- Sokol (gymnastic society)
Sokol, (Czech: “Hawk,” or “Falcon”), gymnastic society, originating in Prague in 1862 to develop strength, litheness, alertness, and courage. Originally patterned after the German turnverein, the Sokol traditionally emphasized mass calisthenics as a means of promoting communal spirit and physical
- Sokollu Mehmed Paşa (Ottoman vizier)
Sokollu Mehmed Paşa was an Ottoman grand vizier (chief minister) from June 1565, under the sultans Süleyman the Magnificent and Selim II, and perhaps the real ruler of the empire until the death of Selim in 1574. During his tenure, a war was fought with Venice (1570–73), in which the Ottoman navy
- Sokolnikov, G. Y. (Russian revolutionary)
Great Purge: Pyatakov, G.Y. Sokolnikov, L.P. Serebryakov, and Karl Radek, all prominent figures in the Soviet regime. They and their 17 codefendants were accused of forming an “anti-Soviet Trotskyite centre,” which had allegedly collaborated with Trotsky to conduct sabotage, wrecking, and terrorist activities that would ruin the Soviet…
- Sokolovsky, Vasily (Soviet marshal)
20th-century international relations: Renewed U.S.–Soviet cooperation: Marshal Sokolovsky’s volumes on military strategy in the 1960s, while granting that nuclear war would be an unprecedented disaster for all, still committed the U.S.S.R. to a war-winning capability.
- Sokolow, Anna (American choreographer and dancer)
Anna Sokolow was an American dancer, choreographer, and teacher noted for her socially and politically conscious works and her unique blend of dance and theatre choreography. She is also recognized for her instrumental role in the development of modern dance in Israel and Mexico. The daughter of
- Sokolow, Nahum (British writer)
Nahum Sokolow was a Jewish journalist and Zionist leader. The descendant of an ancient Polish rabbinical family, Sokolow became well known for his contributions to the Jewish press in Hebrew and other languages. At 24 he became assistant editor of the Hebrew scientific weekly ha-Zefirah in Warsaw;
- Sokolsky, Joseph (Bulgarian bishop)
Bulgarian Catholic Church: Joseph Sokolsky was consecrated the first Bulgarian Catholic prelate in 1859; and, although he was soon afterward abducted by the Russians and interned for 18 years, the Bulgarian Catholic Church grew to number 80,000 faithful. By 1872, however, 60,000 of these returned to Orthodoxy, and…
- Sokora (people)
Niger: Settlement patterns: …the Niger the Buduma and Sorko peoples are fishermen. Sedentary peoples live in dwellings that vary from those made of straw to those made of banco (hardened mud), although the Wogo people live in tents of delicate matting.
- Sokoto (state, Nigeria)
Sokoto, state, northwestern Nigeria. Bordering the Republic of Niger to the north, it also shares boundaries with Kebbi state to the west and south, and Zamfara to the south and east. Sokoto state occupies an area of short-grass savanna vegetation in the south and thorn scrub in the north. A
- Sokoto (Nigeria)
Sokoto, capital and largest town of Sokoto state, northwestern Nigeria. It lies along the Sokoto (Kebbi) River just east of the latter’s junction with the Rima River. The town, some 50 miles (80 km) south of the Niger border, lies on a traditional caravan route that leads northward across the
- Sokoto River (river, Nigeria)
Sokoto River, river in northwestern Nigeria, rising just south of Funtua on the northern plateau. It flows northwestward in a wide arc for 200 miles (320 km) to Sokoto town, west of which the Rima River joins it in its lower course to its confluence with the Niger River east of Illo. The alluvial
- Sokotra (island, Yemen)
Socotra, island in the Indian Ocean about 210 miles (340 km) southeast of Yemen, to which it belongs. The largest of several islands extending eastward from the Horn of Africa, it has an area of about 1,400 square miles (3,600 square km). The Hajīr (Hajhir) Mountains occupy Socotra’s interior,
- Sokrates (Byzantine historian)
Socrates was a Byzantine church historian whose annotated chronicle, Historia ecclesiastica (“Ecclesiastical History”), is an indispensable documentary source for Christian history from 305 to 439. Through excerpts from the 6th-century Latin translation ascribed to Cassiodorus and Epiphanius, it
- Sokurov, Aleksandr (Russian director)
