B ..
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Backscattering: Reflecting light back in the direction of the source.
Back-up: An item kept available to replace an item which fails to perform satisfactorily.
Ballistics(buh-lis-tik): The science that deals with the motion, behavior, appearance or modification of missiles acted upon by propellants, rifling, wind, gravity, temperature or other modifying conditions of force.
Ballute: An aerodynamic braking device which is both balloon and parachute.
Bar: A unit of pressure equal to one million dynes per square centimeter, or 0.99 atmospheres.
Barycenter: The common center of mass about which two or more bodies revolve.
Basin: A large, >200 km, circular depression from the explosive impact of an asteroid or similar sized body on a planet surface, usually rimmed by mountains.
Battery: A device with two or more connected cells that produce a direct current by converting chemical energy into electrical energy.
Big Bang theory: The theory that the universe was once clustered and at the 'beginning' it exploded out, as shown by the fact that objects are still moving out from the center.
Binary star: Two stars revolving around a common center of gravity.
Bi-propellant: A rocket propellant consisting of two unmixed or uncombined chemicals (fuel and oxidizer) fed separately into the combustion chamber.
BIS: British Interplanetary Society.
Bit: A basic unit of computer information; abbreviation of binary digit.
Black hole: An object whose gravity is so strong that the escape velocity exceeds the speed of light.
Blackout (physiological): A temporary loss of vision and/or consciousness when a person is subjected to high accelerations.
Blackout (radio): A temporary loss of radio communications which occurs between a spacecraft reentering the atmosphere and ground stations due to an ionized sheath of plasma which develops around the vehicle.
Black powder: A mixture of saltpeter (potassium nitrate), sulfur, and charcoal, used in explosives and as an early propellant for rockets.
Boilerplate: A metal replica of the flight model (e.g. of a spacecraft) but usually heavier and cruder for test purposes.
BOL: Beginning Of Life.
Boost: The extra power given to a rocket or space vehicle during liftoff, climb or flight, as with a booster rocket.
Booster(boo-ster): The first stage of a missile or rocket.
Bow shock wave: The compressed wave that forms in front of a spacecraft or satellite as it moves rapidly through Earth's atmosphere; more generally, any such wave that forms between an object and a fluid medium.
Burn: Combustion action in rockets. Propulsion in space is achieved through a sequence of burns.
Bus: A major part of the structural subsystem of a spacecraft which provides a place to attach components internally and externally, and to house delicate modules requiring a measure of thermal and mechanical stability. The bus also establishes the basic geometry of the spacecraft.
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Backscattering: Reflecting light back in the direction of the source.
Back-up: An item kept available to replace an item which fails to perform satisfactorily.
Ballistics(buh-lis-tik): The science that deals with the motion, behavior, appearance or modification of missiles acted upon by propellants, rifling, wind, gravity, temperature or other modifying conditions of force.
Ballute: An aerodynamic braking device which is both balloon and parachute.
Bar: A unit of pressure equal to one million dynes per square centimeter, or 0.99 atmospheres.
Barycenter: The common center of mass about which two or more bodies revolve.
Basin: A large, >200 km, circular depression from the explosive impact of an asteroid or similar sized body on a planet surface, usually rimmed by mountains.
Battery: A device with two or more connected cells that produce a direct current by converting chemical energy into electrical energy.
Big Bang theory: The theory that the universe was once clustered and at the 'beginning' it exploded out, as shown by the fact that objects are still moving out from the center.
Binary star: Two stars revolving around a common center of gravity.
Bi-propellant: A rocket propellant consisting of two unmixed or uncombined chemicals (fuel and oxidizer) fed separately into the combustion chamber.
BIS: British Interplanetary Society.
Bit: A basic unit of computer information; abbreviation of binary digit.
Black hole: An object whose gravity is so strong that the escape velocity exceeds the speed of light.
Blackout (physiological): A temporary loss of vision and/or consciousness when a person is subjected to high accelerations.
Blackout (radio): A temporary loss of radio communications which occurs between a spacecraft reentering the atmosphere and ground stations due to an ionized sheath of plasma which develops around the vehicle.
Black powder: A mixture of saltpeter (potassium nitrate), sulfur, and charcoal, used in explosives and as an early propellant for rockets.
Boilerplate: A metal replica of the flight model (e.g. of a spacecraft) but usually heavier and cruder for test purposes.
BOL: Beginning Of Life.
Boost: The extra power given to a rocket or space vehicle during liftoff, climb or flight, as with a booster rocket.
Booster(boo-ster): The first stage of a missile or rocket.
Bow shock wave: The compressed wave that forms in front of a spacecraft or satellite as it moves rapidly through Earth's atmosphere; more generally, any such wave that forms between an object and a fluid medium.
Burn: Combustion action in rockets. Propulsion in space is achieved through a sequence of burns.
Bus: A major part of the structural subsystem of a spacecraft which provides a place to attach components internally and externally, and to house delicate modules requiring a measure of thermal and mechanical stability. The bus also establishes the basic geometry of the spacecraft.
C ...
Calibration: Setting a measuring instrument before measuring for accurate results.
Carrier: The main frequency of a radio signal generated by a transmitter prior to application of modulation.
CAS: Chinese Academy of Sciences.
CAST: Chinese Academy of Space Technology.
CAT: Capsule Ariane Technologique.
Catalytic decomposition engine: A mono-propellant engine in which a liquid fuel decomposes into hot gas in the presence of a catalyst. The fuel is most commonly hydrazine.
C-band: A range of microwave radio frequencies in the neighborhood of 4 to 8 GHz, used for spacecraft communications on Mercury and Gemini flights (~5 Ghz).
CCD: Charged Coupled Device.
CDS: Command & Data Subsystem.
Celestial sphere: The apparent sphere of sky that surrounds the Earth; used as a convention for specifying the location of a celestial object.
Centrifugal force: A force which is directed away from the center of rotation.
Centripetal force: A force which is directed towards the center of rotation.
CEO: Close Earth Orbit.
CETI: Communication with Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence.
Chaff: Metallic foil ejected by a reentry module to enhance its radar image.
Charged coupled device: An imaging device consisting of a large-scale integrated circuit which has a two-dimensional array of hundreds of thousands of charge-isolated wells, each representing a pixel.
Cholorella: A genus of unicellular green algae, proposed for converting carbon dioxide into oxygen for use in spacecraft.
Chromosphere: A reddish layer in the Sun's atmosphere, the transition between the photosphere and the corona.
Cislunar: Relating to the space between the Earth and the orbit of the Moon.
CM: Command Module.
CNES: Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (France).
CO: Circular Orbit.
Coherence(koh-heer-uhns): The property of being coherent, e.g. waves having similar direction, amplitude and phase that are capable of exhibiting interference.
Coma: The cloud of diffuse material surrounding the nucleus of a comet.
Combustion: A chemical reaction between two or more substances that releases heat, light, and gases.
Combustion chamber: The chamber in a rocket where the fuel and oxidizer are ignited and burned. By common usage the expansion nozzle is included as part of the combustion chamber, particularly for liquid-propelled rocket engines.
Comet: A body of small mass but large volume, compared to a planet, often developing a long luminous and partly transparent tail when close to the Sun.
Command & data subsystem: The onboard computer responsible for overall management of a spacecraft's activity.
Command module: The compartment of a spacecraft which contains the crew and main controls, and is used as the reentry vehicle.
Composites: Structural materials of metal alloys or plastics with built-in strengthening agents, e.g. carbon fibers.
Constellation: A group of stars that make a shape, often named after mythological characters, people, animals, and things.
Control rocket: A vernier or other rocket used to control the attitude of, or slightly change the speed of, a spacecraft.
Coolant: A medium, usually a fluid, which transfers heat from an object.
Core: The innermost layer of a planet or star.
Coreolis effect: Dizziness or nausea experienced when an astronaut in a spinning spacecraft moves his head in the opposite direction.
