-
-
-
A unit of pressure, equal to the sea-level pressure of Earth's
atmosphere; 1 bar = 0.987 atmosphere = 101,300 pascals = 14.5
lbs/square inch = 100,000 Newtons per square meter.
-
-
A general term for dark-colored, igneous rocks composed of minerals
that are relatively rich in iron and magnesium.
-
-
The temperature of an object if it is reradiating all the thermal
energy that has been added to it; if an object is not a blackbody
radiator, it will not reradiate all the excess heat and the leftover
will go toward increasing its temperature.
-
-
An object whose gravity is so strong that the escape velocity
exceeds the speed of light.
-
-
An exploding meteorite.
-
-
The outermost part of a planetary magnetosphere;
the place where the supersonic flow of the solar
wind is slowed to subsonic speed by the planetary magnetic
field.
-
-
A course-grained rock, composed of angular, broken rock fragments
held together by a mineral cement or a fine-grained matrix.
-
-
A conspicuous, isolated, flattop hill with steep slopes.
-
-
calcium
K
-
A
narrow wavelength of blue light which is emitted and absorbed
by ions of the element calcium.
-
-
A large, basin-shaped volcanic depression that is more or less
circular in form. Most volcanic calderas are produced by collapse
of the roof of a magma chamber due to removal of magma by voluminous
eruptions or subterranean withdrawal of the magma, although some
calderas may be formed by explosive removal of the upper part
of a volcano.
-
carbonate
-
A compound containing carbon and oxygen; an example is calcium
carbonate (limestone).
-
-
A texture found in metamorphic rocks in which brittle minerals
have been broken, crushed and flattened during shearing.
-
-
A chain of craters.
-
-
Hollows, irregular depressions.
-
-
The exposed core of uplifted rocks in complex meteorite impact
craters; the central peak material typically shows evidence of
intense fracturing, faulting and shock metamorphism.
-
-
A distinctive area of broken terrain.
-
-
A canyon.
-
-
The lower level of the solar atmosphere between the photosphere
and the corona.
-
-
Loose, vesicular volcanic ejecta 4 to 32 millimeters (.16 to 1.28
inches) in diameter.
-
-
A conical hill formed by the accumulation of pyroclastic
fragments that fall to the ground in an essentially solid condition.
-
-
A fragment of rock that has been transported, either by volcanic
or sedimentary processes.
-
-
A small hill or knob.
-
-
The dust and gas surrounding an active comet's nucleus.
-
-
A volcano composed of interbedded lava and pyroclastic material
commonly with steep slopes.
-
-
-
-
1) The upper level of the solar atmosphere, characterized by low
densities and high temperatures (> 1.0E+06 K); it is not visible
from the Earth except during a total eclipse of the sun or by
use of special telescopes called coronagraphs. 2) An ovoid-shaped
feature.
-
-
A
special telescope which blocks light from the disk of the Sun
in order to study the faint solar atmosphere.
-
-
Electromagnetic rays of extremely high frequency and energy; cosmic
rays usually interact with the atoms of the atmosphere before
reaching the surface of the Earth. Some cosmic rays come from
outside the solar system while others are emitted from the Sun
and pass through holes in the corona.
-
-
1) A depression formed by the impact of a meteorite. 2) A depression
around the orifice of a volcano.
-
-
The relatively stable portions of continents composed of shield
areas and platform sediments; typically, cratons are bounded by
tectonically active regions characterized by uplift, faulting
and volcanic activity.
-
-
A geological term denoting the interval of Earth history beginning
around 144 million years ago and ending 66 million years ago.
-
-
A major stratigraphic boundry on Earth marking the end of the
Mesozoic Era, best known as the age of the dinosaurs. The boundary
is defined by a global extinction event that caused the abrupt
demise of the majority of all life on Earth.
-
-
Rock types made up of crystals or crystal fragments, such as metamorphic
rocks that recrystallized in high temperature or pressure environments,
or igneous rocks that formed from cooling of a melt.
-
-
-
Measured in grams per cubic centimeter (or kilograms per liter);
the density of water is 1.0, iron is 7.9, and lead is 11.3.
-
-
A natural glass formed by shock pressure from any of several minerals
without melting; it is found only in association with meteorite
impact craters.
