Glossary – N

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Near Side
the side of the Moon that always faces toward the earth. Features on this side are named mainly after the European astronomers who first observed them with telescopes.
Nebula (pl. nebulae)
A diffuse mass of interstellar dust and gas.
Neutrino
a fundamental particle produced in massive numbers by the nuclear reactions in stars; they are very hard to detect because the vast majority of them pass completely through the Earth without interacting.
Neutron
an uncharged subatomic particle that, along with protons, make up atomic nuclei.
Neutron Star
the extremely dense core of a star after it has exploded as a supernova. A neutron star has a mass of 1.4 solar masses to as much as three times the mass of the Sun, but may be only a few kilometers across.
Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation
two objects with masses m1 and m2 that have a distance r between their centers attract each other with a force equal to `(G*m1*m2)/r^2`. The Universal Gravitational Constant, G, is equal to 6.672 × 10-11 Nm2/kg2 in SI units.
Nuclear Fusion
the process by which lighter elements like hydrogen and helium fuse together to make heavier elements like lithium, carbon, oxygen, etc.
Nuclear Radiation
the particles emitted by the decay of unstable nuclei. This type of radiation typically consists of neutrons, electrons/positrons (historically called beta rays) and/or alpha particles (now known to be helium nuclei with mass 4). High energy photons (gamma rays) are also frequently produced – these are particles of very energetic light.
Nucleosynthesis
the name given to the process that created atomic nuclei containing more than just a single proton.
Nucleus (pl. nuclei)
the core of an atom, generally made up of protons and neutrons.
Numerical Operations
mathematical operations like adding, subtracting, multiplying or dividing numbers.