history of film: Eastern Europe and Russia: …significant figure to emerge was Aleksandr Sokurov, whose early films had been “shelved,” or prohibited from public screening, until 1987. Sokurov’s first film to be widely seen internationally was Mat’ i syn (1997; Mother and Son). In 2002 he made Russki kovcheg (Russian Ark), a 96-minute tour of the Hermitage…
- sokutai (Japanese dress)
sokutai, Japanese emperor’s court dress, worn for coronations and other important ceremonies. The costume, which has many Chinese characteristics, has changed little since the 12th century. It consists of baggy white damask trousers (ue-no-hakama) and a voluminous yellow outer robe (hō) cut in the
- söl (red algae)
dulse, (Palmaria palmata), edible red alga (Rhodophyta) found along the rocky northern coasts of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Dulse can be eaten fresh or dried. In traditional dishes, it is boiled with milk and rye flour or made into a relish and is commonly served with fish and butter. The
- Sol (Roman god)
Sol, in Roman religion, name of two distinct sun gods at Rome. The original Sol, or Sol Indiges, had a shrine on the Quirinal, an annual sacrifice on August 9, and another shrine, together with Luna, the moon goddess, in the Circus Maximus. Although the cult appears to have been native, the Roman
- sol (colloid)
sol, in physical chemistry, a colloid (aggregate of very fine particles dispersed in a continuous medium) in which the particles are solid and the dispersion medium is fluid. If the dispersion medium is water, the colloid may be called a hydrosol; and if air, an aerosol. Lyophobic (Greek:
- sol (astronomy)
day: The apparent solar day is the time between two successive transits of the Sun over the same meridian. Because the orbital motion of the Earth makes the Sun seem to move slightly eastward each day relative to the stars, the solar day is about four minutes longer…
- Sŏl Ch’ong (Korean writer)
Korean literature: The Three Kingdoms period and unification: 57 bce–935 ce: Of this group, Sŏl Ch’ong was the author of “Hwawanggye” (“Admonition to the King of Flowers”), in which he personifies flowers in order to satirize the king. Another member of the group, Ch’oe Ch’i-Wŏn, who had studied in Tang China and passed the civil service examination there, contributed…
- Sol Indiges (Roman god)
Roman religion: The Sun and stars: …a sacred grove at Lavinium, Sol Indiges was regarded as one of the divine ancestors of Rome. During the last centuries before the Christian era, worship of the Sun spread throughout the Mediterranean world and formed the principal rallying point of paganism’s last years. Closely associated with the sun cult…
- Sol Invictus (Roman god)
church year: Formation of the church year: …age brought by the “Unconquered Sun.” Later the Western churches created a preparatory season for the Christmas festival, known as Advent. Many new days were gradually added to the roster of martyr anniversaries to commemorate distinguished leaders, the dedication of buildings and shrines in honour of the saints, and…
- Sól ziemi (work by Wittlin)
Józef Wittlin: …literature is Sól ziemi (1936; Salt of the Earth). The book is a tale of a “patient infantryman,” an illiterate Polish peasant who is unwillingly drafted into the Austrian army to fight a war he does not understand. The novel treats not war itself but the bewilderment of a man…
- Sol, Isla del (island, South America)
Isla del Sol, island in the Bolivian (eastern) sector of Lake Titicaca, just northwest of the Copacabana peninsula. The island, whose name is Spanish for “Island of the Sun,” was an important centre of pre-Columbian settlement in the eastern part of the Andes mountain ranges. It has an area of 5.5
- sol-fa (music)
solmization: …the most prominent being tonic sol-fa, developed about 1850 in England by John Curwen. Tonic sol-fa emphasizes the relation of the notes to one another and to the tonic, or key note (do in major scales, la in minor scales). If the key changes, do (or la) shifts to a…
- sol-gel microsphere pelletization (technology)
nuclear ceramics: Nuclear fuel: …in an advanced process called sol-gel microsphere pelletization. The sol-gel route (described in the article advanced ceramics) achieves homogeneous distribution of uranium and plutonium in solid solution, enables sintering to occur at lower temperature, and ameliorates the toxic dust problem associated with the powder-pellet method.
