LBV | Luminous Blue Variables -- A variable-star designation for the high-luminosity early type objects. Also called S Dor variables or Hubble-Sandage Variables. [JJ95] | |
L Component | The part of the Solar corona whose spectrum consists of emission lines. [H76] | |
L Galaxy | In Morgan's classification, an elongated galaxy of low surface brightness. [H76] | |
L-magnitude | The magnitude derived from observations at an infrared wavelength of 3.5 microns. [H76] | |
l-number | The orbital quantum number, which determines the magnitude of an electron's angular momentum. [H76] | |
BL Lacertae | A highly variable object (the most rapid radio
variable
known, also an optically violent variable - mv = 12
to 15 mag - and an infrared source). Probably an exceedingly compact
nonthermal object, and undoubtedly extragalactic. Its optical
spectrum is characterized by an absence of lines, so its redshift
cannot be measured. (In 1974 Oke and Gunn infer z = 0.07
from an H | |
BL Lac Object | A member of a class of astronomical objects with the following characteristics: (1) rapid variations in intensity at radio, infrared, and optical wavelengths; (2) energy distributions such that most of the energy is emitted at infrared wavelengths; (3) absence of discrete features in low-dispersion spectra; and (4) strong and rapidly varying polarization at visual and radio wavelengths. [H76] | |
Lagoon Nebula | An emission nebula in Sagittarius 2 kpc distant. (M8, NGC 6523) [H76] | |
Lagrangian | (a) A mathematical expression summarizing the
properties and interactions
of a physical system. It is essentially the difference between the
kinetic energy and potential energy of the system. Moreover, one can
derive the system's dynamical equations of motion directly from the
Lagrangian. [CD99]
| |
Lagrangian Points | Five points in the orbital plane of two massive particles in circular orbits around a common center of gravity, where a third particle of negligible mass can remain in equilibrium. Three of the points are on the line passing through the centers of mass of the two bodies - L2 beyond the most massive body, L1 (the point through which mass transfer occurs) between the two bodies, and L3 beyond the less massive body. All three of these points are in unstable equilibrium. The other two (L4 and L5) are stable, and are located at the two points in the orbit of the less massive component which are equidistant from the two main components. see Trojans [H76] | |
Lallemand Camera | A very early form of image tube. | |
Lamb Shift | (a) A minute correction to the energy levels of atoms
(specifically the first excited state of the hydrogen atom) predicted
by quantum electrodynamics, and confirmed to great accuracy by Willis
Lamb. [D89]
| |
Lambda (![]() | see Cosmological Constant [C95] | |
Lambda Boo Stars | A-type stars with weak metallic lines, low rotational velocity and low radical velocity. [JJ95] | |
Lambda Doublet | Two lines in the microwave region of the spectrum of the OH molecule caused by splitting of electronic levels. [H76] | |
Lambda Term | see Cosmological Constant [LB90] | |
Lambert's Law | (a) First proposed in 1760; then restricted to visible light, it is now used with all radiations. The law concerns the rate of absorption of radiation as it travels deeper into a medium. It states that equal thicknesses of the medium absorb equal proportions of the incident radiation. In other words, the intensity I of the transmitted radiation falls off exponentially with distance d in the medium:
I = I0
exp -
Here I0 is the intensity of the initially incident
radiation, and
I0 = I0 cos
Here, I0 is the intensity along the normal, while
I is that along a line at angle
| |
Laminar Flow | Steady flow in which the fluid moves past a surface in parallel layers of different velocities. Compare turbulent flow. [DC99] | |
LAN | Local Area Network -- A means of interlinking computers. [McL97] | |
Landau Damping | Damping caused by electrons that are moving at the phase velocity of the wave. It is analogous to a surfer who will be carried along by a wave if he is already moving at the velocity of the wave when it hits him. [H76] | |
Landé Factor | The constant of proportionality relating the separations of lines of successive pairs of adjacent components of the levels of a spectral multiplet to the larger of the two J-values for the respective pairs. The interval between two successive components J and J + 1 is proportional to J + 1. [H76] | |
Lane-Emden Equation | A second-order nonlinear differential equation describing the structure of polytropes. [H76] | |
Lanthanium
![]() | ||
Laplacian Determinism | Clockwork conception of the Universe in which complete knowledge of the state of the Universe at one moment completely determines its state at all future and past moments. [G99] | |