-
-
The ratio of electric flux density to electric field.
-
-
The
visible surface of the Sun (or any heavenly body) projected against
the sky.
-
-
The apparent change in wavelength of sound or light caused by
the motion of the source, observer or both.
-
-
-
-
-
Einstein's
famous theory of relativity formula known as the energy-mass relation.
The energy e is equal to the mass m
multiplied by the speed of light squared c2.
A small mass produces an enormous amount of energy.
-
-
Noncircular; elliptical (applied to an orbit).
-
-
A value that defines the shape of an ellipse or planetary orbit;
the ratio of the distance between the foci and the major axis.
-
-
The cutting off of light from one celestial body by another.
-
-
The plane of Earth's orbit about the Sun
-
-
A relative quiet volcanic eruption which puts out basaltic lava
that moves at about the speed one walks. The lava is fluid in
nature. The eruptions at the Kilauea volcano on the island of
Hawaii are effusive
-
-
Material such as glass and fragmented rock thrown out of an impact
crater during its formation.
-
-
A closed curve that is formed from two foci or points in which
the sum of the distances from any point on the curve to the two
foci is a constant. Johannes Kepler
first discovered that the orbits of the planets are ellipses,
not circles; he based his discovery on the careful observations
of Tycho Brahe.
-
-
Fissures that are parallel in trend to each other, but offset
to either the left or right.
-
-
Related to wind deposits and associated effects.
-
-
The ejection of volcanic materials (lavas, pyroclasts and volcanic
gases) onto the surface, either from a central vent, a fissure
or a group of fissures.
-
-
A dramatic volcanic eruption which throws debris high into the
air for hundreds of miles. The lava is low in silicate and can
be very dangerous for people near by. An example is Mount St.
Helens in 1980.
-
-
-
A bright region of the photosphere
seen in white light, seldom visible except near the solar limb.
-
-
A crack or break in the crust of a planet along which slippage
or movement can take place.
-
-
A strand of cool gas suspended over the photosphere
by magnetic fields, which appears dark as seen against the disk
of the Sun; a filament on the limb of the
Sun seen in emission against the dark sky is called a prominence.
-
-
A narrow opening or crack of considerable length and depth.
-
-
A sudden eruption of energy on the solar disk
lasting minutes to hours, from which radiation and particles are
emitted.
-
-
A
cuspate linear feature
-
-
A
flow terrain
-
-
A long, narrow, shallow depression.
-
-
-
Named for the Greek Earth goddess Gaea, this hypothesis holds
that the Earth should be regarded as a living organism. British
biologist James Lovelock first advanced this idea in 1969.
-
-
-
-
An elongated, relatively depressed crustal unit or block that
is bounded by faults on its sides.
-
-
A direct, circular, low-inclination orbit in which the satellite's
orbital velocity is matched to the rotational velocity of the
planet; a spacecraft appears to hang motionless above one position
of the planet's surface.
-
-
A pattern of small cells seen on the surface of the Sun caused
by the convective motions of the hot solar gas.
-
-
An increase in temperature caused when the atmosphere absorbs
incoming solar radiation but blocks outgoing thermal radiation;
carbon dioxide is the major factor.
-
-
A mutual physical force attracting two bodies.
-
-
-
A
narrow wavelength of red light which is emitted and absorbed by
the element hydrogen; this wavelength is often used to study the
Sun.
-
-
-
-
The point at which the solar wind meets
the interstellar medium or solar wind from other stars.
-
-
The space within the broundary of the heliopause containing the
Sun and solar system.
-
-
A half of the celestial sphere that is divided into two halves
by either the horizon, the celestial equator, or the ecliptic.
-
-
In this phase, mineral forms that are stable only at the extremely
high pressures typical of Earth's deep interior but not its surface.
Such pressures are generated instantaneously during meteorite
impact. Stishovite is the high-pressure
polymorph of quartz, a common crustal mineral.
-
-
Center of persistent volcanism, thought to be the surface expression
of a rising hot plume in Earth's mantle.
-
-
-
-
-
Planetary scientists use this word to refer to water, methane,
and ammonia, which usually occur as solids in the outer solar
system.
-
-
Rock or mineral that solidified from molten or partly molten material.