- sol-gel processing (materials processing)
advanced ceramics: The sol-gel route: …for producing ceramic powders is sol-gel processing. Stable dispersions, or sols, of small particles (less than 0.1 micrometre) are formed from precursor chemicals such as metal alkoxides or other metalorganics. By partial evaporation of the liquid or addition of a suitable initiator, a polymer-like, three-dimensional bonding takes place within the…
- sol-gel route (materials processing)
advanced ceramics: The sol-gel route: …for producing ceramic powders is sol-gel processing. Stable dispersions, or sols, of small particles (less than 0.1 micrometre) are formed from precursor chemicals such as metal alkoxides or other metalorganics. By partial evaporation of the liquid or addition of a suitable initiator, a polymer-like, three-dimensional bonding takes place within the…
- sol-gel synthesis (materials processing)
advanced ceramics: The sol-gel route: …for producing ceramic powders is sol-gel processing. Stable dispersions, or sols, of small particles (less than 0.1 micrometre) are formed from precursor chemicals such as metal alkoxides or other metalorganics. By partial evaporation of the liquid or addition of a suitable initiator, a polymer-like, three-dimensional bonding takes place within the…
- Sola, ma chérie (work by Philombe)
René Philombe: His other published works include Sola, ma chérie (1966; “Sola, My Darling”), a novel about seemingly unjust marriage customs; Un Sorcier blanc à Zangali (1970; “A White Sorcerer in Zangali”), a novel about the effect of a missionary’s clash with the colonial administration in a small village; Choc anti-choc (1978),…
- Solace (film by Poyart [2015])
Anthony Hopkins: Later movie and television roles: …starred in the crime drama Solace, playing a doctor who is assisting in the hunt for a serial killer. After playing a string of villainous characters, Hopkins appeared in Transformers: The Last Knight in 2017. Hopkins later portrayed the eponymous hero in a televised adaptation (2018) of William Shakespeare’s King…
- Solace of Pilgrims (work by Capgrave)
John Capgrave: …which are described in his Solace of Pilgrims (ed. C.A. Mills, 1911).
- solan goose (bird)
gannet: …species is the 100-cm (40-inch) northern gannet, Morus bassanus (or Sula bassana), sometimes called solan goose; it breeds on islands in Canada, Greenland, Iceland, and northeastern Europe, wintering to the Gulf of Mexico, Morocco, and the Mediterranean. The two slightly smaller southern species are the Cape gannet (M. capensis), which…
- Solana Madariaga, Francisco Javier (Spanish politician)
Javier Solana is a Spanish politician who served as the ninth secretary-general (1995–99) of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). He subsequently became a high-level official of the European Union (EU). As a student in the early 1960s, Solana joined the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party
- Solana, Javier (Spanish politician)
Javier Solana is a Spanish politician who served as the ninth secretary-general (1995–99) of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). He subsequently became a high-level official of the European Union (EU). As a student in the early 1960s, Solana joined the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party
- Solanaceae (plant family)
Solanaceae, the nightshade, or potato, family of flowering plants (order Solanales), with 102 genera and about 2,280 species, many of considerable economic importance as food and drug plants. Members of the Solanaceae family are found throughout the world but are most abundant and widely
- Solanales (plant order)
Solanales, potato order of flowering plants, including five families with 165 genera and more than 4,080 species. Two of the families are large and contain some of the most highly cultivated plants: Solanaceae (nightshades) and Convolvulaceae (morning glories). Solanales belongs to the core asterid
- Solanas, Valerie (American writer)
Lena Dunham: …seventh season (Cult); she portrayed Valerie Solanas, who shot Andy Warhol in 1968. Dunham later appeared in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood (2019).
- Solange (American singer, songwriter and actress)
Solange is an American multidisciplinary artist, perhaps best known as a singer, songwriter, choreographer, and actress but also widely celebrated as a visual and performance artist. She began her career at age 14 as a backup dancer for Destiny’s Child, which her elder sister, Beyoncé, helped found
- solanine (chemical compound)
tomato: History: …poisonous and contain the neurotoxin solanine.