Laplacian Plane | For planets see Invariable Plane; for a system of satellites, the fixed plane relative to which the vector sum of the disturbing forces has no orthogonal component. [S92] | |
Large Magellanic Cloud | The nearest and largest of the many galaxies that orbit the Milky Way. It is 160,000 light-years away. [C95] | |
Large-Scale Structure | The distribution of galaxies and other forms of mass on large distance scales, covering hundreds of millions of light years and larger. A perfectly homogeneous and isotropic Universe would have no large-scale structure; a Universe with all the galaxies lined up in single file would have enormous large-scale structure. [LB90] | |
Large-Scale Motions | Bulk motions of distant galaxies deviating from the Hubble flow. see Hubble Law [LB90] | |
Larmor Frequency | The frequency of precession of a charged particle
orbiting in a uniform magnetic field. It is equal to eH / 4 | |
Larmor Radius | The radius of the circular orbit that a charged particle describes transverse to a magnetic field. [H76] | |
Laser | The word laser stands for Light Amplification by
Stimulated
Emission of Radiation. Proposed by A. Schawlow and C. Townes, the
first operating laser was constructed by T. Maiman. Lasers generate
intense directional beams of coherent radiation through stimulated
emission provided sufficient energy is provided to maintain a large
number of radiating atoms in the laser. [D89]
| |
Last Scattering Surface
![]() | ||
Late Type Stars | (a) Stars of spectral type later than the sun (G2). [JJ95]
| |
Latitude, Terrestrial | (b) On Earth, distance north or south on the equator
along a line connecting the poles. [F88]
| |
Latitude, Celestial | Angular distance on the celestial sphere measured north or south of the ecliptic along the great circle passing through the poles of the ecliptic and the celestial object. [S92] | |
Lattice | (a) A regular solids are characterized by the arrangement of the atoms on a set of regularly spaced points known as the lattice sites. [D89] | |
Lattice Gas | A model of a condensed system in which atoms may be present on or absent from the sites of a lattice, but no movement of the sites or distortion of the lattice is allowed.[D89] | |
Law | A theory of such wide and invariable application that its violation is thought to be impossible. [F88] | |
Law of Universal Attraction | Isaac Newton's formulation of the law of gravity. [A84] | |
Lawrencium | A radioactive transuranic element of the actinoid
series, not found naturally on Earth. Several very short-lived
isotopes have been synthesized by bombarding 252Cf with
boron nuclei or 249Bk with 18O nuclei.
| |
Laws of Physics
![]() | ||
LBG | Lyman Break Galaxy | |
Lead
![]() | A dense, dull, gray, soft metallic element; the end
product of radioactive decay series. It occurs in small quantities in
a wide variety of minerals but only a few are economically
important. Lead is used in (lead-acid) accumulators, alloys, radiation
shielding, and water and sound proofing. It is also used in the
petrochemical, paint, and glass industries.
| |
Leap Second | A second (see Second, Système International) added between 60s and 0s at announced times to keep UTC within 0s.90 of UT1. Generally, leap seconds are added at the end of June or December. [S92] | |
Least Action | see Action [P88] | |
Least Squares, Principle of | A principle which states that the best estimate of an experimental quantity, deducible from a number of observations, is that for which the sum of the weighted squares of the residuals is least. [H76] | |
LED | Light-Emitting Diode -- A semiconductor diode, made from certain materials (e.g. Gallium Arsenide), in which light is emitted in response to the forward-bias current. The light results from the recombination of electrons and positive holes, with a transition to a lower energy state. see also Diode [DC99] | |
LEDA | ||
Lemaître Universe | A big-bang cosmology proposed by the Belgian Abbey Lemaître in 1929 in which the Universe is assumed to have exploded from a primeval "atom". In the Lemaître Universe the rate of expansion steadily decreases. [H76] | |
Lennard-Jones Potential | An approximation of the interaction between two atoms or molecules. [H76] | |
Lense-Thirring Effect | The precession of the plane of the geodesic orbit of a test particle around a rotating mass in general relativity. It arises from the coupling of the rotation of the central mass with the orbital angular momentum of the test particle. This precession is described as resulting from the dragging of inertial frames. [H76] | |
Lensing | see Gravitational Lensing [C95] | |
Lenz's Law | The current induced by an electromotive force will appear in such a direction that it opposes the charge that produced it. [H76] | |
