GLOSSARY
Absolute
zero: The lowest possible temperature, at which
substances contain no heat energy.
Acceleration: The rate at which the speed of an object
is changing.
Anthropic
principle:
We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we
would not be here to observe it.
Antiparticle: Each type of matter particle has a corresponding
antiparticle. When a particle collides with its antiparticle, they
annihilate, leaving only energy.
Atom: The basic unit of ordinary matter, made
up of a tiny nucleus (consisting of protons and neutrons) surrounded
by orbiting electrons.
Big
bang: The singularity at the beginning of the
universe.
Big
crunch: The singularity at the end of the universe.
Black
hole: A region of space-time from which nothing,
not even light, can escape, because gravity is so strong.
Casimir
effect: The attractive pressure between two flat,
parallel metal plates placed very near to each other in a vacuum.
The pressure is due to a reduction in the usual number of virtual
particles in the space between the plates.
Chandrasekhar limit: The maximum possible mass
of a stable cold star, above which it must collapse into a black
hole.
Conservation
of energy:
The law of science that states that energy (or its equivalent in
mass) can neither be created nor destroyed.
Coordinates: Numbers that specify the position of a
point in space and time.
Cosmological
constant:
A mathematical device used by Einstein to give space-time an inbuilt
tendency to expand.
Cosmology: The study of the universe as a whole.
Dark
matter: Matter in galaxies, clusters, and possibly
between clusters, that can not be observed directly but can be detected
by its gravitational effect. As much as 90 percent of the mass of
the universe may be in the form of dark matter.
Duality: A correspondence between apparently different
theories that lead to the same physical results.
Einstein-Rosen
bridge: A
thin tube of space-time linking two black holes. Also see Wormhole.
Electric
charge: A
property of a particle by which it may repel (or attract) other
particles that have a charge of similar (or opposite) sign.
Electromagnetic
force: The
force that arises between particles with electric charge; the second
strongest of the four fundamental forces.
Electron: A particle with negative electric charge
that orbits the nucleus of an atom.
Electroweak
unification energy:
The energy (around 100 GeV) above which the distinction between
the electromagnetic force and the weak force disappears.
Elementary
particle:
A particle that, it is believed, cannot be subdivided.
Event: A point in space-time, specified by its
time and place.
Event
horizon: The boundary of a black hole.
Exclusion
principle:
The idea that two identical spin-1/2 particles cannot have (within
the limits set by the uncertainty principle) both the same position
and the same velocity.
Field: Something that exists throughout space
and time, as opposed to a particle that exists at only one point
at a time.
Frequency: For a wave, the number of complete cycles
per second.
Gamma
rays: Electromagnetic rays of very short wavelength,
produced in radio-active decay or by collisions of elementary particles.
General
relativity:
Einsteins theory based on the idea that the laws of science
should be the same for all observers, no matter how they are moving.
It explains the force of gravity in terms of the curvature of a
four-dimensional space-time.
Geodesic: The shortest (or longest) path between
two points.
Grand
unification energy:
The energy above which, it is believed, the electro-magnetic force,
weak force, and strong force become indistinguishable from each
other.
Grand
unified theory (GUT):
A theory which unifies the electromagnetic, strong, and weak forces.
Imaginary
time: Time measured using imaginary numbers.
Light
cone: A surface in space-time that marks out
the possible directions for light rays passing through a given event.
Light-second
(light-year):
The distance traveled by light in one second (year).
Magnetic
field: The field responsible for magnetic forces,
now incorporated along with the electric field, into the electromagnetic
field.
Mass: The quantity of matter in a body; its inertia,
or resistance to acceleration.
Microwave
background radiation:
The radiation from the glowing of the hot early universe, now so
greatly red-shifted that it appears not as light but as microwaves
(radio waves with a wavelength of a few centimeters). Also see COBE,
on page 145.
Naked
singularity: A space-time singularity not surrounded
by a black hole.
Neutrino: An extremely light (possibly massless)
particle that is affected only by the weak force and gravity.
Neutron: An uncharged particle, very similar to
the proton, which accounts for roughly half the particles in an
atomic nucleus.