- Solanki dynasty (Indian history)
Gujarat: History of Gujarat: …followed shortly afterward by the Solanki dynasty. The boundaries of Gujarat reached their farthest limits during the reign of the Solankis, when remarkable progress was made in the economic and cultural fields. Siddharaja Jayasimha and Kumarapala are the best-known Solanki kings. Karnadeva Vaghela, of the subsequent Vaghela dynasty, was defeated…
- solano (wind)
Spain: Climate of Spain: …from the same sector, the solano, carries unbearably hot, dry, suffocating weather over the Andalusian plain. Northern Spain, from Galicia to northern Catalonia (Catalunya, or Cataluña), is characterized by a temperate humid or maritime type of climate, having high rainfall and an average temperature in January of 43 °F (6…
- Solanum (plant genus)
nightshade, (genus Solanum), genus of about 2,300 species of flowering plants in the nightshade family (Solanaceae). The term nightshade is often associated with poisonous species, though the genus also contains a number of economically important food crops, including tomato (Solanum lycopersicum),
- Solanum baretiae (plant)
Jeanne Baret: Later years: …2012 a species of vine, Solanum baretiae, was named for her. Six years later the International Astronomical Union named a chain of mountains on Pluto the Baret Montes to commemorate Baret.
- Solanum dulcamara (plant)
bittersweet: ) or woody nightshade (Solanum dulcamara), belongs to the family Solanaceae. It is an herbaceous vine, up to 4.5 m long; the violet and yellow star-shaped flowers are followed by shiny green berries that gradually turn bright red.
- Solanum esculentum (fruit)
tomato, (Solanum lycopersicum), flowering plant of the nightshade family (Solanaceae), cultivated extensively for its edible fruits. Labelled as a vegetable for nutritional purposes, tomatoes are a good source of vitamin C and the phytochemical lycopene. The fruits are commonly eaten raw in salads,
- Solanum lycopersicum (fruit)
tomato, (Solanum lycopersicum), flowering plant of the nightshade family (Solanaceae), cultivated extensively for its edible fruits. Labelled as a vegetable for nutritional purposes, tomatoes are a good source of vitamin C and the phytochemical lycopene. The fruits are commonly eaten raw in salads,
- Solanum maritimum (plant)
Central Valley: …with altitude: near sea level Solanum maritimum, a relative of the potato, is common; up to 2,500 feet (760 metres) characteristic plants include a treelike lily (Crinodendron patagua), Bellota miersii, and low trees such as Acacia. The original dry forest, however, has gradually succumbed to urban and agricultural encroachment.
- Solanum melongena (plant)
eggplant, (Solanum melongena), tender perennial plant of the nightshade family (Solanaceae), grown for its edible fruits. Eggplant requires a warm climate and has been cultivated in its native Southeast Asia since remote antiquity. A staple in cuisines of the Mediterranean region, eggplant figures
- Solanum nigrum (plant)
nightshade: The black nightshade (S. nigrum) is also generally considered poisonous, but its fully ripened fruit and foliage are cooked and eaten in some areas.
