elastic kešâyand (#) Fr.: élastique Of, pertaining to, or noting a body having the property of → elasticity. See also → elastic collision, → elastic deformation, → elastic limit, → elastic scattering. From Fr., from Gk. elastos "ductile, flexible," related to elaunein "to strike, beat out." Kešâyand, from keš stem of kešidan/kašidan "to pull, drag, draw" (Av. karš- "to draw, to plough," karša- "furrow;" cf. Skt. kars-, kársati "to pull, drag, plough," Gk. pelo, pelomai "to be busy, to bustle") + âyand agent form of âmadan "to come; to become," from Mid.Pers. âmatan (O.Pers. gam- "to come; to go," Av. gam- "to come; to go," jamaiti "goes;" O.Iranian *āgmatani; Skt. gamati "goes;" Gk. bainein "to go, walk, step;" L. venire "to come;" Tocharian A käm- "to come;" O.H.G. queman "to come;" E. come; PIE root *gwem- "to go, come"). |
elastic collision hamkubš-e kešâyand Fr.: collision élastique A collision between two particles which conserves the total kinetic energy and momentum of the system. |
elastic deformation vâdiseš-e kešâyand Fr.: déformation élastique A deformation of a → solid body in which the change (→ strain) in the relative position of points in the body disappears when the deforming stress is removed. See also → elastic limit. → elastic; → deformation. |
elastic limit hadd-e kešâyand Fr.: limite d'élasticité, ~ élastique The smallest → stress beyond which a → solid body can no longer return to its original shape. The material ceases to obey → Hooke's law. Also called → yield point. |
elastic scattering parâkaneš-e kešâyand Fr.: diffusion élastique In a → collision between two → particles,
the reaction in which the total → kinetic energy
of the system, projectile plus target, is the same before the collision as after. → elastic; → scattering. |
elastic wave mowj-e kešâyand (#) Fr.: onde élatique A wave that propagates by → elastic deformation of the medium. The → propagation takes place by a change in shape that disappears when the forces are removed. In other words, the displaced particles transfer momentum to adjoining particles, and are themselves restored to their original position. A → seismic wave is a type of elastic wave. |
elasticity kešâyandi (#) Fr.: élasticité The ability of a body which has been → deformed by an applied → force to return to its original shape when the force is removed. Up to a certain point the material obeys → Hooke's law. See also → ductility, → plasticity. |
inelastic collision hamkubeš-e nâkešâyand Fr.: collision inélastique A collision between bodies in which there is a loss of total kinetic energy. |
inelastic scattering parâkaneš-e nâkešâyand Fr.: diffusion inélastique A type of scattering when the → scattered radiation has a → wavelength different from that of the → incident radiation (→ Raman scattering, → fluorescence ). → inelastic; → scattering. |