Language/English/Vocabulary/Astronomy

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In today's lesson, we are going to learn some vocabulary related to astronomy. Please edit this wiki page to complete it 😊

Upon completing this study module, you might be interested in these relevant resources: Difference between ROBBER, BURGLAR ..., Words ending with the suffix less, As long as & Top 1000 Small Business Ideas.

The Earth[edit | edit source]

The planet you are on now. See Planet.

Space[edit | edit source]

Everything that exists outside of The Earth and its atmosphere. Note that we do not use the definite article with "Space".

The Universe[edit | edit source]

Everything that exists in space plus the Earth.

Galaxy[edit | edit source]

A system of millions of stars held together by gravity.

Star[edit | edit source]

A star is a type of astronomical object consisting of a luminous spheroid of plasma held together by its own gravity. The sun is the star closest to our planet.

The Sun[edit | edit source]

The star which is closest to our planet and which we can easily observe in the sky, especially during daytime.

Solar System[edit | edit source]

Any collection of planets and their moons orbiting around a star; "Our Solar System" consists of eight planets (the Earth included), some of them with one or more moons, asteroids and our sun.

Solar Wind[edit | edit source]

The high energy particles emitted from the Sun as a result of heating and nuclear fusion. These have enough energy to escape the Sun's gravity.

Asteriod[edit | edit source]

A celestial body smaller than a planet moving in an elliptical orbit around a star. Another term used for an asteriod is a planetoid.

Meteor[edit | edit source]

An asteroid which is pulled towards a planet or moon and then heats up in its atmosphere.

Meteorite[edit | edit source]

A meteor or a piece of one which has landed on the Earth, another planet or moon which has not completely been evapourated during its passage through an atmosphere after heating up.

Orbit[edit | edit source]

The path of a celestial object which it takes around another celestial body. For example, the orbit of the Earth around the Sun takes exactly 1 year.

Comet[edit | edit source]

A type of meteorite which consists of ice, dust and rocky matter and possibly carbon compounds with a highly elliptic orbit. When it comes close to the sun, it heats up because of solar wind and then emits a tail of gas and dust which points away from the sun. These can sometimes be seen from the Earth.

Planet[edit | edit source]

A heavy celestial body moving in an elliptical orbit around a star. The more technical details are that it has enough mass to assume a nearly spherical shape as a result of achieving hydrostatic equalibrium, it has cleared its neighbouring orbital region of other bodies.

Dwarf Planet[edit | edit source]

A celestial body which is "almost a planet". The most famous example is Pluto, which is no longer classified as a planet. Technically speaking, it fulfills just about all the definitions of a planet, but might miss or nearly miss one or two. In the case of Pluto, it has been unable to substantially clear all the asteriods and other celestial bodies which it comes across in the neighbourhood of its orbit around the Sun.

Black Hole[edit | edit source]

A celestial body from which nothing can escape from its gravitation pull, not even light. These often occur at the centre of galaxies.

Moon[edit | edit source]

A natural satellite orbiting a planet. "The Moon" refers to the Earth's own natural satellite.

Saturn, Uranus, Mars, Venus, Mercury, Jupiter, Neptune[edit | edit source]

These are planets in the solar system.

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