Corona: The Sun's outer layer. The corona's changing appearance reflects changing solar activity.
Coronal mass ejection : A huge cloud of hot plasma, expelled sometimes from the Sun. It may accelerate ions and electrons, and may travel through interplanetary space as far as the Earth's orbit and beyond it, often preceded by a shock front. When the shock reaches Earth, a magnetic storm may result.
Cosmic ray: An extremely energetic (relativistic) charged particle.
Cosmic year: The time it takes the Sun to revolve around the center of the galaxy, approximately 225 million years.
Cosmonaut: The Russian term for an astronaut. A space traveler.
COSPAR: The Committee on Space Research (established October 1958).
Countdown: A count in inverse numerical order, in hours, minutes and finally seconds, of time remaining before the launch of a rocket.
Crater: A round impression left in a planet or satellite from a meteoroid.
Crust: The outer layer of Earth and other terrestrial planets.
Cryogenic: A rocket fuel or oxidizer which is liquid only at very low temperatures, e.g. liquid hydrogen which has a boiling point of -217.2oC (-423oF).
CSA: Chinese Society of Astronautics.
CSAA: Chinese Society of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
CSM: Command/Service Module.
C-stoff: A rocket fuel used by Germany in World War II: 30% hydrazine hydrate, 57% methanol, 13% water with traces of potassium cuprocyanate. Used in conjunction with T-stoff oxidizer: 80% hydrogen peroxide with 1 to 2% oxiquinoline as a stabilizer.
Current: The amount of electric charge flowing past a specified circuit point per unit time.
Cut-off: The action of stopping a process abruptly, such as shutting off the flow of propellant to a rocket engine.
The Space Shuttle Endeavor at California Science Center |
Calibration: Setting a measuring instrument before measuring for accurate results.
Carrier: The main frequency of a radio signal generated by a transmitter prior to application of modulation.
CAS: Chinese Academy of Sciences.
CAST: Chinese Academy of Space Technology.
CAT: Capsule Ariane Technologique.
Catalytic decomposition engine: A mono-propellant engine in which a liquid fuel decomposes into hot gas in the presence of a catalyst. The fuel is most commonly hydrazine.
C-band: A range of microwave radio frequencies in the neighborhood of 4 to 8 GHz, used for spacecraft communications on Mercury and Gemini flights (~5 Ghz).
CCD: Charged Coupled Device.
CDS: Command & Data Subsystem.
Celestial sphere: The apparent sphere of sky that surrounds the Earth; used as a convention for specifying the location of a celestial object.
Centrifugal force: A force which is directed away from the center of rotation.
Centripetal force: A force which is directed towards the center of rotation.
CEO: Close Earth Orbit.
CETI: Communication with Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence.
Chaff: Metallic foil ejected by a reentry module to enhance its radar image.
Charged coupled device: An imaging device consisting of a large-scale integrated circuit which has a two-dimensional array of hundreds of thousands of charge-isolated wells, each representing a pixel.
Cholorella: A genus of unicellular green algae, proposed for converting carbon dioxide into oxygen for use in spacecraft.
Chromosphere: A reddish layer in the Sun's atmosphere, the transition between the photosphere and the corona.
Cislunar: Relating to the space between the Earth and the orbit of the Moon.
CM: Command Module.
CNES: Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (France).
CO: Circular Orbit.
Coherence(koh-heer-uhns): The property of being coherent, e.g. waves having similar direction, amplitude and phase that are capable of exhibiting interference.
Coma: The cloud of diffuse material surrounding the nucleus of a comet.
Combustion: A chemical reaction between two or more substances that releases heat, light, and gases.
Combustion chamber: The chamber in a rocket where the fuel and oxidizer are ignited and burned. By common usage the expansion nozzle is included as part of the combustion chamber, particularly for liquid-propelled rocket engines.
Comet: A body of small mass but large volume, compared to a planet, often developing a long luminous and partly transparent tail when close to the Sun.
Command & data subsystem: The onboard computer responsible for overall management of a spacecraft's activity.
Command module: The compartment of a spacecraft which contains the crew and main controls, and is used as the reentry vehicle.
Composites: Structural materials of metal alloys or plastics with built-in strengthening agents, e.g. carbon fibers.
Constellation: A group of stars that make a shape, often named after mythological characters, people, animals, and things.
Control rocket: A vernier or other rocket used to control the attitude of, or slightly change the speed of, a spacecraft.
Coolant: A medium, usually a fluid, which transfers heat from an object.
Core: The innermost layer of a planet or star.
Coreolis effect: Dizziness or nausea experienced when an astronaut in a spinning spacecraft moves his head in the opposite direction.
Corona: The Sun's outer layer. The corona's changing appearance reflects changing solar activity.
Coronal mass ejection : A huge cloud of hot plasma, expelled sometimes from the Sun. It may accelerate ions and electrons, and may travel through interplanetary space as far as the Earth's orbit and beyond it, often preceded by a shock front. When the shock reaches Earth, a magnetic storm may result.
Cosmic ray: An extremely energetic (relativistic) charged particle.
Cosmic year: The time it takes the Sun to revolve around the center of the galaxy, approximately 225 million years.
Cosmonaut: The Russian term for an astronaut. A space traveler.
COSPAR: The Committee on Space Research (established October 1958).
Countdown: A count in inverse numerical order, in hours, minutes and finally seconds, of time remaining before the launch of a rocket.
Crater: A round impression left in a planet or satellite from a meteoroid.
Crust: The outer layer of Earth and other terrestrial planets.
Cryogenic: A rocket fuel or oxidizer which is liquid only at very low temperatures, e.g. liquid hydrogen which has a boiling point of -217.2oC (-423oF).
CSA: Chinese Society of Astronautics.
CSAA: Chinese Society of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
CSM: Command/Service Module.
C-stoff: A rocket fuel used by Germany in World War II: 30% hydrazine hydrate, 57% methanol, 13% water with traces of potassium cuprocyanate. Used in conjunction with T-stoff oxidizer: 80% hydrogen peroxide with 1 to 2% oxiquinoline as a stabilizer.
Current: The amount of electric charge flowing past a specified circuit point per unit time.
Cut-off: The action of stopping a process abruptly, such as shutting off the flow of propellant to a rocket engine.
E ..
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Earth(urth): Third planet from the Sun, a terrestrial planet.
Earth radius: The average radius of the Earth, a convenient unit of distance in describing phenomena and orbits in the Earth's neighborhood in space. 1 RE = 6371.2 km approximately.
Earth-sensor: A light-sensitive diode which seeks the direction of Earth and then informs the attitude control system of a spacecraft.
Eccentric: Noncircular; elliptical (applied to an orbit).
Eccentricity: The amount of separation between the two foci of an ellipse and, hence, the degree to which an elliptical orbit deviates from a circular shape.
Eclipse: The obscuring of one celestial body by the passage of another in front of it.
Ecliptic: The great circle on the celestial sphere which traces the path of the Sun during the year.
ECM: Electromagnetic Countermeasures.
EDT: Eastern Daylight Time.
EELV: Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle.
Ejection seat: A seat fitted with an explosive charge and designed to eject the occupant clear of an aircraft during an in-flight emergency.
ELDO: European Launcher Development Organization.
Electric propulsion: A form of rocket propulsion which depends on some form of electric acceleration of propellant to achieve low thrust over long periods of time. E.g. an ion or magnetohydrodynamic engine.
Electromagnetic: Relating to the interplay between electric and magnetic fields.
Electromagnetic waves: A wave propagated through space by simultaneous periodic variation in the electric and magnetic field intensity at right angles to each other and to the direction of propagation. The electromagnetic spectrum includes radio waves, microwaves, infrared, visible and ultraviolet radiation, X-rays, gamma rays and cosmic rays.
Elevation(el-uh-vey-shuhn): The angular measure of the height of an object above the horizon; with azimuth, one of the coordinates defining celestial location and sometimes used in tracking spacecraft.
ELV: Expendable Launch Vehicle.