- Solanum rostratum (plant)
buffalo bur, (Solanum rostratum), plant of the nightshade family (Solanaceae), native to high plains east of the Rocky Mountains from North Dakota to Mexico. Buffalo bur, named for its prickly berries that were commonly entangled in the fur of American bison (Bison bison), is an aggressive weed in
- Solanum tuberosum (plant)
potato, (Solanum tuberosum), annual plant in the nightshade family (Solanaceae), grown for its starchy edible tubers. The potato is native to the Peruvian-Bolivian Andes and is one of the world’s main food crops. Potatoes are frequently served whole or mashed as a cooked vegetable and are also
- Solapur (India)
Solapur, city, southern Maharashtra state, western India. It is situated in an upland region on the Sina River. In early centuries the city belonged to the Hindu Chalukyas and Devagiri Yadavas but later became part of the Muslim Bahmani and Bijapur kingdoms. Located on major road and rail routes
- solar (architecture)
solar, in architecture, private room located on the floor above the great hall in a late medieval English manor house. The solar served as a kind of parlour to which the family of the owner of the manor house or castle could retire from the bustling communal living of the hall below. In fact, by
- solar activity
Sun: Solar activity: A wonderful rhythm in the ebb and flow of sunspot activity dominates the atmosphere of the Sun. Sunspots, the largest of which can be seen even without a telescope, are regions of extremely strong magnetic field found on the Sun’s surface. A…
- Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (satellite)
Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), satellite managed jointly by the European Space Agency (ESA) and the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) that is equipped with a battery of novel instruments to study the Sun. SOHO was launched by NASA on an Atlas rocket on Dec. 2,
- solar apex (astronomy)
Milky Way Galaxy: Solar motion calculations from space motions: …reference frame is called the apex of solar motion. In addition, the calculation of the solar motion provides dispersion in velocity. Such dispersions are as intrinsically interesting as the solar motions themselves because a dispersion is an indication of the integrity of the selection of stars used as a reference…
- solar array (technology)
International Space Station: …four units that held large solar-power arrays and thermal radiators. Aside from the United States and Russia, station construction involved Canada, Japan, and 11 ESA members. Russian modules were carried into space by Russian expendable launch vehicles, after which they automatically rendezvoused with and docked to the ISS. Other elements…
- Solar Barque (novel by Nin)
Anaïs Nin: …House of Love (1954), and Solar Barque (1958).
- solar calendar (chronology)
solar calendar, any dating system based on the seasonal year of approximately 365 14 days, the time it takes the Earth to revolve once around the Sun. The Egyptians appear to have been the first to develop a solar calendar, using as a fixed point the annual sunrise reappearance of the Dog
- solar cell (electronics)
solar cell, any device that directly converts the energy of light into electrical energy through the photovoltaic effect. The overwhelming majority of solar cells are fabricated from silicon—with increasing efficiency and lowering cost as the materials range from amorphous (noncrystalline) to
- solar cell panel (electronics)
solar cell, any device that directly converts the energy of light into electrical energy through the photovoltaic effect. The overwhelming majority of solar cells are fabricated from silicon—with increasing efficiency and lowering cost as the materials range from amorphous (noncrystalline) to
- Solar Challenger (American aircraft)
Paul Beattie MacCready: On July 7, 1981, the Solar Challenger, a solar-powered plane designed by MacCready, flew from the Pointoise Cormeilles airport, near Paris, to the Manston Royal Air Force Base, in Kent, Eng., a distance of 160 miles (258 km), in 5 hr 23 min at an average speed of about 30…
- solar compass
solar compass, type of navigational instrument that uses the position of the Sun to establish bearing. The solar compass operates somewhat like a sundial. It indicates direction by employing the angle of the shadow cast by the Sun in conjunction with a compass card, a flat disk marked with points
- solar constant
solar constant, the total radiation energy received from the Sun per unit of time per unit of area on a theoretical surface perpendicular to the Sun’s rays and at Earth’s mean distance from the Sun. It is most accurately measured from satellites where atmospheric effects are absent. The value of
- solar cooker
solar oven, a device that harnesses sunlight as a source of heat for cooking foodstuffs. The solar oven is a simple, portable, economical, and efficient tool. Especially in the developing world, solar ovens are much to be preferred over other methods of cooking. Of the many advantages of solar
- solar corona (Sun)
corona, outermost region of the Sun’s atmosphere, consisting of plasma (hot ionized gas). It has a temperature of approximately two million kelvins and an extremely low density. The corona continually varies in size and shape as it is affected by the Sun’s magnetic field. The solar wind, which
- solar cycle (astronomy)
solar cycle, period of about 11 years in which fluctuations in the number and size of sunspots and solar prominences are repeated. Sunspot groups have a magnetic field with a north and a south pole, and, in each 11-year rise and fall, the same polarity leads in a given hemisphere while the opposite
- solar cycle 23 (astronomy)
solar cycle: …number of sunspots seen in solar cycle 23. This decrease in the number of sunspots has led some solar physicists to conclude that the Sun may be in a period of inactivity like the Dalton minimum.
- solar cycle 24 (astronomy)
solar cycle: …be weak, like that of solar cycle 24, which had only half the number of sunspots seen in solar cycle 23. This decrease in the number of sunspots has led some solar physicists to conclude that the Sun may be in a period of inactivity like the Dalton minimum.
