carbon cycle carxe-ye karbon (#) Fr.: cycle du carbone 1) A complex series of processes through which all the carbon atoms on
Earth is cycled through the air, ground, plants, animals, and fossil
fuels. During the cycle, plants absorb → carbon dioxide
(CO2) from the atmosphere and through
→ photosynthesis incorporate the associated
carbon atoms into sugars and other molecules necessary for
growth. Plants return carbon atoms back to the atmosphere in the form
of CO2. However, much of the carbon absorbed remains "locked up" in
the living organisms until decomposition or fire releases it back to
the atmosphere. |
Carnot cycle carxe-ye Carnot Fr.: cycle de Carnot A → cyclic process comprising a sequence of → isothermal and → adiabatic expansions and compressions that bring a system back to its initial state. Nicolas Léonard Sadi Carnot (1796-1832), a French physicist and military engineer who, in his 1824 Reflections on the Motive Power of Fire, gave the first successful theoretical account of heat engines; → cycle. |
CNO cycle carxe-ye CNO (#) Fr.: cycle CNO A series of → nuclear reactions taking place in stars in which → carbon, → nitrogen, and → oxygen are used to transform → hydrogen into → helium. In → massive stars the carbon cycle is the dominant process of energy generation, whereas in → low-mass stars such as the Sun, the → proton-proton chain of reactions converts hydrogen into helium. The carbon cycle starts and ends with carbon-12, which acts as a catalyst in the sequential production of helium from hydrogen; neutrinos and gamma rays are also produced. |
cycle carx (#), carxé (#) Fr.: cycle 1) A sequence of changes that are repeated regularly, such as revolution, rotation,
vibration, oscillation, wave motion. From L.L. cyclus, from Gk. kyklos "circle, wheel," from PIE base *kw(e)-kwl-o- "wheel, circle," from *kwel- "to turn, move around, sojourn, dwell," (cf. Av. caxra- "wheel," caraiti "he moves, approaches;" Mod.Pers. carx "wheel;" Skt. cakra- "wheel, circle; cycle," carati "he moves, wanders;" Gk. polos "axis of a sphere," polein "move around;" L. colere "to dwell in, to cultivate, move around," colonus "farmer, settler;" O.E. hweol "wheel;" Rus. koleso "awheel"). Carx "every thing performing a circulatory motion; a wheel; a cart," Mid.Pers. chr "wheel," Parthian cxr "wheel," Ossetic, Khotanese calx "wheel," Av. caxra- "wheel," cognate with Gk. kyklos "circle, wheel," as above. Carxé from carx + nuance suffix -é. |
cycle shape šekl-e carxe Fr.: forme de cycle A graph displaying the average → sunspot number over each → sunspot cycle. It presents a shape of skewed → Gaussian: the rise to maximum is faster than the decline to minimum. |
epicycle 1) falak-e tadvir (#); 2) apicarxé Fr.: épicycle 1) In → Ptolemaic system, a circular
→ orbit of a body around a point that itself
orbits circularly another point. Such a system was formulated to explain some
→ planetary
orbits in terms of → circular
motions in a → geocentric
cosmology. 1) Falak-e tadvir, from Ar. falak al-tadwir, from falak
"sphere" + tadwir "causing to turn in a circle." |
hydrologic cycle carxe-ye âbšenâsik (#), ~ âbšenâxti (#) Fr.: cycle hydrologique The vertical and horizontal transport of water in all its states between the earth, the atmosphere, and the seas; often called the water cycle. |
Metonic cycle carxe-ye Meton Fr.: cycle de Méton A time interval lasting 235 → lunations, or about 19 → tropical years (235 = 19 x 12 + 7), after which → lunar phases recur on the same days of the year. Named after Meton of Athens, a Gk. mathematician, astronomer, geometer, and engineer who used it in 432 B.C., but it was known to the Babylonians by around 500 B.C. and to the Chinese around 600 B.C.; → cycle. |
Milankovich cycles carxehâ-ye Milankovich Fr.: cycles de Milankovitch The theory according to which variations in the elements of Earth-Sun geometry are responsible for the sequence of ice ages during the Pleistocene era. The main elements are the varying tilt of the Earth's rotational axis, and the varying eccentricity of the Earth's orbit. Named after the Serbian mathematician Milutin Milankovitch (1879-1958), who introduced the concept during the first half of the twentieth century. |
recycle 1) bâzcarx kardan; 2) bâzcarx šodan Fr.: 1) recycler; 2) se recycler 1) To treat or process used material so that it can be used again. |
recycled pulsar pulsâr-e bâzcarx šodé Fr.: pulsar recyclé A → pulsar of abnormally low magnetic field and short period. The short period suggests that the pulasr is young, while the low field suggests a very old pulsar. According to theoretical models, a pulsar at some point in its evolution stops functioning as a pulsar. If it resides in a binary system (→ binary pulsar), its magnetic field decays in the interval when the companion evolves and fills its → Roche lobe. The dead pulsar is eventually spun up to life when → mass transfer from the companion begins. The pulsar gains → angular momentum from the infalling gas and increases its spin rate as more gas falls onto it. → Millisecond pulsars that spin hundreds of times per second are thought to be the result of such a transfer (see, e.g., G. Srinivasan, 2010, New Astronomy Reviews 54, 93, and references therein). |
solar activity cycle carxe-ye žirandegi-ye xoršid Fr.: cycle d'activité solaire Same as the → solar cycle. → solar activity; → cycle. |
solar cycle carxe-ye xoršidi (#) Fr.: cycle solaire The periodic variation in frequency or number of solar active events (→ sunspots, → prominences, → flares, and other solar activity) occurring with an interval of about 11 years. The solar cycle was discovered in 1843 by Samuel Heinrich Schwabe (1789-1875), a German apothecary and amateur astronomer, who after 17 years of observations noticed a periodic variation in the average number of sunspots seen from year to year on the solar disk. Solar cycle numbering goes back to the 18-th century, when the Cycle 1 peak occurred in 1760. Cycle 23 peaked in 2000, and the following Cycle 24 will reach its maximum in 2013. |
solar magnetic cycle carxe-ye meqnâtisi-ye xoršid Fr.: cycle magnétique solaire The period of time, about 22 years, after which the magnetic → polarity of the Sun returns to its earlier state. It consists of two consecutive → solar cycles. |
sunspot cycle carxe-ye hurlak Fr.: cycle des taches solaires → solar cycle. |