EMU: Extravehicular Mobility Unit.
Energetic particle: Particles that can penetrate outer surfaces of spacecraft. For electrons, this is typically above 100 keV, while for protons and other ions this is above 1 Mev. Neutrons, gamma-rays and X-rays are also considered energetic particles in this context.
Engine: In spacecraft, a rocket or thruster that burns liquid propellants and can be throttled to adjust thrust.
EOL: End Of Life.
Ephemeris: Table of predicted positions of bodies in the solar system.
Ephemeris time: A measurement of time defined by orbital motions. Equates to Mean Solar Time corrected for irregularities in Earth's motions.
Epoch: An instant in time that is arbitrarily selected as a point of reference, e.g. for a set of orbital elements.
Equator: An imaginary circle around a body which is everywhere equidistant from the poles, defining the boundary between the northern and southern hemispheres.
Equatorial orbit: An orbit in the plane of the equator.
ESA: European Space Agency.
Escape tower: A rocket-powered framework designed to separate spacecraft modules from their booster rockets in case of accident. Escape towers are mounted atop the spacecraft and jettisoned after launch.
Escape velocity: The precise velocity necessary to escape from a given point in a gravitational field. A body in a parabolic orbit has escape velocity at any point in that orbit. The velocity necessary to escape from the Earth's surface is 6.95 miles/sec. (11.2 km/sec.).
ESMC: Eastern Space and Missile Center.
EST: Eastern Standard Time.
Eurospace: Non-profit-making industrial association with headquarters in Paris (founded September 1961).
EVA: Extravehicular Activity.
Exhaust velocity: The velocity of the exhaust leaving the nozzle of a rocket.
Exosphere: The part of the Earth atmosphere above the thermosphere which extends into space. H and He atoms can attain escape velocities at the outer rim of the exosphere.
Extravehicular activity: Action performed by an astronaut or cosmonaut outside a vehicle in space; a spacewalk.
The Spy Plane, SR-71 |
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Earth(urth): Third planet from the Sun, a terrestrial planet.
Earth radius: The average radius of the Earth, a convenient unit of distance in describing phenomena and orbits in the Earth's neighborhood in space. 1 RE = 6371.2 km approximately.
Earth-sensor: A light-sensitive diode which seeks the direction of Earth and then informs the attitude control system of a spacecraft.
Eccentric: Noncircular; elliptical (applied to an orbit).
Eccentricity: The amount of separation between the two foci of an ellipse and, hence, the degree to which an elliptical orbit deviates from a circular shape.
Eclipse: The obscuring of one celestial body by the passage of another in front of it.
Ecliptic: The great circle on the celestial sphere which traces the path of the Sun during the year.
ECM: Electromagnetic Countermeasures.
EDT: Eastern Daylight Time.
EELV: Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle.
Ejection seat: A seat fitted with an explosive charge and designed to eject the occupant clear of an aircraft during an in-flight emergency.
ELDO: European Launcher Development Organization.
Electric propulsion: A form of rocket propulsion which depends on some form of electric acceleration of propellant to achieve low thrust over long periods of time. E.g. an ion or magnetohydrodynamic engine.
Electromagnetic: Relating to the interplay between electric and magnetic fields.
Electromagnetic waves: A wave propagated through space by simultaneous periodic variation in the electric and magnetic field intensity at right angles to each other and to the direction of propagation. The electromagnetic spectrum includes radio waves, microwaves, infrared, visible and ultraviolet radiation, X-rays, gamma rays and cosmic rays.
Elevation(el-uh-vey-shuhn): The angular measure of the height of an object above the horizon; with azimuth, one of the coordinates defining celestial location and sometimes used in tracking spacecraft.
ELV: Expendable Launch Vehicle.
EMU: Extravehicular Mobility Unit.
Energetic particle: Particles that can penetrate outer surfaces of spacecraft. For electrons, this is typically above 100 keV, while for protons and other ions this is above 1 Mev. Neutrons, gamma-rays and X-rays are also considered energetic particles in this context.
Engine: In spacecraft, a rocket or thruster that burns liquid propellants and can be throttled to adjust thrust.
EOL: End Of Life.
Ephemeris: Table of predicted positions of bodies in the solar system.
Ephemeris time: A measurement of time defined by orbital motions. Equates to Mean Solar Time corrected for irregularities in Earth's motions.
Epoch: An instant in time that is arbitrarily selected as a point of reference, e.g. for a set of orbital elements.
Equator: An imaginary circle around a body which is everywhere equidistant from the poles, defining the boundary between the northern and southern hemispheres.
Equatorial orbit: An orbit in the plane of the equator.
ESA: European Space Agency.
Escape tower: A rocket-powered framework designed to separate spacecraft modules from their booster rockets in case of accident. Escape towers are mounted atop the spacecraft and jettisoned after launch.
Escape velocity: The precise velocity necessary to escape from a given point in a gravitational field. A body in a parabolic orbit has escape velocity at any point in that orbit. The velocity necessary to escape from the Earth's surface is 6.95 miles/sec. (11.2 km/sec.).
ESMC: Eastern Space and Missile Center.
EST: Eastern Standard Time.
Eurospace: Non-profit-making industrial association with headquarters in Paris (founded September 1961).
EVA: Extravehicular Activity.
Exhaust velocity: The velocity of the exhaust leaving the nozzle of a rocket.
Exosphere: The part of the Earth atmosphere above the thermosphere which extends into space. H and He atoms can attain escape velocities at the outer rim of the exosphere.
Extravehicular activity: Action performed by an astronaut or cosmonaut outside a vehicle in space; a spacewalk.
F ...
Space Shuttle Endeavor,CSC |
Fairing: A structure whose main function is to streamline and smooth the surface of an aircraft or space vehicle..
Fault: A crack or break in the crust of a planet along which slippage or movement can take place.
Fault protection: Algorithms, which reside in a spacecraft's subsystems, that insure the ability of the spacecraft to both prevent a mishap and to reestablish contact with Earth if a mishap occurs and contact is interrupted.
Ferret: Satellite using electromagnetic surveillance techniques.
Fission: The release of energy through splitting atoms.
Fluorescence: The phenomenon of emitting light upon absorbing radiation of an invisible wavelength.
Flux: The amount of radiation crossing a surface per unit of time, often expressed in "integral form" as particles per unit area per unit time.
Flyby: Space flight past a heavenly body without orbiting.
Flyby spacecraft: A spacecraft which follows a continuous trajectory past a target object, never to be captured into an orbit. It must carry instruments that are capable of observing passing targets by compensating for the target's apparent motion.
FOBS: Fractional Orbit Bombardment System. A Soviet method of delivering a warhead from partial satellite orbit and thus approaching from any direction.
Force: A vector quantity that tends to produce an acceleration of a body in the direction of its application.
Forward scattering: Reflecting light approximately away from the source.
FOV: Field Of View.
Free-fall: The motion of any unpowered body moving in a gravitational field.
Free-return trajectory: Path of a spacecraft that provides for a return to Earth.
Frequency(free-kwuhn-see): The number of oscillations per second of an electromagnetic (or other) wave.
Fuel: A substance that when combined with an oxidizer burns to produce thrust in rockets.
Fuel cell: A cell in which chemical reaction is used directly to produce electricity.
Fusion: The release of nuclear energy through the uniting of atoms.
FY: Fiscal Year.
Gimbal |
G ...
g: The symbol for the acceleration of a freely moving body due to gravity at the surface of the Earth. Alternatively, 1 g.
Galaxy: A very large system of stars, gas and dust isolated from its neighbors by an immensity of space; an "island universe".
GALCIT: Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory of the California Institute of Technology.
Gamma rays: Very short, highly-penetrative electromagnetic radiation with a shorter wavelength than X-rays; produced in general by emission from atomic nuclei.
Gas generator: A chamber in which propellant is burned to produce high pressure gas that is then used to drive a turbine, e.g. turbopump.