- solar cycle 25 (astronomy)
solar cycle: Solar cycle 25 began in 2019 and will reach maximum in 2025, but that maximum is predicted to be weak, like that of solar cycle 24, which had only half the number of sunspots seen in solar cycle 23. This decrease in the number of…
- solar day (astronomy)
day: The apparent solar day is the time between two successive transits of the Sun over the same meridian. Because the orbital motion of the Earth makes the Sun seem to move slightly eastward each day relative to the stars, the solar day is about four minutes longer…
- solar day rhythm (biology)
circadian rhythm, the cyclical 24-hour period of human biological activity. Within the circadian (24-hour) cycle, a person usually sleeps approximately 8 hours and is awake 16. During the wakeful hours, mental and physical functions are most active and tissue cell growth increases. During sleep,
- solar deity (religion)
sun worship, veneration of the sun or a representation of the sun as a deity, as in Atonism in Egypt in the 14th century bce. Although sun worship has been used frequently as a term for “pagan” religion, it is, in fact, relatively rare. Though almost every culture uses solar motifs, only a
- Solar Delta (work by Otero)
Latin American art: Trends, c. 1950–c. 1970: …in his monumental stainless steel Solar Delta (1977) on the Mall in Washington, D.C. More abstract sculptures were constructed by a number of Colombians in the early 1960s; Eduardo Ramírez Villamizar and Edgar Negret made metal sculptures out of coloured planes, often bearing titles that suggest mental and spiritual processes,…
- solar distiller (thermoelectric device)
Mária Telkes: …her most important inventions: a solar distiller capable of vaporizing seawater and recondensing it into drinkable water. Although the system was carried aboard life rafts during the war, it was also scaled up to supplement the water demands of the Virgin Islands. She remained at MIT after the war, becoming…
- Solar Dynamics Observatory (United States satellite)
Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), U.S. satellite designed to study the Sun. It was launched on February 11, 2010, from Cape Canaveral, Florida, by an Atlas V rocket into a geosynchronous orbit. SDO is the first satellite in the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s Living with a Star
- solar eclipse (astronomy)
solar eclipse, the Moon coming between Earth and the Sun so that the Moon’s shadow sweeps over Earth’s surface. This shadow consists of two parts: the umbra, a cone into which no direct sunlight penetrates; and the penumbra, which is reached by light from only a part of the Sun’s disk. See also
- solar economy (economics)
solar cell: …to envision a future “solar economy” in which practically all of humanity’s energy requirements are satisfied by cheap, clean, renewable sunlight.
- solar elevation angle (meteorology)
climate: Distribution of radiant energy from the Sun: …they receive depends on their solar elevation angle. (The maximum solar elevation is 90° for the overhead Sun.) This angle changes systematically with latitude, the time of year, and the time of day. The noontime elevation angle reaches a maximum at all latitudes north of the Tropic of Cancer (23.5°…
- solar energy (physics)
solar energy, radiation from the Sun capable of producing heat, causing chemical reactions, or generating electricity. The total amount of solar energy incident on Earth is vastly in excess of the world’s current and anticipated energy requirements. If suitably harnessed, this highly diffused
- solar flare (astronomy)
solar flare, sudden intense brightening in the solar corona, usually in the vicinity of a magnetic inversion near a sunspot group. The flare develops in a few minutes, or even seconds, and may last several hours. High-energy particles, electron streams, hard X-rays, and radio bursts are often
- solar heating (technology)
solar heating, the use of sunlight to heat water or air in buildings. There are two types of solar heating, passive and active. Passive heating relies on architectural design to heat buildings. The building’s site, structure, and materials can all be utilized to maximize the heating (and lighting)
- solar humidification (chemical process)
desalination: Desalination processes: …a simple thermal process called solar humidification can be used. The heat of the Sun partially vaporizes salt water under a transparent cover. On the underside of the cover, the vapour condenses and flows into a collecting trough. The principal difficulty in this process is that large land areas are…
- Solar Impulse (aircraft)
Bertrand Piccard: The first of those planes, Solar Impulse, was completed in 2009, and a major step occurred when the plane, piloted by Borschberg, completed a 26-hour flight over Switzerland on July 7–8, 2010, becoming the first solar-powered aircraft to fly through the night. Other pioneering milestones included an international flight from…
- Solar Impulse (aviation project)
Bertrand Piccard: …pilot André Borschberg, Piccard launched Solar Impulse, a project that had the ultimate goal of developing and launching a solar-powered airplane capable of circumnavigating the globe. The first of those planes, Solar Impulse, was completed in 2009, and a major step occurred when the plane, piloted by Borschberg, completed a…
- Solar Lottery (novel by Dick)
Philip K. Dick: He published his first novel, Solar Lottery, in 1955. Early in Dick’s work the theme emerged that would remain his central preoccupation—that of a reality at variance with what it appeared or was intended to be. In such novels as Time out of Joint (1959), The Man in the High…
- solar magnetic field (astronomy)
heliosphere: … that is filled with the solar magnetic field and the protons and electrons of the solar wind.