-
-
Rocks melted during impact, including small particles dispersed
in various impact deposits and ejecta, and larger pools and sheets
of melt that coalesce in low areas within the crater. Impact melts
are extremely uniform in their composition but highly variable
in texture. They are composed predominantly of the target rocks,
but can contain a small but measurable amount of the impactor.
-
-
The inclination of a planet's orbit is the angle between the plane
of its orbit and the ecliptic. The inclination
of a moon's orbit is the angle between the plane of its orbit
and the plane of its primary's equator.
-
inferior planets
-
The planets Mercury and Venus are inferior planets because their
orbits are closer to the Sun than is Earth's orbit.
-
interplanetary magnetic field (IMF)
-
-
-
An atom or molecular fragment that has a positive electrical charge
due to the loss of one or more electrons; the simplest ion is
the hydrogen nucleus, a single proton.
-
-
A region of charged particles in a planet's upper atmosphere;
the part of the earth's atmosphere beginning at an altitude of
about 400 kilometers (25 miles) and extending outward 400 kilometers
(250 miles) or more.
-
-
-
-
-
-
Zero K is absolute zero; ice melts at 273 K (0° C, 32°
F); water boils at 373 K ( 100° C, 212° F).
-
-
One kilogram is equivalent to 1,000 grams or 2.2 pounds; the mass
of a liter of water.
-
-
One kilometer is equivalent to 1,000 meters or 0.62 miles.
-
-
-
A
landslide.
-
-
An
intersecting valley complex.
-
-
A lake.
-
-
One of the solutions to the three-body problem discovered by the
eighteenth century French mathematician Lagrange; the two stable
Lagrangian points, L-4 and L-5, lie in the orbit of the primary
body, leading and trailing it by a 60-degree arc.
-
-
A
general term for molten rock that is extruded onto the surface.
-
-
A tunnel formed underneath the surface of a solidfying lava flow.
-
-
The hemisphere that faces forward, into the direction of motion
of a satellite that keeps the same face toward the planet.
-
-
The side of an object that is sheltered from the wind.
-
-
An embankment, continuous dike or ridge.
-
-
Electromagnetic radiation that is visible to the eye.
-
-
The distance light travels in a year, at the rate of 300,000 kilometers
per second (671 million miles per hour); 1 light-year is equivalent
to 9.46053e12 km, 5,880,000,000,000 miles or 63,240 AU.
-
-
The outer edge of the apparent disk of a celestial body.
-
-
An elongate marking.
-
-
Linear topographic feature that may depict crustal structure.
-
-
Having lobes or resembling a lobe.
-
-
-
A dark spot.
-
-
Molten rock within the crust of a planet that is capable of intrusion
into adjacent crustal rocks or extrusion onto the surface. Igneous
rocks are derived from magma through solidification and related
processes or through eruption of the magma at the surface.
-
-
A region of space near a magnetized body where magnetic forces
can be detected.
-
-
A special telescope which analyzes the color and polarization
of sunlight in order to measure the magnetic field of the Sun.
-
-
The boundary of the magnetosphere, lying inside the bow
shock.
-
-
The region of space in which a planet's magnetic field dominates
that of the solar wind.
-
-
The portion of a planetary magnetosphere which is pushed in the
direction of the solar wind.
-
-
The degree of brightness of a celestial body designated on a numerical
scale, on which the brightest star has magnitude -1.4 and the
faintest visible star has magnitude 6, with the scale rule such
that a decrease of one unit represents an increase in apparent
brightness by a factor of 2.512; also called apparent magnitude.
-
-
Latin word for "sea." Galileo thought the dark featureless areas
on the Moon were bodies of water, even though the Moon is essentially
devoid of liquid water. The term is still applied to the basalt-filled
impact basins common on the face of the Moon visible from Earth.
-
-
A
mesa, flat-topped elevation.
-
-
A
broad, flattop, erosional hill or mountain, commonly bounded by
steep slopes.
-
-
The luminous phenomenon seen when a meteoroid enters the atmosphere,
commonly known as a shooting star.
-
-
A
part of a meteoroid that survives through the Earth's atmosphere.
-
-
A small rock in space.
-
-
This is 1/1000 of a bar; the standard sea-level
pressure is about 1,013 millibars.
-
-
Another term used for asteroids.
-
mons
-
-
-
-
A diffuse mass of interstellar dust and gas.