Gas giant: A large planet composed mostly of gas, e.g. the Jovian planets.
GATV: Gemini-Agena Target Vehicle.
Gauss: CGS unit of magnetic induction (after the German mathematician Karl F. Gauss).
GE: General Electric Company of the USA.
GEO: Geostationary Orbit. Also abbreviated GO.
Geo-: Prefix referring to the Earth.
Geocentric: Earth centered.
Geodesy: The science of the Earth's shape.
Geomagnetic storm: A worldwide disturbance of the Earth's magnetic field, distinct from regular diurnal variations.
Geospace: Also called the solar-terrestrial environment, geospace is the domain of Sun-Earth interactions. It consists of the particles, fields, and radiation environment from the Sun to Earth's space plasma environment and upper atmosphere. Geospace is considered to be the fourth physical geosphere (after solid earth, oceans, and atmosphere).
Geostationary orbit: A geosynchronous orbit with an inclination of zero degrees. A spacecraft in such an orbit appears to remain fixed above one particular point on the Earth's equator.
Geostationary transfer orbit: An elliptical orbit used to transfer a space vehicle from low earth orbit to geostationary orbit.
Geosynchronous orbit: A prograde, circular, low inclination orbit about Earth having a period of 23 hours 56 hours 4 seconds. A spacecraft in such an orbit appears to remain above Earth at a constant longitude, although it may seem to wander north and south.
g-Force: A force caused by acceleration expressed in g's.
GH2: Gaseous Hydrogen.
GHz: Gigahertz, equal to one billion hertz.
Gimbal(gim-buhl): A mechanical frame for a gyroscope or power unit, usually with two perpendicular axes of rotation.(se above photo)
GMT: Greenwich Mean Time.
GN&C: Guidance, Navigation and Control.
GO: Geostationary Orbit. Also abbreviated GEO.
GOX: Gaseous Oxygen.
Grain: The rubber-like mass of chemical propellant that provides propulsion in solid fuel rockets. The shape of the grain determines the rate and pattern of burn and thus controls thrust.
Gravitational waves : Einsteinian distortions of the space-time medium predicted by general relativity theory (not yet detected as of November 1995).
Gravity: The force responsible for the mutual attraction of separate masses.
Gravity assist trajectory: A trajectory in which angular momentum is transferred from an orbiting planet to a spacecraft approaching from behind. The result is an increase in the spacecraft's velocity.
Gravity field survey: The mapping of a planet's mass distribution by studying variations in the in the planet's gravity field strength made evident by minute Doppler shifts in an orbiting spacecraft's radio signal.
Gravity waves: Certain atmospheric waves within a planet's atmosphere.
Great circle: An imaginary circle on the surface of a sphere whose center is at the center of the sphere.
Greenwich mean time: See universal time.
GSFC: Goddard Space Flight Center (Greenbelt, Maryland).
GSO: Geosynchronous Orbit.
GTO: Geostationary Transfer Orbit.
Guillotine: A device equipped with explosive blades used to cut cables, water lines, wires, etc. during separation of spacecraft modules.
Gyration: The circular motion of ions and electrons around magnetic field lines.
Gyroscope: A spinning, wheel-like device that resists any force that tries to tilt its axis. Gyroscopes are used for stabilizing the attitude of rockets and spacecraft in motion.
Invoice for the Shuttle |
I ...
IAA: Indian Astronautical Association.
IAA: International Academy of Astronautics (established August 1960).
IAF: International Astronautical Federation (formally inaugurated 1951).
IC: Integrated Circuit.
ICBM: Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile (range >5,500 km).
ICO: Intermediate Circular Orbit.
IGY: International Geophysical Year (1957-58).
Impulse: The product of the average force acting on a body and the interval of time during which it acts, being a vector quantity equal to the change of momentum of the body during the same time interval.
IMU: Inertial Measurement Unit.
Inclination: The angular distance between a satellite's orbital plane and the equator of its primary.
Inertial guidance: An on-board system for launch vehicles and spacecraft where gyroscopes, accelerometers and other devices satisfy guidance requirements.
Inertial measurement unit: An on-board instrument system that measures the attitude of a spacecraft. It includes accelerometers and gyroscopes.
Inferior conjunction: Alignment of Earth, Sun, and an inferior planet on the same side of the Sun.
Inferior planets: Planets whose orbits are closer to the Sun than Earth's, i.e. Mercury and Venus. Also called inner planets.
Infrared: Electromagnetic radiation of wavelengths between 7500 A, the limit of the visible light spectrum at the red end, and centimetric radio waves.
Infrared radiometer: A telescope based instrument that measures the intensity of infrared energy radiated by the targets.
Injection angle: The angle at which a spacecraft's return trajectory intersects the Earth's atmosphere.
Injector: Typically, a perforated plate through which liquid fuel and oxidizer are injected into the combustion chamber at a controlled rate.
Intelsat: Organization of 105 countries (July 1980) owning or operating systems of satellites used by 144 countries and territories around the world for international communications, and by 16 countries for domestic communications.
Interferometer: Any of several optical, acoustic, or radio frequency instruments that use interference phenomena between a reference wave and an experimental wave or between two parts of an experimental wave to determine wavelengths and wave velocities, measure very small distances and thicknesses, and measure indices of refraction.
Interplanetary magnetic field: The weak magnetic field filling interplanetary space, with field lines usually connected to the Sun. The IMF is kept out of the Earth's magnetosphere, but the interaction of the two plays a major role in the flow of energy from the solar wind to the Earth's environment.
Interplanetary probe: Unmanned instrumented spacecraft capable of reaching the planets.
Interplanetary shock: The abrupt boundary formed at the front of a plasma cloud (e.g. from a coronal mass ejection) moving much faster than the rest of the solar wind, as it pushes its way through interplanetary space.
Interstellar ark: Hypothetical space colony capable of transporting human intelligence to the stars.
Interstallar probe: Unmanned instrumented spaceship with artificial intelligence capable of reaching the nearer stars.
Inverse-square law: The mathematical description of how the strength of some forces, including gravity, changes in inverse proportion to the square of the distance from the source.
Ion: An atom that has lost or acquired one or more electrons.
Ion engine: A rocket engine, the thrust of which is obtained by the electrostatic acceleration of ionized particles.
Ionization: Formation of electrically charged particles. Can be produced by high-energy radiation such as light or UV rays, or by collision of particles in thermal agitation.
Ionosphere: An atmospheric layer dominated by charged, or ionized, atoms that extend from about 38 to 400 miles above the Earth's surface.
IR: Infrared.
IRBM: Intermediate Range Ballistic Missile (range 2,400-5,500 km).
IRFNA: Inhibited Red Fuming Nitric Acid; RFNA + 0.6% HF as corrosion inhibitor.
ISAS: Institute of Space and Aeronautical Science; University of Tokyo (Japan).
Isotropic: A property of a distribution of particles where the flux is constant over all directions.
Isp: Specific Impulse. Also abbreviated SI.
ISRO: Indian Space Research Organization.
IWFNA: Inhibited White Fuming Nitric Acid; WFNA + 0.6% HF as corrosion inhibitor.
J ..
Jansky: Unit used to express flux. 1 Jansky = 10-26 W m-2 Hz-1 Bandwidth.
JAXA: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (formed in 2003 by merger of ISAS, NAL and NASDA).
Jet propulsion: Reaction propulsion in which the propulsion unit obtains oxygen from the air as distinguished from rocket propulsion in which the unit carries its own oxygen-producing material.
Jovian planet: Any of the four biggest planets: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
JPL: Jet Propulsion Laboratory (Pasadena, California).
JSC: Johnson Space Center (Houston, Texas).
Jupiter: Fifth planet from the Sun, a gas giant or Jovian planet.
Space Shuttle, Endeavor, CSC, 2016 |
Jansky: Unit used to express flux. 1 Jansky = 10-26 W m-2 Hz-1 Bandwidth.
