peryton
English
Etymology
Coined by the translator Norman Thomas di Giovanni translating Jorge Luis Borges' Book of Imaginary Beings, from Borges' invented (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Spanish peritio (peryton). Astrophysical use began with a paper by S. Burke-Spolaor et al. (see quotations).
Noun
peryton (plural perytons)
- A fictional winged stag.
- 2007 August 5, Ligaya Mishan, “Lost Pets”, in New York Times[1]:
- The peryton also makes an appearance, in a nod to its inventor, Borges — who compiled his own bestiary, “The Book of Imaginary Beings,” itself supposedly based on a long-lost medieval text.
- (astronomy) A radio signal which appears to come from outside the galaxy but is actually produced by terrestrial sources.
- 2011 January 20, S. Burke-Spolaor et al., “Radio Bursts with Extragalactic Spectral Characteristics Show Terrestrial Origins”, in The Astrophysical Journal[2], volume 727, number 1:
- Despite a trend mimicking that expected from dispersion, such deviations decisively distinguish the pulses’ frequency-dependence from a delay induced by interstellar propagation. Hereafter we distinguish these detections with the name “Perytons,” representing the non-dispersive, highly swept, terrestrial signals exhibited by the pulses. (The name is chosen from mythology to be unassociated with an exact physical phenomenon, due to the ambiguous origin of the detections; Perytons are winged elk that cast the shadow of a man.)
- 2013 July 5, D. Thornton et al., “A Population of Fast Radio Bursts at Cosmological Distances”, in Science[3], volume 341, number 6141, pages 53-56:
- Three of these FRBs are factors of >3 narrower than any documented peryton.
- 2014 June 10, E. Petrov et al., “An Absence of Fast Radio Bursts at Intermediate Galactic Latitudes”, in Astrophysics Journal Letters[4], volume 789, number 2:
- In this model, the Lorimer burst, which was detected in three adjacent beams of the multibeam receiver, occupies a place between traditional FRB events and traditional peryton events and is believed to have occurred at some distance from the detector close to the Fresnel scale for Parkes, 20 km.