-
-
A fundamental particle supposedly produced in massive numbers
by the nuclear reactions in stars; they are very hard to detect
because the vast majority of them pass completely through the
Earth without interacting.
-
-
A nuclear process whereby several small nuclei are combined to
make a larger one whose mass is slightly smaller than the sum
of the small ones. The difference in mass is converted to energy
by Einstein's famous equivalence
E=mc2. This is the source of the Sun's
energy and, ultimately, of (almost) all energy on Earth.
-
-
-
An ocean.
-
-
The angle between a body's equatorial plane and orbital plane.
-
-
The blockage of light by the intervention of another object; a
planet can occult (block) the light from a distant star.
-
-
A planetary surface that has been modified little since its formation
typically featuring large numbers of impact craters; (compare
to young).
-
-
The path of an object that is moving around a second object or
point.
-
-
-
-
-
A geological term denoting the time in Earth history between 570
and 245 million years ago.
-
-
A type of basalt lava flow characterized by a smooth glassy skin,
and constructed of innumerable "flow units" called "toes"; pahoehoe
flows advance at rates of 1 to 10 meters (3 to 33 feet) hour and
are associated with low-effusion-rate eruptions with little to
no fountaining.
-
-
A circular feature on the surface of dark icy moons such as Ganymede
and Callisto lacking the relief associated
with craters; Pamlimpsests are thought to be impact craters where
the topographic relief of the crater has been eliminated by slow
adjustment of the icy surface.
-
-
A swamp.
-
-
Shallow crater; scalloped, complex edge.
-
-
A central uplift characterized by a ring of peaks rather than
a single peak; peak rings are typical of larger terrestrial craters
above about 50 kilometers (30 miles) in diameter.
-
-
The outer filamentary region of a sunspot.
-
-
The point in the orbit closest to the planet.
-
-
The point in the orbit closest to the Earth.
-
-
The point in its orbit where a planet is closest to the Sun.
-
-
To cause a planet or satellite to deviate from a theoretically
regular orbital motion.
-
-
The visible surface of the Sun; the upper surface of a convecting
layer of gases in the outer portion of the sun whose temperature
causes it to radiate light at visible wavelengths; sunspots
and faculae are observed in the photosphere.
-
-
A volcanic eruption or explosion of steam, mud or other material
that is not incandescent; this form of eruption is caused by the
heating and consequent expansion of ground water due to an adjacent
igneous heat source.
-
-
Bright regions seen in the solar chromosphere.
-
-
Microscopic features in grains of quartz or feldspar consisting
of very narrow planes of glassy material arranged in parallel
sets that have distinct orientations with respect to the grain's
crystal structure.
-
-
Broad plains that occupy lowlands on planetary surfaces.
-
-
A plateau or high plain.
-
-
A low-density gas in which the individual atoms are charged, even
though the total number of positive and negative charges is equal,
maintaining an overall electrical neutrality.
-
-
A special property of light; light has three properties, brightness,
color and polarization.
-
-
A geological term denoting the time in Earth history prior to
570 million years ago.
-
-
A ridge formed by the uplift of a lava flow crust due to pressure
of the flowing lava.
-
-
An eruption of hot gases above the photosphere
of the Sun. Prominences are most easily
visible close to the limb of the Sun, but some are also visible
as bright streamers on the photosphere.
-
-
A cape.
-
-
A generally circular crater produced by a phreatic eruption resulting
from emplacement of a lava flow over wet ground.
-
-
Pertaining to clastic (broken and fragmented) rock material formed
by volcanic explosion or aerial expulsion from a volcanic vent.
-
-
A light vesicular form of volcanic glass with a high silica content;
it is usually light in color and will float on water.
-
-
-
-
Energy radiated in the form of waves or particles; photons.
-
-
-
-
A star that has low surface temperature and a diameter that is
large relative to the Sun.
-
-
Region.
-
-
The layer of rocky debris and dust made by metoritic impact that
forms the uppermost surface of planets, satellites and asteroids.
-
-
More accurately describes the motions of bodies in strong gravitational
fields or at near the speed of light than newtonian
mechanics. All experiments done to date agree with relativity's
predictions to a high degree of accuracy. (Curiously,
Einstein received the Nobel prize in 1921 not for Relativity
but rather for his 1905 work on the photoelectric effect.)