JAXA: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (formed in 2003 by merger of ISAS, NAL and NASDA).
Jet propulsion: Reaction propulsion in which the propulsion unit obtains oxygen from the air as distinguished from rocket propulsion in which the unit carries its own oxygen-producing material.
Jovian planet: Any of the four biggest planets: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
JPL: Jet Propulsion Laboratory (Pasadena, California).
JSC: Johnson Space Center (Houston, Texas).
Jupiter: Fifth planet from the Sun, a gas giant or Jovian planet.
N ...
N2O4: Nitrogen Tetroxide. Also abbreviated NTO.
Nadir: The direction from a spacecraft directly down toward the center of a planet. Opposite the zenith.
NAL: National Aerospace Laboratory of Japan.
NASA: National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASDA: National Space Development Agency (Japan).
Nautical mile: The distance spanned by one minute of arc in latitude, defined internationally as 1,852 meters (6,076.1033 feet).
Neptune: Eighth planet from the Sun, a gas giant or Jovian planet.
Neutron: Atomic particles having approximately the same mass as a hydrogen atom; very penetrating.
Newton: That force which gives a mass of 1 kilogram an acceleration of 1 meter per second per second; equal to 100,000 dynes.
NiCd: Nickel Cadmium.
Nitric acid: A liquid oxidizer that reacts spontaneously with hydrazine. Also see IRFNA and IWFNA.
Nitrogen tetroxide: A liquid oxidizer that reacts spontaneously with hydrazine.
Noctilucent clouds: Weakly-luminous clouds, seen at night at heights of about 50 miles (80 km) above the Earth.
Non-coherent: Communications mode wherein a spacecraft generates its downlink frequency independent of any uplink frequency.
NORAD: North American Air Defense Command (USA).
Nose shroud: A cover on the nose of a rocket or spacecraft which jettisons before insertion into orbit.
Nozzle: The projecting aperture at the end of a combustion chamber serving as an outlet for the exhaust gases.
NRC: National Research Council (USA).
NTO: Nitrogen Tetroxide. Also abbreviated N2O4.
Nucleus: The central body of a comet.
N2O4: Nitrogen Tetroxide. Also abbreviated NTO.
Nadir: The direction from a spacecraft directly down toward the center of a planet. Opposite the zenith.
NAL: National Aerospace Laboratory of Japan.
NASA: National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASDA: National Space Development Agency (Japan).
Nautical mile: The distance spanned by one minute of arc in latitude, defined internationally as 1,852 meters (6,076.1033 feet).
Neptune: Eighth planet from the Sun, a gas giant or Jovian planet.
Neutron: Atomic particles having approximately the same mass as a hydrogen atom; very penetrating.
Newton: That force which gives a mass of 1 kilogram an acceleration of 1 meter per second per second; equal to 100,000 dynes.
NiCd: Nickel Cadmium.
Nitric acid: A liquid oxidizer that reacts spontaneously with hydrazine. Also see IRFNA and IWFNA.
Nitrogen tetroxide: A liquid oxidizer that reacts spontaneously with hydrazine.
Noctilucent clouds: Weakly-luminous clouds, seen at night at heights of about 50 miles (80 km) above the Earth.
Non-coherent: Communications mode wherein a spacecraft generates its downlink frequency independent of any uplink frequency.
NORAD: North American Air Defense Command (USA).
Nose shroud: A cover on the nose of a rocket or spacecraft which jettisons before insertion into orbit.
Nozzle: The projecting aperture at the end of a combustion chamber serving as an outlet for the exhaust gases.
NRC: National Research Council (USA).
NTO: Nitrogen Tetroxide. Also abbreviated N2O4.
Nucleus: The central body of a comet.
Closeup of a Space Shuttle tile |
O ...
Occultation: The passage of a celestial body across a line between an observer and another celestial object; and the progressive blocking of light, radio waves, or other radiation from a celestial source during such a passage.
OKB: Experimental Construction Bureau.
Omnidirectional: Capable of transmitting or receiving signals in all directions, as an antenna.
OMS: Orbital Maneuvering System.
One-way: Communications mode consisting only of downlink received from a spacecraft.
One-way light time: The elapsed time it takes for light, or a radio signal, to reach a spacecraft or other body from Earth, or vice versa.
Oort cloud: A large swarm of comets theorized to orbit the sun in the neighborhood of 50,000 AU.
Orbit: The path of a body acted upon by the force of gravity. Under the influence of a single attracting body, all orbital paths trace out simple conic sections. Although all ballistic or free-fall trajectories follow an orbital path, the word orbit is more usually associated with the continuous path of a body which does not impact with its primary.
Orbit insertion: The placing of a spacecraft into orbit around a planet or moon.
Orbit trim maneuver: The firing of control rockets to refine a spacecraft's speed and trajectory.
Orbital elements: Six quantities used to mathematically describe an orbit; i.e. semi-major axis, eccentricity, inclination, argument of periapsis, time of periapsis passage and longitude of ascending node.
Orbital mechanics: The study of the motions of artificial satellites and space vehicles moving under the influence of forces such as gravity, drag, and thrust. Also called flight mechanics.
Orbital module: That part of a spacecraft which allows additional volume for crew relaxation and/or experiments. Discarded prior to reentry.
Orbital period: The time taken by an orbiting body to complete one orbit.
Orbital velocity: The velocity necessary to overcome the gravitational attraction of the Earth and so keep a satellite in orbit, about 17,450 mph (28,080 km/hr) close to the Earth.
Orbiter spacecraft: A spacecraft designed to travel to a distant planet or moon and enter orbit. It must carry a substantial propulsive capability to decelerate it at the right moment to achieve orbit insertion.
O-stage: Rocket boosters which operate during part of the burning time of the first stage of a launch vehicle to provide additional thrust.
OTM: Orbit Trim Maneuver.
OTRAG: Orbital Transport- und Raketen- Atktiengesellsschaft.
OWLT: One-Way Light Time.
Oxidizer: An agent that releases oxygen for combination with another substance, creating combustion and gas for propulsion. Alternatively oxidants.
P ...
P & W: Pratt and Whitney (USA).
Parachute: An apparatus used to retard free fall, consisting of a light, usually hemispherical canopy attached by cords and stored folded until deployed in descent.
Parallel: Circle in parallel planes to that of the equator defining north-south measurements, also called line of latitude.
Parking orbit: Orbit in which a space vehicle awaits the next phase of its planned mission.
Parsec: Measure of distance, 1 parsec = approximately 3.26 light years.
Pascal: A unit of pressure equal to one Newton per square meter.
Passive cooling: The use of painting, shading, reflectors and other techniques to cool a spacecraft.
Payload: Revenue-producing or useful cargo carried by a spacecraft; also, anything carried in a rocket or spacecraft that is not part of the structure, propellant, or guidance systems.
PBAN: Polybutadiene acrylic acid acrylonitrile. A polymeric fuel binder.
PDT: Pacific Daylight Time.
Pegasus: A rocket-vehicle concept for transportation of commercial high-priority freight or 172 passengers.
Periapsis: That point in an orbit which is nearest to the primary.
Perigee: That point in a terrestrial orbit which is nearest to the Earth.
Perihelion: That point in a solar orbit which is nearest to the Sun.
Perilune: That point in a lunar orbit which is nearest to the Moon.
Period of revolution: Time of one complete cycle in orbital motion - referred to as a year when applied to Earth.
Period of rotation: Time of one complete cycle - referred to as a day when applied to Earth.
Perturbation: Modifications to simple conic section orbits caused by such disturbances as air drag, non-uniformity of the Earth, and gravitational fields of more distant bodies such as the Moon.
Phase: Two meanings: (1) The particular appearance of a body's state of illumination, such as the full phase of the moon. (2) As applied to electromagnetic waves, phase is the relative measurement of the alignment of two waveforms of similar frequency.
Phase angle: The angle in which waves come to a body.
Photometer: An optical instrument that measures the intensity of light from a source.
