additive color rang-e bardâyeši Fr.: synthèse additive Color created by mixing light rays of different colors. Combining all the color rays of light results in white light. See also → subtractive color. |
color rang (#) Fr.: couleur 1) A visual sensation produced in the brain when the eye views various wavelengths or
frequencies of light. From M.E. colour, from O.Fr. colur, from L. color "color, hue," from Old L. colos "a covering," from PIE *kel-os- "that which covers," from *kel- "to cover, conceal." Rang, from Mid.Pers. rang "color" (abrang "splendor"), related to Mod.Pers. razidan "to color," raxš "a mixture of red and white," also the name of Rostam's horse (loan from Sogd.?), awrang "glory, beauty, throne;" Kurd. raš "black;" cf. Skt. raj- "to color, to become red;" Gk. rezein "to color;" PIE base *(s)reg- "to color, paint" (Cheung 2007). |
color charge bâr-e rang Fr.: charge de couleur In the → standard model of particle physics, a property possessed by → quarks and → gluons that determine rules for how these particles may interact in the context of → quantum chromodynamics. Color charge is analogous to electromagnetic charge, but it comes in three types rather than two, which results in a different type of force, the → strong interaction. There are three pairs of colors and anti-colors, named red (anti-red), green (anti-green), and blue (anti-blue). The terminology has nothing to do with visible color. It is only a word that is used to designate three independent types of the strong charge characteristic. |
color excess fozuni-ye rang, Fr.: excès de couleur The difference between the observed → color index of a star and the intrinsic color index corresponding to its → spectral type. It indicates the modification brought to a color index by the → interstellar absorption. → color; excess, M.E., from O.Fr., from L. excessus "departure, going beyond," p.p. excedere "to depart, go beyond," from → ex- "out" + cedere "to go, yield." Fozuni, from afzuni "excess," afzuni kardan "to exceed bounds," → add; → color. |
color index dišan-e rang Fr.: indice de couleur The difference between the → apparent magnitude of a star measured at one standard wavelength and the apparent magnitude at another longer, standard wavelength, allowing the quantitative measure of a star's color. |
color temperature damâ-ye rang Fr.: température de couleur The temperature of that black-body which has the same spectral energy distribution in a limited spectral region, as the object under study has. → color; → temperature. |
color transformation tarâdis-e rang Fr.: transformation de couleur Empirical mathematical transformation applied to the observed magnitudes in order to convert them into a standard system, or into a different system. → color; → transformation. |
color-color diagram nemudâr-e rang-rang (#) Fr.: diagramme couleur-couleur A diagram based on two photometric colors usually representing the same class of astronomical objects. → color; → diagram. |
color-color plot nemudâr-e rang-rang (#) Fr.: diagramme couleur-couleur
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color-luminosity diagram nemudâr-e rang-tâbandegi Fr.: diagramme couleur-luminosité A form of → Hertzsprung-Russell diagram in which the luminosity is the vertical axis and the → color index the horizontal axis. → color; → luminosity, → diagram. |
color-magnitude diagram nemudâr-e rang-borz Fr.: diagramme couleur-magnitude A form of → Hertzsprung-Russell diagram in which the visual absolute magnitude Mv is the vertical axis and the → color index the horizontal axis. |
colorimetry rangsanji (#) Fr.: colorimétrie The measurement and definition of unknown colors in terms of standard colors. |
false color rang-e zif Fr.: fausse couleur In imaging technique, assigning color to black and white images to differentiate features or convey information. → true color. |
five-color system râžmân-e panj-rangé Fr.: système à cinq couleurs A photometric system which uses five filters, from ultraviolet to the red part of the visual spectrum: U, B, V, R and I. |
intrinsic color rang-e darungin Fr.: couleur intrinsèque A → color not affected by → extinction. |
Newton's color wheel carx-e rang-e Newton Fr.: disque de Newton The arrangement of the seven colors of the rainbow on a disk. When the disk rotates very fast, the eye cannot distinguish between individual colors and the disk is perceived as white. This apparatus demonstrates the discovery made by Newton (Opticks, 1704) that light is composed of seven colors. |
subtractive color rang-e zirkaršeši Fr.: synthèse soustractive Color produced by mixing pigments rather than light. Mixing all of the subtractive colors together results in the color black. See also → additive color. → subtractive; → color. |
two-color diagram nemudâr-e do rang Fr.: diagramme deux couleurs A graph on which two color indices such as B-V and U-B are plotted, one along each axis, for a sample of stars or other objects, such as stars. |