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67 results for "stellar classification" — page 1 of 4
Q_2_04 — Stellar Evolution: The Life Cycle of Stars
Stars are born in collapsing molecular clouds, live by nuclear fusion for millions to trillions of years, and die in ways determined almost entirely by their initial mass. Low-mass stars (< 8 M☉) shed their outer layers
ZH_3_13 — Women in Astronomy: Hypatia, Caroline Herschel, Henrietta Leavitt
Women have contributed to astronomy from antiquity to the present — often against formidable institutional barriers, many of which persisted well into the 20th century. Hypatia of Alexandria (~355–415 CE) was a renowned
ZG_2_06 — Historical Linguistics and Language Family Classification
Historical linguistics is the scientific study of how languages change over time, how they are related to each other, and how they can be grouped into language families descended from common ancestors. The discipline's c
Q_4_16 — Chandrasekhar Limit: White Dwarf Physics and Stellar Death
The Chandrasekhar limit — approximately 1.4 solar masses ($1.4 \, M_\odot$) — is the maximum mass of a stable white dwarf star, the dense remnant left after a low- or intermediate-mass star (initial mass up to ~8 $M_\odo
Q_3_13 — Interstellar Objects: 'Oumuamua, Borisov, and Interstellar Visitors
Interstellar objects (ISOs) are bodies — asteroids, comets, or other macroscopic objects — that originate in other star systems and pass through our solar system on unbound, hyperbolic trajectories. While the theoretical
H_4_15 — Classification and Declassification — How Governments Control Knowledge
The classification system — the legal and bureaucratic apparatus by which governments designate information as secret and restrict its dissemination — is one of the most powerful mechanisms of knowledge control in the mo
ZH_4_13 — African Stellar Calendars: Borana, Mursi, Tswana
African stellar calendars represent some of the most sophisticated naked-eye observational systems in the ethnographic record, yet remain among the least studied in archaeoastronomy — a gap that reflects colonial biases
Q_2_13 — Interstellar Medium, Dust, and Nebulae
The space between stars is far from empty — the interstellar medium (ISM) is a complex, dynamic ecosystem of gas, dust, magnetic fields, and cosmic rays that pervades galaxies and plays a central role in stellar birth, d
Q_2_11 — Stellar Populations, Metallicity, and Generations
Stars preserve the chemical fingerprint of the gas from which they formed, making them archaeological records of the universe's chemical history. Walter Baade (1944) recognized two distinct stellar populations: Populatio
Q_2_05 — Galaxy Formation, Structure, and Classification
Galaxies — gravitationally bound systems of stars, gas, dust, and dark matter — are the fundamental building blocks of the universe's large-scale structure. From Edwin Hubble's morphological classification (1926) to mode
S_4_06 — Interstellar Communication — SETI, Breakthrough Listen, and the Search for Intelligence
The scientific search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) has proceeded for over six decades since Frank Drake's Project Ozma (1960) first aimed a radio telescope at nearby stars, yet no confirmed signal of intellig
I_1_03 — Close Encounters Classification System and Case Study Methodology
The systematic classification of UFO/UAP encounters provides the methodological backbone for anomaly research. J. Allen Hynek's Close Encounter scale (1972) — ranging from CE-I (visual sighting within 150 meters) through
M_5_11 — Archaeological Anomalies Database: Cataloging the Unexplained
This document serves as a structured database and classification system for archaeological anomalies — finds that appear to challenge accepted timelines, technological capabilities, or historical frameworks. Rather than
ZH_4_10 — Sirius in World Cultures: Rising Star and Calendar Anchor
Sirius (α Canis Majoris) is the brightest star in the night sky (apparent magnitude −1.46) — and has been one of the most culturally significant stars in human history. Its pre-dawn heliacal rising (the first day it beco
ZH_5_17 — Ancient Variable Star Observations (Algol)
Algol (Beta Persei, the "Demon Star") — a second-magnitude eclipsing binary star in the constellation Perseus that dims dramatically every 2.867 days as its fainter companion transits the primary star — may have been rec
B_2_18 — Star Beings and Sky People: Celestial Origin Myths
Across cultures worldwide, myths describe beings who originate from the stars or descend from the sky to interact with humanity — teaching knowledge, founding civilizations, or serving as ancestral progenitors. These cel
H_4_11 — Classified Science and Declassified Programs
Governments routinely classify scientific and technical research on national security grounds, creating vast bodies of knowledge that are inaccessible to the public, the scientific community, and democratic oversight for
S_4_19 — Dyson Sphere Engineering
A Dyson sphere is a hypothetical megastructure that encompasses an entire star to capture a substantial fraction of its energy output — representing the ultimate engineering achievement of a technologically advanced civi
U_5_24 — Totemism: Animal Ancestors, Sacred Kinship, and Species Identity
Totemism is a system of belief and social organization in which human groups maintain spiritual, ancestral, or kinship relationships with natural species, objects, or phenomena (the "totem"). First documented systematica
ZH_4_14 — Sky Burials, Celestial Afterlives, and Astral Religion
Across human cultures, the celestial realm — the sky, stars, Sun, and Moon — has been imagined as the destination of the soul after death, the abode of gods and ancestors, and the matrix of cosmic justice. Astral religio
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