Leo I | The most distant galaxy that orbits the Milky Way. A dwarf galaxy, Leo I was discovered in 1950 and lies 890,000 light-years from the Galactic center. It is close to the bright star Regulus, whose glare interferes with the study of the galaxy. [C95] | |
Leo II | The second most distant galaxy that orbits the Milky Way, lying 720,000 light-years from the Galactic center. Like Leo I, Leo II is a dwarf galaxy that was discovered in 1950.[C95] | |
Leo Systems | Two dwarf elliptical galaxies (about 220-250 kpc
distant)
belonging to the Local Group. Leo I (dE3), Mv | |
Leonid Meteor Shower | Shower of meteors emanating from an apparent point in Leo every 33 years; the most recent one having occurred in 1999. | |
17 Leporis | A close binary system (A0 V, M1 III) with a shell-like spectrum indicating that mass transfer may be occurring from the late-type companion onto the A0 primary. [H76] | |
Lepton | (a) A fermion which is not made of quarks. [C97]
| |
Lepton Era | The era following the hadron era, when the temperature had dropped to about 1012 K and when the Universe consisted mainly of leptons and photons. It started about 10-4 s after the big bang and lasted until about 10 s after the big bang; it was followed by the radiation era. [H76] | |
Leptonic Era | The era following the Hadronic Era, when the Universe consisted mainly of leptons and photons. It began when the temperature dropped below 1012 K some 10-4 seconds after the Big Bang, and it lasted until the temperature fell below 1010 K, at an era of about 1 second. At this stage, the characteristic photon energy fell below the rest mass energy of an electron, and the abundance of electron-positron pairs fell by many orders of magnitude. Only one electron survived for every 108 photons. The Universe was subsequently radiation-dominated (substantial numbers of neutrinos were also present, but they did not interact directly with the matter or the radiation). [Silk90] | |
LERG | Low-Excitation Radio Galaxy | |
LHe | The symbol for Liquid Helium. The temperature of liquid helium is normally 4 K, that is, four degrees above absolute zero. [McL97] | |
LHEA | Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics | |
Li-rich stars | A subgroup of C stars, with a very strong LiI 6078 line. [JJ95] | |
Libration | (a) The "turning" of the Moon so that although the
same face is
presented to Earth at all times, the overall surface of the Moon
visible is 59% of the total. Libration is described as latitudinal,
longitudinal and diurnal. [A84]
| |
Libration Orbits | see Lagrangian Points [H76] | |
Librations | Variations in the orientation of the Moon's surface with respect to an observer on the Earth. Physical librations are due to variations in the rate at which the Moon rotates on its axis. The much larger optical librations are due to variations in the rate of the Moon's orbital motion, the obliquity of the Moon's equator to its orbital plane, and the diurnal changes of geometric perspective of an observer on the Earth's surface. [S92] | |
LIDAR | LIght Detection And Ranging [LLM96] | |
Life Zone | The region around a star where a planet can have liquid water and so may support life. [C95] | |
Light | Electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths of or close to those detectable by the eye. [F88] | |
Light Clock | A hypothetical clock that measures elapsed time by counting the number of round-trip journeys completed by a single photon between two mirrors. [G99] | |
Light Cone | (a) The history, in space-time, of a light flash. [D89]
| |
Light-Emitting Diode | LED -- A semiconductor diode, made from certain materials (e.g. gallium arsenide), in which light is emitted in response to the forward-bias current. The light results from the recombination of electrons and positive holes, with a transition to a lower energy state. see also Diode [DC99] | |
Lightest Superpartner | The superpartner with the least mass. The LSP may have seve ral important roles. In particular, it may be the cold dark matter of the universe, and its properties are crucial for identifying the events of superpartner production at colliders, because all of the heavier superpartners decay into the lightest one. [K2000] | |
Lifetime | The time it takes for a sample of identical
particles to decay to 1/e
of its initial population (e | |
Light Curve | A plot of magnitude or intensity versus time for a variable star. [H76] | |
Light Cylinder | The cylinder whose radius is that at which the
rotational velocity
of a neutron star would equal the speed of light. RL =
cT / 2 | |
Light, Deflection of | The bending of the beam of light due to gravity. It is observable when the light from a star or planet passes a massive object such as the Sun. [S92] | |