Photometry: The measurement of light intensities.
Photon: A quantum of radiant energy.
Photon propulsion: The propulsion of a vehicle by the emission of photons, which possess momentum.
Photosphere: The visible surface of the Sun.
Photovoltaic cells: Crystalline wafers called solar cells which convert sunlight directly into electricity without moving parts.
Pitch: The rotation of a vehicle about its lateral (Y) axis, i.e. movement in elevation.
Planet: A nonluminous celestial body larger than an asteroid or a comet, illuminated by light from a star, such as the sun, around which it revolves. The only known planets are those of the Sun but others have been detected on physical (non-observational) grounds around some of the nearer stars.
Planetoid: An asteroid.
Plasma: A gas-like association of ionized particles that responds collectively to electric and magnetic fields.
Plasma detector: A device for measuring the density, composition, temperature, velocity and three-dimensional distribution of plasmas that exist in interplanetary regions and within planetary magnetospheres.
Plasma engine: A rocket engine in which thrust is obtained from the acceleration of a plasma with crossed electrical and magnetic fields.
Plasma wave: An oscillation or wave in a plasma that falls in the audio range of frequency.
Plasma wave detector: A device for measuring the electrostatic and electromagnetic components of local plasma waves in three dimensions.
Plasmasphere: The region of the atmosphere consisting of cold dense plasma originating in the ionosphere and trapped by the Earth's magnetic field.
PLSS: Portable Life Support System.
Plug nozzle: A doughnut-shaped combustion chamber which discharges engine gases against the surface of a short central cone (the plug). Adapted in the form of an LH2 cooled heat shield, it can be used as a combination rocket/ aerodynamic braking device.
Pluto: Ninth planet from the Sun, considered by many a minor planet.
Plutonium(ploo-toh-nee-uhm)-238: A form of the radioactive element plutonium, characterized by high energy emissions.
PO: Polar Orbit.
Polar orbit: An orbit which passes over the poles.
Polarimeter: An optical instrument that measures the direction and extent of the polarization of light reflected from its targets.
Polymer: A compound used as a binder for solid rocket propellant systems; more generally, a compound consisting of repeating structural units.
Potential energy: The energy of a body due to its position in a field.
Pound: The U.S. customary unit of force defined as the weight of the standard pound at sea level and at the latitude of 45o.
ppm: Parts per million.
Precession: A change in the direction of the axis of spin of a rotating body.
Pressure suit: A suit, with helmet attached, which is inflated to provide body pressure and air, worn by the crew of certain spacecraft and aircraft which fly at great altitudes.
Pressurized: Containing air or other gas at a pressure higher than the pressure outside the chamber.
Primary: The body around which a satellite orbits.
Primitive: Used in a chemical sense, indicating an unmodified material representative of the original composition of the solar nebula.
Probe: An unmanned instrumented vehicle sent into space to gather information.
Prograde: Orbital motion in the same direction as the primary's rotation.
Propellant: A chemical or chemical mixture burned to create the thrust for a rocket or spacecraft.
Propulsion: The process of driving or propelling.
PST: Pacific Standard Time.
PTC: Passive Thermal Control.
Pulsar: Discovered in 1967. Pulsars emit radio signals the pulsations of which are extremely precise. The evidence suggests that pulsars are fast-spinning neutron stars.
Pyrotechnics: The use of electrically initiated explosive devices to operate valves, ignite solid rocket motors, and explode bolts to separate from or jettison hardware, or to deploy appendages.
Space Shuttle with students, CSC 2016 |
P & W: Pratt and Whitney (USA).
Parachute: An apparatus used to retard free fall, consisting of a light, usually hemispherical canopy attached by cords and stored folded until deployed in descent.
Parallel: Circle in parallel planes to that of the equator defining north-south measurements, also called line of latitude.
Parking orbit: Orbit in which a space vehicle awaits the next phase of its planned mission.
Parsec: Measure of distance, 1 parsec = approximately 3.26 light years.
Pascal: A unit of pressure equal to one Newton per square meter.
Passive cooling: The use of painting, shading, reflectors and other techniques to cool a spacecraft.
Payload: Revenue-producing or useful cargo carried by a spacecraft; also, anything carried in a rocket or spacecraft that is not part of the structure, propellant, or guidance systems.
PBAN: Polybutadiene acrylic acid acrylonitrile. A polymeric fuel binder.
PDT: Pacific Daylight Time.
Pegasus: A rocket-vehicle concept for transportation of commercial high-priority freight or 172 passengers.
Periapsis: That point in an orbit which is nearest to the primary.
Perigee: That point in a terrestrial orbit which is nearest to the Earth.
Perihelion: That point in a solar orbit which is nearest to the Sun.
Perilune: That point in a lunar orbit which is nearest to the Moon.
Period of revolution: Time of one complete cycle in orbital motion - referred to as a year when applied to Earth.
Period of rotation: Time of one complete cycle - referred to as a day when applied to Earth.
Perturbation: Modifications to simple conic section orbits caused by such disturbances as air drag, non-uniformity of the Earth, and gravitational fields of more distant bodies such as the Moon.
Phase: Two meanings: (1) The particular appearance of a body's state of illumination, such as the full phase of the moon. (2) As applied to electromagnetic waves, phase is the relative measurement of the alignment of two waveforms of similar frequency.
Phase angle: The angle in which waves come to a body.
Photometer: An optical instrument that measures the intensity of light from a source.
Photometry: The measurement of light intensities.
Photon: A quantum of radiant energy.
Photon propulsion: The propulsion of a vehicle by the emission of photons, which possess momentum.
Photosphere: The visible surface of the Sun.
Photovoltaic cells: Crystalline wafers called solar cells which convert sunlight directly into electricity without moving parts.
Pitch: The rotation of a vehicle about its lateral (Y) axis, i.e. movement in elevation.
Planet: A nonluminous celestial body larger than an asteroid or a comet, illuminated by light from a star, such as the sun, around which it revolves. The only known planets are those of the Sun but others have been detected on physical (non-observational) grounds around some of the nearer stars.
Planetoid: An asteroid.
Plasma: A gas-like association of ionized particles that responds collectively to electric and magnetic fields.
Plasma detector: A device for measuring the density, composition, temperature, velocity and three-dimensional distribution of plasmas that exist in interplanetary regions and within planetary magnetospheres.
Plasma engine: A rocket engine in which thrust is obtained from the acceleration of a plasma with crossed electrical and magnetic fields.
Plasma wave: An oscillation or wave in a plasma that falls in the audio range of frequency.
Plasma wave detector: A device for measuring the electrostatic and electromagnetic components of local plasma waves in three dimensions.
Plasmasphere: The region of the atmosphere consisting of cold dense plasma originating in the ionosphere and trapped by the Earth's magnetic field.
PLSS: Portable Life Support System.
Plug nozzle: A doughnut-shaped combustion chamber which discharges engine gases against the surface of a short central cone (the plug). Adapted in the form of an LH2 cooled heat shield, it can be used as a combination rocket/ aerodynamic braking device.
Pluto: Ninth planet from the Sun, considered by many a minor planet.
Plutonium(ploo-toh-nee-uhm)-238: A form of the radioactive element plutonium, characterized by high energy emissions.
PO: Polar Orbit.
Polar orbit: An orbit which passes over the poles.
Polarimeter: An optical instrument that measures the direction and extent of the polarization of light reflected from its targets.
Polymer: A compound used as a binder for solid rocket propellant systems; more generally, a compound consisting of repeating structural units.
Potential energy: The energy of a body due to its position in a field.
Pound: The U.S. customary unit of force defined as the weight of the standard pound at sea level and at the latitude of 45o.
ppm: Parts per million.
Precession: A change in the direction of the axis of spin of a rotating body.
Pressure suit: A suit, with helmet attached, which is inflated to provide body pressure and air, worn by the crew of certain spacecraft and aircraft which fly at great altitudes.
