Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Eddington_luminosity> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 87 of
87
with 100 triples per page.
- Eddington_luminosity abstract "The Eddington luminosity, also referred to as the Eddington limit, is the maximum luminosity a body (such as a star) can achieve when there is balance between the force of radiation acting outward and the gravitational force acting inward. The state of balance is called hydrostatic equilibrium. When a star exceeds the Eddington luminosity, it will initiate a very intense radiation-driven stellar wind from its outer layers. Since most massive stars have luminosities far below the Eddington luminosity, their winds are mostly driven by the less intense line absorption. The Eddington limit is invoked to explain the observed luminosity of accreting black holes such as quasars.Originally, Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington took only the electron scattering into account when calculating this limit, something that now is called the classical Eddington limit. Nowadays, the modified Eddington limit also counts on other radiation processes such as bound-free and free-free radiation (see Bremsstrahlung) interaction.".
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageExternalLink SurpassingEddington.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageID "208810".
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageLength "11114".
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageOutDegree "41".
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageRevisionID "706698421".
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Abundances_of_the_elements_(data_page).
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Accretion_disk.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Active_galactic_nucleus.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Alpha_particle.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Eddington.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Black_hole.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Bremsstrahlung.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Cataclysmic_variable_star.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Category:Astrophysics.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Convection_zone.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Divergence_theorem.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Electron.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Eta_Carinae.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Euler_equations_(fluid_dynamics).
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Event_horizon.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Gamma-ray_burst.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Gravitational_potential.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Hayashi_track.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Helium.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Hydrogen.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Hydrostatic_equilibrium.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink List_of_most_massive_stars.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Neutron_star.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Nova.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Opacity_(optics).
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Photon_bubble.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Plasma_(physics).
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Poissons_equation.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Quasar.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Stellar_wind.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Sun.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Supernova.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Thomson_scattering.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink Ultraluminous_X-ray_source.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink White_dwarf.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLink X-ray_binary.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLinkText "Eddington instability".
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLinkText "Eddington limit".
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageWikiLinkText "Eddington luminosity".
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refbegin.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refend.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Eddington_luminosity wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Star.
- Eddington_luminosity subject Category:Astrophysics.
- Eddington_luminosity hypernym Luminosity.
- Eddington_luminosity type Astrophysic.
- Eddington_luminosity type Redirect.
- Eddington_luminosity type Sub-discipline.
- Eddington_luminosity comment "The Eddington luminosity, also referred to as the Eddington limit, is the maximum luminosity a body (such as a star) can achieve when there is balance between the force of radiation acting outward and the gravitational force acting inward. The state of balance is called hydrostatic equilibrium. When a star exceeds the Eddington luminosity, it will initiate a very intense radiation-driven stellar wind from its outer layers.".
- Eddington_luminosity label "Eddington luminosity".
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Q853005.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Eddington-limiet.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs حد_إدنجتون.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Lxc3xadmit_dEddington.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Eddington-Grenze.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Límite_de_Eddington.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs حد_ادینگتون.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Eddingtonin_raja.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Limite_dEddington.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs בהירות_אדינגטון.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Limite_di_Eddington.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs エディントン光度.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs 에딩턴_한계.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Eddington-Grenz.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Eddingtonlichtkracht.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Eddington-luminositet.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Jasność_Eddingtona.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Limite_de_Eddington.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs m.01dnq2.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Предел_Эддингтона.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Eddington_limit.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Eddingtonova_rovnica.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Eddingtonova_meja.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Eddington-luminositet.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Eddington_aydınlatma_gücü.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Межа_Едінгтона.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs Q853005.
- Eddington_luminosity sameAs 爱丁顿光度.
- Eddington_luminosity wasDerivedFrom Eddington_luminosity?oldid=706698421.
- Eddington_luminosity isPrimaryTopicOf Eddington_luminosity.