Light Elements
![]() | (a) Usually, hydrogen, helium, and lithium, which have
atomic numbers of one, two, and three; sometimes also beryllium and
boron, which have atomic numbers of four and five. [C95]
| |
Light Pressure | see Radiation Pressure [H76] | |
Light-Time | The interval of time required for light to travel from a celestial body to the Earth. During this interval the motion of the body in space causes an angular displacement of its apparent place from its geometric place. see Geometric Position; Aberration, Planetary [S92] | |
Light-Year | (a) Distance traveled at the speed of light after one
Earth-year: 9.46 million million km. [A84]
| |
LIGO | Large Interferometric Gravitational Wave Observatory | |
Limb | (a) Apparent edge of the disk of a Solar System body
as projected
on the sky. see Terminator [H76]
| |
Limb Brightening | Increase in the intensity of radio or X-ray brightness of the Sun or other star from its center to its limb. [H76] | |
Limb Correction | Correction that must be made to the distance between the center of mass of the Moon and its limb. These corrections are due to the irregular surface of the Moon and are a function of the librations in longitude (see Longitude, Celestial) and latitude (see Latitude, Celestial) and the position angle from the central meridian. [S92] | |
Limb Darkening | Decrease in, and reddening of, the optical brightness of the Sun or other star from its center to its limb. [H76] | |
Limit Cycle | The attractor describing a time-periodic regime of a dissipative dynamical system. In the phase space a limit cycle is represented by a closed curve. [D89] | |
Lindblad Resonance | A resonance hypothesized by Lindblad in the 1920s in his attempt to explain the existence of spiral arms (see Density Wave Theory). It is a resonance which occurs when the frequency at which a star encounters the galactic spiral wave is a multiple of its epicyclic frequency. The inner Lindblad resonance occurs whenever the ratio of the frequency of the radial oscillation to that of the rotational motion around the center of the galaxy (in a frame of reference rotating together with the spiral pattern) is 2:1. [H76] | |
Linear Electron Collider | Particles traveling in a curved path continuously radiate p hotons that carry away some of the particles' energy. The fraction of energy radiated increases with the energy of the particle, and the radiation happens with greater probability for lighter particles than for heavier ones. For electrons this loss of energy is a large effect at the circular CERN LEP collide r, and it would be worse at a higher-energy collider, so it is unlikely that any future electron collider will be circular. The next electron collider built is expected to be a linear one, where the radiated energy loss is greatly decreased (NLC, for Next Linear Collider), modeled on the first linear collider, the SLC at SLAC. [K2000] | |
Line Blanketing | The combined effects of spectral lines upon the emergent energy distribution from and the temperature distribution in a stellar or planetary atmosphere. [H76] | |
Line Broadening | Increase in the range of wavelengths in which some characteristic emission or absorption occurs, due to a number of causes (e.g., Doppler broadening, the effects of perturbers, etc.). [H76] | |
Line Profile | A plot of intensity versus wavelength across a spectral line. [H76] | |
Line Spectrum | (a) A spectrum composed of a number of discrete lines
corresponding to single wavelengths of emitted or absorbed
radiation. Line spectra are produced by atoms or simple (monatomic)
ions in gases. Each line corresponds to a change in electron orbit,
with emission or absorption of radiation. [DC99]
| |
Line Width | The width of a spectral line in wavelength terms. The usual measure is the half-width of the line. see Monochromatic Radiation [DC99] | |
Line Wings | Broad "wings" that appear on either side of a spectral line when the number of atoms producing the line is very great. [H76] | |
LINER
![]() | Low-Ionization Nuclear Emission-line Region | |
Liouville's Theorem | The Equation of Continuity: For a general Hamiltonian system the volume of an element of phase space is invariant with respect to the equations of motion. As applied to astronomy, the difference between the number of the stars moving into a volume of six-dimensional phase space at a given time and those moving out of it at the same time must be equal to the increase in the distribution function for those stars. [H76] | |
Liquid Crystal | substances intermediate in their properties between liquids and crystals. There is considerable variety in the type of structure that they can have, but in general they have the anisotropy of a complex crystalline solid but no crystalline long range order, and they can flow like a liquid. [D89] | |