Pressurized: Containing air or other gas at a pressure higher than the pressure outside the chamber.
Primary: The body around which a satellite orbits.
Primitive: Used in a chemical sense, indicating an unmodified material representative of the original composition of the solar nebula.
Probe: An unmanned instrumented vehicle sent into space to gather information.
Prograde: Orbital motion in the same direction as the primary's rotation.
Propellant: A chemical or chemical mixture burned to create the thrust for a rocket or spacecraft.
Propulsion: The process of driving or propelling.
PST: Pacific Standard Time.
PTC: Passive Thermal Control.
Pulsar: Discovered in 1967. Pulsars emit radio signals the pulsations of which are extremely precise. The evidence suggests that pulsars are fast-spinning neutron stars.
Pyrotechnics: The use of electrically initiated explosive devices to operate valves, ignite solid rocket motors, and explode bolts to separate from or jettison hardware, or to deploy appendages.
S ...
SAR: Synthetic Aperture Radar.
Satellite: Any body, natural or artificial, in orbit around a planet. The term is used most often to describe moons and spacecraft.
Saturn: Sixth planet from the Sun, a gas giant or Jovian planet.
S-band: A range of microwave radio frequencies in the neighborhood of 2 to 4 GHz, used for communicating with piloted space missions (~2 Ghz).
SCADA: Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition.
Scan platform: An articulated, powered appendage to the spacecraft bus which points in commanded directions, allowing optical observations to be taken independently of the spacecraft's attitude.
Seismometer: A device for measuring movements of the ground.
Semi-major axis: Half the major axis of an ellipse. The mean distance of a planet or satellite from its primary.
Sensor: An electronic device for measuring or indicating a direction or movement.
SEP: Societe Europeene de Propulsion (France).
Sequencer: A mechanical or electrical device which may be set to initiate a series of events and to make events follow a sequence.
Service module: That part of a spacecraft which usually carries a maneuvering engine, thrusters, electrical supply, oxygen and other consumables external to the descent module. Discarded prior to reentry.
SETI: Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence.
Sextant: An instrument that measures angular distances from fixed celestial objects.
Shepherd moon: Moon which gravitationally confines ring particles.
Sidereal time: Time relative to the stars other than the Sun.
Simulator: A device that mimics the operational conditions of equipment or vehicles.
SIS: Satellite Interceptor System.
SL: Sea Level.
SLBM: Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile.
Slug: The U.S. customary unit of mass defined as the mass which receives an acceleration of 1 foot per second per second when a force of 1 pound is applied to it.
SM: Service Module.
Solar: Of or pertaining to the Sun.
Solar array: See solar panel.
Solar cell: A cell that converts sunlight into electrical energy. The light falling on certain substances (e.g. a silicon cell) causes an electric current to flow.
Solar constant: The electromagnetic radiation from the Sun that falls on a unit area of surface normal to the line from the Sun, per unit time, outside the atmosphere, at one astronomical unit.
Solar flare: A sudden brightening in some part of the Sun, followed by the emission of jets of gas and a flood of ultra-violet radiation. The gale of protons which accompanies a flare can be very dangerous to astronauts.
Solar nebula: The large cloud of gas and dust from which the Sun and planets condensed 4.6 billion years ago.
Solar panel: An array of light-sensitive cells attached to a spacecraft and used to generate electrical power for the vehicle in space. Also called solar array.
Solar sensors: Light-sensitive diodes which indicate the direction of the Sun.
Solar wind: A current of charged particles that streams outward from the Sun.
Solid propellant: A rocket propellant in solid form; usually consisting of a mixture of fuel and oxidizer.
Solid rocket booster: A rocket, powered by solid propellants, used to launch spacecraft into orbit.
Sounding rocket: A research rocket used to obtain data from the upper atmosphere.
Space: The universe beyond Earth's atmosphere. The boundary at which the atmosphere ends and space begins is not sharp but starts at approximately 100 miles above Earth's surface.
Space colony: Hypothetical extra-terrestrial habitat, for hundreds, thousands or even millions of people, perhaps established on a moon or planet or as an artificial construction in free space.
Space debris(duh-bree): Man-made objects or parts thereof in space which do not serve any useful purpose.
Spacecraft: A piloted or unpiloted vehicle designed for travel in space.
Spacecraft clock: A counter maintained by the command & data subsystem. It meters the passing of time during the life of the spacecraft, and regulates nearly all activity within the spacecraft systems.
Space platform: A large artificial satellite conceived as a habitable base in space with scientific, exploratory or military applications. A space station.
Space station: An orbiting spacecraft designed to support human activity for an extended time.
Space weather: The popular name for energy-releasing phenomena in the magnetosphere, associated with magnetic storms, substorms and shocks.
SPADATS: Space Detection and Tracking System (USA).
SPASUR: Space Surveillance System (USA).
Specific impulse: Parameter for rating the performance of a rocket engine. Indicates how many pounds or kilograms of thrust are obtained by consumption of a pound or kilogram of propellant in one second.
Spectrometer: An optical instrument that splits the light received from an object into its component wavelengths by means of a diffraction grating; then measuring the amplitudes of the individual wavelengths.
Spectroscopy: The study of the production, measurement and interpretation of electromagnetic spectra.
Spectrum: A particular distribution of wavelengths and frequencies.
Spin stabilization: Spacecraft stabilization accomplished by rotating the spacecraft mass, thus using gyroscopic action as the stabilizing mechanism.
SRB: Solid Rocket Booster.
SRB propellant: Composite propellant used in the Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters. Consists mainly of ammonium perchlorate as the oxidizer, powdered aluminum as the metallic fuel, and PBAN, polybutadiene-acrylic acid-acrylonitrile terpolymer, as the polymeric fuel binder. A small amount of iron oxide is added to increase the burning rate. The final product is a rubbery material not unlike a typewriter eraser.
SRBM: Short Range Ballistic Missile (range <800 km).
SRC: Science Research Council (UK).
SSO: Sun-Synchronous Orbit.
SSPO: Sun-Synchronous Polar Orbit.
Stage: An independently powered section of a rocket or spacecraft, often combined with others to form multistage vehicles.
Star: A self-luminous celestial body consisting of a mass of gas held together by its own gravity in which the energy generated by nuclear reactions in the interior is balanced by the outflow of energy to the surface, and the inward-directed gravitational forces are balanced by the outward-directed gas and radiation pressures.
Static firing: The firing of a rocket on a special test stand to measure thrust, etc.
Stratosphere: A division of the Earth's atmosphere extending from altitudes ranging 5-10 miles to 18-30 miles.
Subatomic particles: Fundamental components of matter such as electrons or protons.
Subcarrier: Modulation applied to a carrier which is itself modulated with information-carrying variations.
Sublimator: An exposed metal plate, located on the outside of a spacesuit, that functions as a cooling coil to control suit temperatures.
Sub-orbital: Not attaining orbit, i.e. a ballistic space shot.
Sub-satellite: A secondary object released from a parent satellite in orbit, e.g. an electronic "ferret" released by a reconnaissance satellite.
Sunspot cycle: The recurring, eleven-year rise and fall in the number of sunspots.
Sunspots: Dark regions on the Sun which are the centers of large vortices and possess powerful magnetic fields. Maximum sunspot activity occurs in cycles with a period of about 11 years.
Sun synchronous orbit: A walking orbit whose orbital plan precesses with the same period as the planet's solar orbital period. In such an orbit, a satellite crosses periapsis at about the same local time every orbit.
Superior conjunction: Alignment between Earth and a planet on the far side of the Sun.
Superior planets: Planets whose orbits are farther from the Sun than Earth's, i.e. Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto. Also called outer planets.
Supernova: A large dying star, the final collapse of which is a cataclysmic explosion, hurling its substance into space.
Surface penetrator: A probe designed to penetrate the surface of a body, surviving an impact of hundreds of g's, measuring and telemetering the properties of the penetrated surface.
