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Terme du glossaire : Centre galactique

Description : Le centre galactique est la région centrale de la Voie lactée (la galaxie dans laquelle se trouve le Système solaire), la région autour de laquelle tourne le disque de la Voie lactée. Le centre galactique fait partie du bulbe galactique et se trouve à environ 27 000 années-lumière (8 kiloparsecs) du Système solaire, alors que le diamètre du disque galactique est d'environ 100 000 années-lumière (environ 31 kiloparsecs). Elle contient la source radio Sagittarius A et la source radio compacte Sagittarius A*, qui est le trou noir supermassif au cœur de notre galaxie. Plusieurs étoiles jeunes et massives sont en orbite autour de ce trou noir qui a une masse d'environ 4,5 millions de masses solaires. Le tout est entouré de millions d'étoiles plus anciennes qui constituent ce que l'on appelle l'amas nucléaire d'étoiles.

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Statut du terme et de sa définition : La définition initiale de ce terme en anglais a été aprouvée par un·e spécialiste de la recherche en astronomie et un·e spécialiste de l’éducation
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The OAE Multilingual Glossary is a project of the IAU Office of Astronomy for Education (OAE) in collaboration with the IAU Office of Astronomy Outreach (OAO). The terms and definitions were chosen, written and reviewed by a collective effort from the OAE, the OAE Centers and Nodes, the OAE National Astronomy Education Coordinators (NAECs) and other volunteers. You can find a full list of credits here. All glossary terms and their definitions are released under a Creative Commons CC BY-4.0 license and should be credited to "IAU OAE".

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Diagrammes associés


Ophiuchus appears as a headless stick figure

Ophiuchus Constellation Map

Légende : The constellation Ophiuchus along with its bright stars and its surrounding constellations. Ophiuchus is surrounded by (going clockwise from the top): Hercules, Serpens Caput, Scorpius, Sagittarius and Serpens Cauda. Ophiuchus is not part of the traditional twelve zodiac constellations but it lies on the ecliptic (shown here as a blue line), this is the path the Sun appears to take across the sky over the course of a year. The Sun is in Ophiuchus from late November to mid December. The other planets of the Solar System can often be found in Ophiuchus. Ophiuchus spans the celestial equator and thus part of the constellation is visible across the whole of the earth at some point in the year. However during the time it is most visible in the evenings (the southern hemisphere winter and northern hemisphere summer) much of the arctic is in perpetual daylight making the stars in the constellation impossible to see. The whole constellation is visible from equatorial and temperate regions of both hemispheres. As Ophiuchus lies close to the galactic center it contains many globular clusters such as M9, M10, M12, M14, M19, M62, and M107. These are marked as yellow circles with plus symbols superimposed. The y-axis of this diagram is in degrees of declination with north as up and the x-axis is in hours of right ascension with east to the left. The sizes of the stars marked here relate to the star's apparent magnitude, a measure of its apparent brightness. The larger dots represent brighter stars. The Greek letters mark the brightest stars in the constellation. These are ranked by brightness with the brightest star being labeled alpha, the second brightest beta, etc., although this ordering is not always followed exactly. The dotted boundary lines mark the IAU's boundaries of the constellations and the solid green lines mark one of the common forms used to represent the figures of the constellations. Neither the constellation boundaries, nor the line marking the ecliptic, nor the lines joining the stars appear on the sky.
Crédit : Adapted by the IAU Office of Astronomy for Education from the original by IAU/Sky & Telescope

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