LISA | Large Interferometric Space Antenna | |
Lithium
![]() | (a) Lightest of all solid elements, third in the
periodic table
after hydrogen and helium. Its atom comprises one proton and three
electrons. One of the electrons is at a higher energy level than the
other two. [A84]
| |
Lithium Stars | Peculiar giant stars (spectral types G-M) whose
spectra show high abundances of lithium. They are primarily S stars and
carbon stars, although Li is also found in T Tauri stars, and is
sometimes observed in normal late-type giants. Interstellar Li / H | |
Little Bangs | Hypothetical explosions of supermassive stars shortly after the big bang, with the release of processed elements into the interstellar medium, postulated by Wagoner to account for the anomalously high abundance of Helium in the Universe, and for the fact that even the oldest stars have some metals. [H76] | |
Littrow | The configuration of a diffraction grating spectrograph in which the diffracted ray returns along the same direction as the incident ray. [McL97] | |
LN2 | The symbol for Liquid Nitrogen. The temperature of liquid nitrogen is normally 77 K, that is, 77 degrees above absolute zero. [McL97] | |
Lobes | In radio astronomy, regions of sensitivity in an antenna pattern. Lobes are analogous to fringes in optical astronomy. [H76] | |
Local Arm | see Orion Arm [H76] | |
Local Bubble | The region of the Galaxy near the Sun which has little neutral hydrogen gas. It extends about a hundred light-years in most directions but up to a thousand in some. The local bubble may have been produced by supernovae. [C95] | |
Local Group
![]() | (a) The gravitationally bound collection of nearby
galaxies
ruled by the Andromeda Galaxy and the Milky Way, which are its largest
members. The Local Group has about 30 known galaxies. [C95]
| |
Local Hypothesis (of quasars) | The hypothesis that quasars are not at the distances inferred from their redshifts. [H76] | |
Local Inertial Frame | A coordinate system or frame of reference defined in the vicinity of the earth in which Newtons first law of motion is valid; that is, a nonrotating and nonaccelerating reference frame. [Silk90] | |
Local Sidereal Time | The local hour angle of a catalog equinox. [S92] | |
Local Standard of Rest | (a) LSR -- An imaginary point, located at the Sun's
distance from the Galactic center, that revolves clockwise around the
Galaxy on a circular orbit. Astronomers measure a star's U, V, and W
velocities with respect to the Local Standard of Rest rather than with
respect to the Sun, because the Sun has a slightly noncircular
orbit. The orbital velocity of the Local Standard of Rest around the
Galaxy is about 220 kilometers per second. [C95]
| |
Local Supercluster | (a) The supercluster to which the Local Group
belongs. It is shaped like a cigar, with the Virgo cluster of galaxies
at its center and the Local Group near one end. [C95]
| |
Local Thermodynamic Equilibrium | LTE -- The assumption that all distribution functions characterizing the material and its interaction with the radiation field at a point in the star are given by thermodynamic equilibrium relations at local values of the temperature and density. [H76] | |
Localisation | the wave-function of an electron is said to be localized if it is confined to a small region of a large system rather than being extended through the system. [D89] | |
Logistic Equation | models the growth of a population as a competition between self-reproduction on the one side and inhibition arising from density-dependent effects on the other side. [D89] | |
Lommel-Seeliger Surface | A surface with large-scale roughness where shadowing effects are important. [H76] | |
Long Distance Scale | The cosmological distance scale which uses a Hubble constant of approximately 50 km/s/Mpc. [C97] | |
Longitude, Celestial | Angular distance on the celestial sphere measured eastward along the ecliptic from the dynamical equinox to the great circle passing through the poles of the ecliptic and the celestial object. [S92] | |
Longitude, Terrestrial | (a) On Earth, distance east or west of Greenwich, England,
measured along lines drawn parallel to the equator. [F88]
| |
Longitude of the Perihelion | For a Solar System body, the longitude of the
ascending node plus
the angle along the orbit from
the node to the perihelion point. ( | |
Longitudinal Wave | A wave vibrating along the direction of propagation - e.g., a sound wave. [H76] | |
Long-Period Variables | LPV -- Pulsating disk-population red giants or supergiants with periods of 100 to 1000 days (Population I typically have periods greater than 200 days; Population II, periods less than 200 days). Typical is Mira (o Ceti), which has a period of 331 days. Long-period variables may vary by as much as 9 magnitudes in the visible, but in the integrated spectrum (most of their radiation is in the infrared) they vary by only 2 or 3 magnitudes. They are usually of spectral type M, R, or N. (sometimes called Red Variables) [H76] | |
