallax, showing the......
James Melville Gilliss was a U.S. naval officer and astronomer who founded the Naval Observatory in Washington,......
Vitaly Ginzburg was a Russian physicist and astrophysicist, who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2003 for his......
Giotto, European space probe that came within 596 km (370 miles) of the nucleus of Halley’s Comet on March 13,......
John Glenn was the first U.S. astronaut to orbit Earth, completing three orbits in 1962. (Soviet cosmonaut Yuri......
Gliese 581, extrasolar planetary system containing four planets. One of them, Gliese 581d, was the first planet......
globular cluster, a large group of old stars that are closely packed in a symmetrical, somewhat spherical form.......
Glory, American satellite that was designed to study Earth’s climate through measuring the amount of aerosols in......
Valentin Petrovich Glushko was a Soviet rocket scientist, a pioneer in rocket propulsion systems, and a major contributor......
Thomas Gold was an Austrian-born British astronomer who promulgated the steady-state theory of the universe, holding......
John Goodricke was an English astronomer who was the first to notice that some variable stars (stars whose observed......
Richard F. Gordon, Jr. was an American astronaut who accompanied Charles Conrad on the September 1966 flight of......
Benjamin Apthorp Gould was an American astronomer whose star catalogs helped fix the list of constellations of......
Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC), the largest optical telescope in the world, with a mirror that has a diameter of......
gravitational lens, matter that through the bending of space in its gravitational field alters the direction of......
gravitational microlensing, brightening of a star by an object passing between the star and an observer. Since......