Surface rover: A semi-autonomous roving vehicle deployed on the surface of a planet or other body, taking images and soil analyses for telemetering back to Earth.
Sustainer engine: An engine that maintains propulsion of a launch vehicle once it has discarded its boosters.
Synthetic aperture radar: A radar imaging instrument which provides a penetrating illumination of radio waves, and is capable of imaging surfaces covered by clouds and haze. SAR images are constructed of a matrix where lines of constant distance or range intersect with lines of constant Doppler shift.
Underneath Space Shuttle Endeavor |
Satellite: Any body, natural or artificial, in orbit around a planet. The term is used most often to describe moons and spacecraft.
Saturn: Sixth planet from the Sun, a gas giant or Jovian planet.
S-band: A range of microwave radio frequencies in the neighborhood of 2 to 4 GHz, used for communicating with piloted space missions (~2 Ghz).
SCADA: Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition.
Scan platform: An articulated, powered appendage to the spacecraft bus which points in commanded directions, allowing optical observations to be taken independently of the spacecraft's attitude.
Seismometer: A device for measuring movements of the ground.
Semi-major axis: Half the major axis of an ellipse. The mean distance of a planet or satellite from its primary.
Sensor: An electronic device for measuring or indicating a direction or movement.
SEP: Societe Europeene de Propulsion (France).
Sequencer: A mechanical or electrical device which may be set to initiate a series of events and to make events follow a sequence.
Service module: That part of a spacecraft which usually carries a maneuvering engine, thrusters, electrical supply, oxygen and other consumables external to the descent module. Discarded prior to reentry.
SETI: Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence.
Sextant: An instrument that measures angular distances from fixed celestial objects.
Shepherd moon: Moon which gravitationally confines ring particles.
Sidereal time: Time relative to the stars other than the Sun.
Simulator: A device that mimics the operational conditions of equipment or vehicles.
SIS: Satellite Interceptor System.
SL: Sea Level.
SLBM: Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile.
Slug: The U.S. customary unit of mass defined as the mass which receives an acceleration of 1 foot per second per second when a force of 1 pound is applied to it.
SM: Service Module.
Solar: Of or pertaining to the Sun.
Solar array: See solar panel.
Solar cell: A cell that converts sunlight into electrical energy. The light falling on certain substances (e.g. a silicon cell) causes an electric current to flow.
Solar constant: The electromagnetic radiation from the Sun that falls on a unit area of surface normal to the line from the Sun, per unit time, outside the atmosphere, at one astronomical unit.
Solar flare: A sudden brightening in some part of the Sun, followed by the emission of jets of gas and a flood of ultra-violet radiation. The gale of protons which accompanies a flare can be very dangerous to astronauts.
Solar nebula: The large cloud of gas and dust from which the Sun and planets condensed 4.6 billion years ago.
Solar panel: An array of light-sensitive cells attached to a spacecraft and used to generate electrical power for the vehicle in space. Also called solar array.
Solar sensors: Light-sensitive diodes which indicate the direction of the Sun.
Solar wind: A current of charged particles that streams outward from the Sun.
Solid propellant: A rocket propellant in solid form; usually consisting of a mixture of fuel and oxidizer.
Solid rocket booster: A rocket, powered by solid propellants, used to launch spacecraft into orbit.
Sounding rocket: A research rocket used to obtain data from the upper atmosphere.
Space: The universe beyond Earth's atmosphere. The boundary at which the atmosphere ends and space begins is not sharp but starts at approximately 100 miles above Earth's surface.
Space colony: Hypothetical extra-terrestrial habitat, for hundreds, thousands or even millions of people, perhaps established on a moon or planet or as an artificial construction in free space.
Space debris(duh-bree): Man-made objects or parts thereof in space which do not serve any useful purpose.
Spacecraft: A piloted or unpiloted vehicle designed for travel in space.
Spacecraft clock: A counter maintained by the command & data subsystem. It meters the passing of time during the life of the spacecraft, and regulates nearly all activity within the spacecraft systems.
Space platform: A large artificial satellite conceived as a habitable base in space with scientific, exploratory or military applications. A space station.
Space station: An orbiting spacecraft designed to support human activity for an extended time.
Space weather: The popular name for energy-releasing phenomena in the magnetosphere, associated with magnetic storms, substorms and shocks.
SPADATS: Space Detection and Tracking System (USA).
SPASUR: Space Surveillance System (USA).
Specific impulse: Parameter for rating the performance of a rocket engine. Indicates how many pounds or kilograms of thrust are obtained by consumption of a pound or kilogram of propellant in one second.
Spectrometer: An optical instrument that splits the light received from an object into its component wavelengths by means of a diffraction grating; then measuring the amplitudes of the individual wavelengths.
Spectroscopy: The study of the production, measurement and interpretation of electromagnetic spectra.
Spectrum: A particular distribution of wavelengths and frequencies.
Spin stabilization: Spacecraft stabilization accomplished by rotating the spacecraft mass, thus using gyroscopic action as the stabilizing mechanism.
SRB: Solid Rocket Booster.
SRB propellant: Composite propellant used in the Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters. Consists mainly of ammonium perchlorate as the oxidizer, powdered aluminum as the metallic fuel, and PBAN, polybutadiene-acrylic acid-acrylonitrile terpolymer, as the polymeric fuel binder. A small amount of iron oxide is added to increase the burning rate. The final product is a rubbery material not unlike a typewriter eraser.
SRBM: Short Range Ballistic Missile (range <800 km).
SRC: Science Research Council (UK).
SSO: Sun-Synchronous Orbit.
SSPO: Sun-Synchronous Polar Orbit.
Stage: An independently powered section of a rocket or spacecraft, often combined with others to form multistage vehicles.
Star: A self-luminous celestial body consisting of a mass of gas held together by its own gravity in which the energy generated by nuclear reactions in the interior is balanced by the outflow of energy to the surface, and the inward-directed gravitational forces are balanced by the outward-directed gas and radiation pressures.
Static firing: The firing of a rocket on a special test stand to measure thrust, etc.
Stratosphere: A division of the Earth's atmosphere extending from altitudes ranging 5-10 miles to 18-30 miles.
Subatomic particles: Fundamental components of matter such as electrons or protons.
Subcarrier: Modulation applied to a carrier which is itself modulated with information-carrying variations.
Sublimator: An exposed metal plate, located on the outside of a spacesuit, that functions as a cooling coil to control suit temperatures.
Sub-orbital: Not attaining orbit, i.e. a ballistic space shot.
Sub-satellite: A secondary object released from a parent satellite in orbit, e.g. an electronic "ferret" released by a reconnaissance satellite.
Sunspot cycle: The recurring, eleven-year rise and fall in the number of sunspots.
Sunspots: Dark regions on the Sun which are the centers of large vortices and possess powerful magnetic fields. Maximum sunspot activity occurs in cycles with a period of about 11 years.
Sun synchronous orbit: A walking orbit whose orbital plan precesses with the same period as the planet's solar orbital period. In such an orbit, a satellite crosses periapsis at about the same local time every orbit.
Superior conjunction: Alignment between Earth and a planet on the far side of the Sun.
Superior planets: Planets whose orbits are farther from the Sun than Earth's, i.e. Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto. Also called outer planets.
Supernova: A large dying star, the final collapse of which is a cataclysmic explosion, hurling its substance into space.
Surface penetrator: A probe designed to penetrate the surface of a body, surviving an impact of hundreds of g's, measuring and telemetering the properties of the penetrated surface.
Surface rover: A semi-autonomous roving vehicle deployed on the surface of a planet or other body, taking images and soil analyses for telemetering back to Earth.
Sustainer engine: An engine that maintains propulsion of a launch vehicle once it has discarded its boosters.
Synthetic aperture radar: A radar imaging instrument which provides a penetrating illumination of radio waves, and is capable of imaging surfaces covered by clouds and haze. SAR images are constructed of a matrix where lines of constant distance or range intersect with lines of constant Doppler shift.
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