Look-Back Time | (a) Phenomenon that, owing to the finite velocity of
light, the more distant an object being observed, the older is the
information received from it. A galaxy one billion light-years away,
for instance, is seen as it looked one billion years ago. [F88]
| |
Loop Nebula | see 30 Doradus [H76] | |
Lorentz Contraction | (a) Diminution in the observed length of an object
along the axis of its motion, as perceived by an external observer who
does not share its velocity. [F88]
| |
Lorentz Force Equation | The equation relating the force on a charged particle to its motion in an electromagnetic field. [H76] | |
Lorentz Invariance | (a) The principle that physics in an inertial frame is
independent of the velocity of the frame relative to any other frame. [D89]
| |
Lorentz Invariant | Invariant with respect to Lorentz transformations. [H76] | |
Lorentz Transformation | (a) The transformation which keeps the speed of light
invariant between
relativistic frames of reference. [C97]
| |
Loschmidt Number (constant) | (a) Number of molecules of an ideal gas per unit
volume (2.687 × 1019 molecules per
cm3). [H76]
|
|
Lossy | Subject to absorption of light. If a material is not lossy, it means that light would be scattered or reflected off. [H76] | |
Love Number | A measure of the rotational deformation of a rotating body in hydrostatic equilibrium. [H76] | |
Low Surface Brightness Galaxy | LSBG -- A galaxy which is very faint because it contains a very limited number of stars. [C97] | |
Low-Temperature Physics | usually defined as the physics of matter below about 20 degrees absolute (-253 degrees Celsius). [D89] | |
Low-Velocity Star | A star whose U, V, and W velocities are all near zero. Such stars have nearly circular orbits around the Galaxy. [C95] | |
Lowell's Band | A dark border sometimes found on the Martian polar cap. [H76] | |
LPV | Long-Period Variables -- Pulsating disk-population red giants or supergiants with periods of 100 to 1000 days (Population I typically have periods greater than 200 days; Population II, periods less than 200 days). Typical is Mira (o Ceti), which has a period of 331 days. Long-period variables may vary by as much as 9 magnitudes in the visible, but in the integrated spectrum (most of their radiation is in the infrared) they vary by only 2 or 3 magnitudes. They are usually of spectral type M, R, or N. (sometimes called Red Variables) [H76] | |
LS Coupling | A condition in an atom in which the spins couple to spins and orbital angular momenta couple to orbital angular momenta to form total spin and total orbital angular-momentum vectors which then couple to form the total angular momentum of the atom. In this case spin-spin and orbit-orbit torques exceed spin-orbit torques; the opposite extreme results in j-j coupling. (also called Russell-Saunders coupling)[H76] | |
LSB | Least Significant Bit see also DN [McL97] | |
LSBG | Low Surface Brightness Galaxy | |
LSR | (a) Local Standard of Rest -- An imaginary point, located at the Sun's
distance from the Galactic center, that revolves clockwise around the
Galaxy on a circular orbit. Astronomers measure a star's U, V, and W
velocities with respect to the Local Standard of Rest rather than with
respect to the Sun, because the Sun has a slightly noncircular
orbit. The orbital velocity of the Local Standard of Rest around the
Galaxy is about 220 kilometers per second. [C95]
| |
LTE | Local Thermodynamic Equilibrium -- The assumption that all distribution functions characterizing the material and its interaction with the radiation field at a point in the star are given by thermodynamic equilibrium relations at local values of the temperature and density. [H76] | |
Lumen | Symbol: lm -- The SI unit of luminous flux, equal to the luminous flux emitted by a point source of one candela in a solid angle of one steradian. 1 lm = 1 cd sr.[DC99] | |
Luminance | Symbol: Lv A measure of the brightness of an extended source (one that cannot be considered a point). In a given direction, it is the luminous intensity per unit area projected at right angles to the direction. The unit is the candela per square meter (cd m-2). [DC99] | |
Luminescence | (a) The emission of radiation from a substance in
which the particles have absorbed energy and gone into excited
states. They then return to lower energy states with the emission of
electromagnetic radiation. If the luminescence persists after the
source of excitation is removed it is called phosphorescence; if not,
it is called fluorescence.