- solar magnetograph (instrument)
Harold Delos Babcock: …Welcome Babcock, invented (1951) the solar magnetograph, an instrument allowing detailed observation of the Sun’s magnetic field. With their magnetograph, the Babcocks demonstrated the existence of the Sun’s general field and discovered magnetically variable stars. In 1959, Harold Babcock announced that the Sun reverses its magnetic polarity periodically. He was…
- solar maximum (astronomy)
space weather: Space weather phenomena: …several-year period known as the solar maximum. Between solar maxima there is a several-year period, called the solar minimum, when the Sun’s activity can be extremely low. The solar minimum that began in approximately 2007 and reached its lowest point in December 2008 was the deepest minimum in at least…
- Solar Maximum Mission (United States space laboratory)
telescope: Reflecting telescopes: …the Earth-orbiting space observatory, the Solar Maximum Mission (SMM), launched in 1980.
- solar minimum (astronomy)
Little Ice Age: Variability in solar output: Both solar minimums coincided with the coldest years of the Little Ice Age in parts of Europe. Some scientists therefore argue that reduced amounts of available solar radiation caused the Little Ice Age. However, the absence of sunspots has not explained the brief cooling episodes that…
- solar motion (astronomy)
Milky Way Galaxy: Solar motion: Solar motion is defined as the calculated motion of the Sun with respect to a specified reference frame. In practice, calculations of solar motion provide information not only on the Sun’s motion with respect to its neighbours in the Galaxy but also on…
- solar nebula (astronomy)
solar nebula, gaseous cloud from which, in the so-called nebular hypothesis of the origin of the solar system, the Sun and planets formed by condensation. Swedish philosopher Emanuel Swedenborg in 1734 proposed that the planets formed out of a nebular crust that had surrounded the Sun and then
- solar neutrino problem (cosmology)
solar neutrino problem, long-standing astrophysics problem in which the amount of observed neutrinos originating from the Sun was much less than expected. In the Sun, the process of energy generation results from the enormous pressure and density at its centre, which makes it possible for nuclei to
- solar oven
solar oven, a device that harnesses sunlight as a source of heat for cooking foodstuffs. The solar oven is a simple, portable, economical, and efficient tool. Especially in the developing world, solar ovens are much to be preferred over other methods of cooking. Of the many advantages of solar
- solar panel (technology)
solar panel, a component of a photovoltaic system that is made out of a series of photovoltaic cells arranged to generate electricity using sunlight. The main component of a solar panel is a solar cell, which converts the Sun’s energy to usable electrical energy. The most common form of solar
- solar panel payback (solar power)
thin-film solar cell: Types of thin-film solar cells: smallest carbon footprint and quickest payback time of any thin-film solar cell technology on the market (payback time being the time it takes for the solar panel’s electricity generation to cover the cost of purchase and installation).
- solar parallax (astronomy)
parallax: Solar parallax: The basic method used for determining solar parallax is the determination of trigonometric parallax. In accordance with the law of gravitation, the relative distances of the planets from the Sun are known, and the distance of the Sun from Earth can be taken…
- solar pond
solar pond, any large human-made body of salt water that collects and stores solar energy, thereby providing a sustainable source of heat and power. Although research on the practical applications of solar ponds did not begin until the late 1940s, a natural lake particularly well-suited for use as