-
-
The amount of small detail visible in an image; low resolution
shows only large features, high resolution shows many small details.
-
-
A relationship in which the orbital period of one body is related
to that of another by a simple integer fraction, such as 1/2,
2/3, 3/5.
-
-
The rotation or orbital motion of an object in a clockwise direction
when viewed from the north pole of the ecliptic;
moving in the opposite sense from the great majority of solar
system bodies.
-
-
Fine-grained extrusive igneous rock, commonly with phenocrysts
of quartz and feldspar in a glassy groundmass.
-
-
A fracture or crack in a planet's surface caused by extension.
On some volcanoes, subsurface intrusions are concentrated in certain
directions; this causes tension at the surface and also means
that there will be more eruptions in these "rift zones."
-
-
An elongated valley formed by the depression of a block of the
planet's crust between two faults or groups of faults of approximately
parallel strike.
-
-
-
-
The closest a fluid body can orbit to its parent planet without
being pulled apart by tidal forces.
-
-
The term applied to scarps on planetary surfaces;
many scarps are thought to be the surface expression of faults
within the crust of the planetary object.
-
-
-
A process of erosion where water leaks to the surface through
the pores of rocks; as the water flows away, it slowly removes
material to form valleys and channel networks.
-
-
A body that revolves around a larger body.
-
-
A line of cliffs produced by faulting or erosion; a relatively
straight, clifflike face or slope of considerable linear extent,
breaking the general continuity of the land by separating surfaces
lying at different levels.
-
-
A lobate or irregular scarp.
-
-
One-half of the longest dimension of an ellipse.
-
-
Striated conical fracture surfaces produced by meteorite impact
into fine-grained, brittle rocks such as limestone.
-
-
A satellite that constrains the extent of a planetary ring through
gravitational forces.
-
-
Any of several extensive regions where ancient Precambrian
crystalline rocks are exposed at the Earth's surface.
-
-
A volcano in the shape of a flattened dome, broad and low, built
by flows of very fluid lava.
-
shock metamorphism
-
The production of irreversible chemical or physical changes in
rocks by a shock wave generated by impact, or detonation of high-explosive
or nuclear devices.
-
-
Of, relating to, or expressed in relation to stars or constellations.
-
siderial rotation
-
Rotation time measured with respect to the fixed stars rather
than the Sun or body orbited.
-
siderophile elements
-
This phrase literally means iron-loving elements. It includes
Iridium, Osmium, Platinum and Plladium, which are found in the
metal-rich interiors of chemically segregated asteroids and planets;
consequently, these elements are extremely rare on Earth's surface.
-
-
A rock or mineral whose structure is dominated by bonds of silicon
and oxygen atoms (ie. olivine).
-
-
A bay.
-
-
The
approximately 11-year, quasi-periodic variation in the frequency
or number of solar active events.
-
-
The large cloud of gas and dust from which the Sun
and planets condensed 4.6 billion years ago.
-
-
A tenuous flow of gas and energetic charged particles, mostly
protons and electrons -- plasma -- which
stream from the Sun; typical solar wind velocities are almost
350 kilometers (217 miles) per second.
-
-
A
low, steep-sided cone built up from fluid pyroclasts coating the
surface around a vent.
-
-
A device that measures the amount of reflected or radiated energy
from a surface in two or more wavelengths.
-
-
The distribution of wavelengths and frequencies.
-
-
Light speed equals 299,792,458 meters/second (186,000 miles/second).
Einstein's Theory of Relativity
implies that nothing can go faster than the speed of light.
-
spicules
-
The grass-like patterns of gas seen in the solar atmosphere.
-
-
The cold region of a planetary atmosphere above the convecting
regions (the troposphere), usually
without vertical motions but sometimes exhibiting strong horizontal
jet streams.
-
-
A dense, high-pressure phase of quartz that has so far been identified
only in shock-metamorphosed, quartz-bearing rocks from meteorite
impact craters.
-
-
The
process of one lithospheric plate descending beneath another.
-
-
Sublimation occurs when a substance changes directly from a solid
to a gas without becoming liquid.
-
-
Subparallel furrows and ridges.