| |
Luminiferous Ether | A material that, prior to special relativity, was believed to permeate all of space, allowing the propagation of light. With the advent of relativity, we now believe that light can propagate without a medium. [G97] | |
Luminosity | (a) Brightness of a celestial body, measured in terms of
(apparent) magnitude, absolute magnitude, or using the Sun's
brightness as 1.0 on a Solar scale. The luminosity of a star
corresponds with its internal radiation pressure, which in turn
depends on its mass. [A84]
| |
Luminosity Class | (a) A measure of a star's intrinsic brightness, as
determined from the star's spectrum. Supergiants have luminosity class
I, bright giants have luminosity class II, giants have luminosity
class III, subgiants have luminosity class IV, and main-sequence stars
have luminosity class V. [C95]
| |
Luminosity Distance | (a) Any distance to a celestial object which has been
calculated using a standard candle. [C97]
| |
Luminosity Function | (a) The number of stars in the Galaxy with a
particular absolute magnitude. The luminosity function reveals that
luminous stars are rare and intrinsically faint stars common.
| |
Luminous | Intrinsically bright, as opposed to being just apparently bright. [C95] | |
Luminous Blue Variables | LBV -- A variable-star designation for the high-luminosity early type objects. Also called S Dor variables or Hubble-Sandage Variables. [JJ95] | |
Luminous Flux | Symbol:
| |
Luminous Intensity | Symbol: Iv The luminous flux from a point source per unit solid angle. The unit is the candela (cd). [DC99] | |
Luminous Mass | The mass contributed by luminous matter in galaxies (see Missing Mass). Luminous mass density, 5 × 10-32 g cm-3 for H0 = 50 km s-1 Mpc-1. [H76] | |
Lumogen | A material used as a down-converter. [McL97] | |
Lunar | Of the Moon. [A84] | |
Lunar Phases | Cyclically recurring apparent forms of the Moon. New Moon, First Quarter, Full Moon, and Last Quarter are defined as the times at which the excess of the apparent celestial longitude (see Longitude, Celestial) of the Moon over that of the Sun is 0°, 90°,180°, and 270°, respectively. [S92] | |
Lunation | (a) The period of time between two successive new
Moons (cf. synodic month). [H76]
| |
Lunisolar Precession | That component of general precession that is caused by the gravitational coupling between the Moon and the Earth and between the Sun and the Earth. Lunisolar precession causes the equinox to move westward along the ecliptic about 50" per year (cf. planetary precession). [H76] | |
Lupus Loop | A radio source, a large broken shell 4°.5 in diameter, identified as a prehistoric supernova remnant. [H76] | |
LUT | Look-Up Table [McL97] | |
Lutetium
![]() | A silvery element of the lanthanoid series of
metals. It occurs in association with other lanthanoids. Lutetium is a
very rare lanthanoid and has few uses.
| |
Luyten 726-8 | A binary (M5.5e V, M6e V) (component B is UV Cet)
with a very small mass (total mass of system [1974] 0.3 M | |
Lyapounov Exponent | measures the rate of exponential separation of initially nearby states of a dynamical system. In a system undergoing chaotic dynamics there is at least one positive Lyapounov exponent. [D89] | |
Lyman Alpha | The spectral line at 1216 Å in the far ultraviolet that corresponds to the transition of an electron in the hydrogen atom between the two lowest energy levels. [McL97] | |
Lyman Alpha Clouds | Gas lying between us and quasars that absorbs some of the radiation from those quasars. see Quasars [LB90] | |
Lyman Alpha Line | The characteristic spectral line of atomic hydrogen associated with its lowest excited state. The corresponding wavelength is 1216 Å in the far ultraviolet, and so the Lyman alpha line can only be studied from spacecraft or in the spectra of highly redshifted quasars. [Silk90] | |
Lyman ![]() | The appearance of many differentially redshifted
Lyman- | |
Lyman Series | (a) A series of lines in the ultraviolet spectrum
emitted by excited hydrogen atoms. They correspond to the atomic
electrons falling into the lowest energy level and emitting energy as
radiation. The wavelength
( | |
Lyot Division | In Saturn's rings, the gap between rings B and C. [H76] | |
![]() | see Vega [H76] | |
![]() | A class of eclipsing binaries whose secondary minima
are intermediate between those of | |
RR Lyrae Stars | A large class of pulsating (amplitude variation about 1 mag) blue giants of anomalous spectral type (A2-F6) with periods of less than 1 day. Their average absolute magnitude is about +0.8. which makes them almost 50 times more luminous than the Sun. They are Population II objects often (but not always) present in globular clusters. RR Lyrae stars are valid distance indicators out to more than 200 kpc. (also called Cluster Variables) [H76] |