Neutron
star: A cold star, supported by the exclusion
principle repulsion between neutrons.
No
boundary condition:
The idea that the universe is finite but has no boundary (in imaginary
time).
Nuclear
fusion: The process by which two nuclei collide
and coalesce to form a single, heavier nucleus.
Nucleus: The central part of an atom, consisting
only of protons and neutrons, held together by the strong force.
Particle
accelerator:
A machine that, using electromagnets, can accelerate moving charged
particles, giving them more energy.
Phase: For a wave, the position in its cycle at
a specified time: a measure of whether it is at a crest, a trough,
or somewhere in between.
Photon: A quantum of light.
Plancks
quantum principle:
The idea that light (or any other classical waves) can be emitted
or absorbed only in discrete quanta, whose energy is proportional
to their wavelength.
Positron: The (positively charged) antiparticle of
the electron.
Primordial
black hole:
A black hole created in the very early universe.
Proportional: X is proportional to Y means
that when Y is multiplied by any number, so is X. X is inversely
proportional to Y means that when Y is multiplied by any number,
X is divided by that number.
Proton: A positively charged particle, very similar
to the neutron, that accounts for roughly half the particles in
the nucleus of most atoms.
Pulsar: A rotating neutron star that emits regular
pulses of radio waves.
Quantum: The indivisible unit in which waves may
be emitted or absorbed.
Quantum
chromodynamics
(QCD): The theory that describes the interactions of quarks and
gluons.
Quantum
mechanics:
The theory developed from Plancks quantum principle and Heisenbergs
uncertainty principle.
Quark: A (charged) elementary particle that feels
the strong force. Protons and neutrons are each composed of three
quarks.
Radar: A system using pulsed radio waves to detect
the position of objects by measuring the time it takes a single
pulse to reach the object and be reflected back.
Radioactivity: The spontaneous breakdown of one type of
atomic nucleus into another.
Red shift: The reddening of light from
a star that is moving away from us, due to the Doppler effect.
Singularity: A point in space-time at which the space-time
curvature becomes infinite.
Singularity
theorem: A
theorem that shows that a singularity must exist under certain circumstances
in particular, that the universe must have started with a
singularity.
Space-time: The four-dimensional space whose points
are events.
Spatial
dimension:
Any of the three dimensions that are spacelike that is, any
except the time dimension.
Special
relativity:
Einsteins theory based on the idea that the laws of science
should be the same for all observers, no matter how they are moving,
in the absence of gravitational phenomena.
Spectrum: The component frequencies that make up
a wave. The visible part of the suns spectrum can be seen
in a rainbow.
Spin: An internal property of elementary particles,
related to, but not identical to, the everyday concept of spin.
Stationary
state: One
that is not changing with time: a sphere spinning at a constant
rate is stationary because it looks identical at any given instant.
String
theory: A theory of physics in which particles
are described as waves on strings. Strings have length but no other
dimension.
Strong
force: The strongest of the four fundamental forces,
with the shortest range of all. It holds the quarks together within
protons and neutrons, and holds the protons and neutrons together
to form atoms.
Uncertainty
principle:
The principle, formulated by Heisenberg, that one can never be exactly
sure of both the position and the velocity of a particle; the more
accurately one knows the one, the less accurately one can know the
other.
Virtual
particle:
In quantum mechanics, a particle that can never be directly detected,
but whose existence does have measurable effects.
Wave/particle
duality: The
concept in quantum mechanics that there is no distinction between
waves and particles; particles may sometimes behave like waves,
and waves like particles.
Wavelength: For a wave, the distance between two adjacent
troughs or two adjacent crests.
Weak
force: The second weakest of the four fundamental
forces, with a very short range. It affects all matter particles,
but not force-carrying particles.
Weight: The force exerted on a body by a gravitational
field. It is proportional to, but not the same as, its mass.
White
dwarf: A stable cold star, supported by the exclusion
principle repulsion between electrons.
Wormhole: A thin tube of space-time connecting distant
regions of the universe. Wormholes might also link to parallel or
baby universes and could provide the possibility of time travel.
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