-
-
A heavy, corrosive, oily, dibasic strong acid H2SO4 that is colorless
when pure; it is a vigorous oxidizing and dehydrating agent.
-
-
An
area seen as a dark spot on the photosphere
of the Sun. Sunspots are concentrations of magnetic flux, typically
occurring in bipolar clusters or groups. They appear dark because
they are cooler than the surrounding photosphere.
-
superior planets
-
The planets Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto are
superior planets because their orbits are farther from the Sun
than Earth's orbit.
-
-
The orbital radius at which the satellite's orbital period is
equal to the rotational period of the planet. A synchronous satellite
with an orbital inclination of zero (same plane as the planet's
equator) stays fixed in the sky from the perspective of an observer
on the planet's surface. These orbits are commonly used for communications
satellites.
-
-
A satellite's rotational period is equal to its orbital period;
this causes the same side of a satellite to always face the planet.
Synchronous rotation occurs when a planet's gravity produces a
tidal bulge in its satellite. The gravitational attraction and
bulge acts like a torque, which slows down the satellite until
it reaches a synchronous rotation.
-
-
SAR is a side-looking imaging system that uses the Doppler
effect to sharpen the effective resolution in the cross-track
direction.
-
-
-
The surface rocks that an asteroid or comet impactor smashes into
in a meteorite impact event.
-
-
The deformation forces acting on a planet's crust.
-
-
Natural, silica-rich, homogeneous glasses produced by complete
melting, and dispersed as droplets during terrestrial impact events.
Tektites range in color from black or dark brown to gray or green
and most are spherical in shape. They have been found in four
regional deposits or strewn fields on the Earth's surface:
North America, Czechoslovakia, Ivory Coast and Australasia.
-
-
The dividing line between the illuminated and the unilluminated
part of the moon's or a planet's disk.
-
-
An extensive land mass.
-
-
A tile; polygonal ground.
-
-
A small domical mountain or hill.
-
-
The gravitational pull on planetary objects from nearby planets
and moons. When the tidal forces of a planet and several moons
are focused on certain moons, particularly if the orbits of the
various objects bring them into alignment on a repeated basis,
the tidal forces can generate a tremendous amount of energy within
the moon. The intense volcanic acivity of Io
is the result of the interaction of such tidal forces.
-
-
The
frictional heating of a satellite's interior due to flexure caused
by the gravitational pull of its parent planet and possibly neighboring
satellites.
-
-
The
hemisphere that faces backwards, away from the direction of motion
of a satellite that keeps the same face toward the planet.
-
-
Satellites
which orbit at the Lagrangian points, 60° ahead of and 60°
behind another satellite. For example, Telesto
and Calypso are trojans of Saturn's
satellite Tethys.
-
-
The
lower regions of a planetary atmosphere where convection
keeps the gas mixed and maintains a steady increase of temperature
with depth. Most clouds are in the troposphere.
-
-
The
general term for consolidated pyroclastic debris.
-
-
-
Electromagnetic radiation at wavelengths shorter than the violet
end of visible light; the atmosphere of the Earth effectively
blocks the transmission of most ultraviolet light.
-
-
The dark central region of a sunspot.
-
-
-
-
-
A
sinuous valley.
-
-
Widespread
lowlands.
-
-
The
opening in the crust through which volcanic material erupts.
-
-
Compounds with low melting temperatures, such as hydrogen, helium,
water, ammonia, carbon dioxide and methane.
-
-
(1) A vent in the planetary surface through which magma and associated
gases and ash erupt. (2) The form or structure produced by the
erupted materials.
-
-
-
The gravitational force exerted on a body.
-
-
A whitish star of high surface temperature and low intrinsic brightness
with a mass approximately equal to that of a Sun but with a density
many times larger.
-
-
-
Electromagnetic radiation of very short wavelength and very high
energy; x-rays have shorter wavelengths than ultraviolet
light but longer wavelengths than cosmic
rays.
-
-
-
When used to describe a planetary surface, "young" means
that the visible features are of relatively recent origin, i.e.
that older features have been destroyed by erosion or lava flows.
Young surfaces exhibit few impact craters and are typically varied
and complex; in contrast, an "old" surface
is one that has changed relatively little over geologic time.
The surfaces of Earth and Io
are young; the surfaces of Mercury
and Callisto are old.
-