ASTR 103 - Astronomy

Glossary - P


Latest Modification: March 5, 2003

P (seismic) waves
Longitudinal waves of an earthquake that cause Earth's inner material to expand and contract alternately. Also called primary, or pressure, or compression waves.
Pangaea
Supercontinent into which all the present continents were merged over 200 million years ago.
panspermia
Theory that microorganisms floating in space or attached to interstellar dust particles can germinate and start the evolutionary chain of life when they encounter a hospitable sterile planet.
parabola
Conic section formed by a plane passing parallel to one side of a cone. The eccentricity of a parabola equals 1.
parallax
Apparent shift in the position of an object when observed from two different placed.
parsec
Unit of distance corresponding to the distance of a body whose parallax equals one arc second.
partial eclipse
 
Pauli exclusion principle
 
peculiar galaxy
abnormally shaped galaxy that emits nonthermal radiation.
penumbra
portion of the shadow from which part of the light source is excluded when a body passes over the light source.
perfect cosmological principle
proposition in the steady state theory that the Universe looks the same everywhere at all times.
perfect gas
ideal gas whose pressure increases directly with the temperature and the density.
perigee
 
perihelion
point in the path of a body orbiting the Sun where it is closest to the Sun.
period
 
period table
 
period-luminosity relation
 
perturbation
disturbance in the normal movement of an orbiting body arising from an external force, usually gravitational.
phase
the repeating portions of a cyclic phenomena, such as the varying shape of the sunlit portion of the Moon during its monthly orbit or the relationship between the crests and trough of a wave.
photometry
 
photometer
instrument used to measure the intensity of a light source.
photometric system
 
photon
unit carrier of electromagnetic radiation.
photosphere
light-emitting, visible surface of the Sun.
photosynthesis
buildup of organic compounds within plants by absorption of water, carbon dioxide, and solar energy.
pion
subatomic particle with a mass equal to 270 electron masses. It may be neutral or charged positively or negatively. Also known as pi-meson.
plage
bright, disturbed area of the solar surface.
Planck's constant (h)
universal constant that connects the energy of the photon (E) to its frequency (f) through the equation E=hf.
Planck's law
formula giving the relation between the temperature and the energy emitted by a blackbody at any wavelength.
planet
one of the principal nonluminous bodies in orbit around the Sun or another star. There are nine in the Solar System.
planetary nebula
slowly expanding envelope of gas surrounding a small, hot central star.
planetesimals
small solid bodies believed to have formed during the condensing stage of the solar nebula.
plasma
hot ionized gas that is electrically conductive.
plate tectonics
the motions of large segments of the Earth's surface, having the form of plates, over the mantle.
polar axis
 
polarized radiation
electromagnetic radiation whose transverse vibration is confined to a fixed place (plane-polarized light) or to one that rotates (circularly polarized light).
Population I
younger stars found in greatest numbers in the outer portions of the Galactic disk.
Population II
older stars inhabiting mainly the central and halo portions of the Galactic system.
population types
classification of the stars into two main groups, Population I and Population II, and intermediate types based on differences in age, chemical composition, spectral properties, velocities, and location in a galaxy.
positive space curvature
space continuum whose curvature is spherical or ellipsoidal, resulting in a closed universe.
positron
positively charged electron or antielectron.
potential energy
energy acquired as a result of position in a gravitational field.
Precambrian
geologic era between the time when Earth's crust formed about 4.5 billion years ago to about 1 billion years ago.
precession of equinoxes
conical movement of Earth's axis of rotation about the vertical to the plane of the ecliptic in a period of 25,800 years. The phenomenon causes the equinoxes to slide westward along the ecliptic about 50 seconds of arc per year.
pressure
the force per unit area exerted by a mechanic force or a field of force.
prime focus
 
primeval fireball
high-powered explosion from a superhot, superdense state of condensed matter (the big band) that supposedly initiated the expansion of the Universe.
principle of equivalence
Einstein's declaration that a gravitational force cannot be distinguished from an inertial force; hence a gravitational field can be replaced by an accelerated system.
prism
 
prominence
 
proper motion
angular change of a star's direction from the Sun in one year.
protein
large molecule composed of hundreds to thousands of amino acids joined together by peptide links making up the DNA molecule.
proton
positively charged particle that is part of the nucleus of every atom. It is 1836 times heavier than the electron.
proton-proton (p-p) chain
sequence of thermonuclear reactions that builds up helium from hydrogen with the release of energy inside the cores of main sequence stars. Also known as the p-p chain.
pulsar
very small, highly condensed, rapidly spinning star emitting a narrow beam of electromagnetic radiation, observed as a fast pulse from Earth. Believed to be the neutron core remnant of a supernova explosion.
pulsating variable
 


Physics & Astronomy Department, George Mason University
Maintained by J. C. Evans; jevans@gmu.edu