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Harvard classification
/ ˈhɑːvəd /
noun
- a classification of stars based on the characteristic spectral absorption lines and bands of the chemical elements present See spectral type
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Word History and Origins
Origin of Harvard classification1
C20: named after the observatory at Harvard, Massachusetts, where it was prepared and published as part of The Henry Draper Catalogue (1924)
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Example Sentences
Cannon created the Harvard Classification System for classifying stars, which is the basis of the system still in use today.
From BBC
In large part the weight of evidence would appear to favor the order of the Harvard classification, independently confirmed as it is by studies of stellar velocities, Galactic distribution, and periods of binary stars both spectroscopic and visual, where Campbell and Aiken find a marked increase in length of period with advance in spectral type.
From Project Gutenberg
Such a scale is indeed implicit in the Harvard classification of the spectra.
From Project Gutenberg
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