Cassini division šekâf-e Cassini (#) Fr.: division de Cassini The main dark gap, 4,700 km wide, which divides Saturn's outermost A and B rings. Named after Jean-Dominique Cassini (1625-1712), French astronomer of Italian origin, who discovered the division in 1675; → division. |
division 1) baxš; 2) šekâf Fr.: division 1) The act or process of dividing; state of being divided. From O.Fr. division, from L. divisionem (nom. divisio), from divid-, stem of dividere "to cleave, distribute," from → dis- "apart" + -videre "to separate," from PIE base *widh- "to separate." 1) Baxš "portion, part, division," baxšidan "to divide,
distribute, grant;" Mod./Mid.Pers. baxt "fortune, fate," baxtan, baxšidan
"to distribute, divide," bâq "garden," initially "piece or patch of land,"
baq "god, lord;" Av. bag- "to attribute, allot, distribute,"
baxš- "to apportion, divide, give to,"
baxta- "what is allotted (luck, fortune),"
baxədra- "part, portion," baγa- "master, god;"
O.Pers. bāji- "tribute, tax;" cf. Skt. bhaj- "to share, divide,
distribute, apportion," bhájati "divides," bhakta- "allotted; occupied
with; a share; food or a meal, time of eating?" pitu-bháj-
"enjoying food;" Gk. phagein"to eat (to have a share of food)";
PIE base *bhag- "to share out, apportion." |
division sign nešâne-ye baxš Fr.: signe de division A symbol placed between two quantities (dividend and the divisor) to indicate the division of the first by the second. The division sign is written as a horizontal line with dot above and dot below, ÷ (→ obelus), or a slash or horizontal line. |
Euclidean division baxš-e Oqlidosi Fr.: division euclidienne In arithmetic, the conventional process of division of two → integers. For a → real number a divided by b > 0, there exists a unique integer q and a real number r, 0 ≤ r <b, such that a = qb + r. |
Huygens Division šekâf-e Huygens Fr.: division de Huygens In the system of → Saturn's rings, the gap at the inner edge of the → Cassini division at a distance of 117,680 km from the center of the planet with a width of 285-400 km. |
Lyot division šekâf-e Liyot (#) Fr.: division de Lyot In Saturn's rings, the gap between rings B and C. Named after Bernard Lyot (1897-1952), French astronomer who discovered the division. He was also a distinguished solar observer and invented (1930) the → coronagraph; → division. |
synthetic division baxš-e handâyeši Fr.: division synthétique A method of dividing a polynomial in the special case of dividing by a linear factor. Synthetic division allows one to do long division problems much quicker. It is related to the → Ruffini-Horner method. |