aperture photometry šidsanji-ye dahânéi Fr.: photométrie d'ouverture Photometry using a diaphragm to isolate a small sky area, either directly with a focal-plane diaphragm, or with an image processing system. → aperture; → photometry. |
astrophotography axtar-šidnegâri, šidnegâri-ye
axtari Fr.: astrophotographie The photography of stars, other celestial bodies, and stellar fields. → astro-, → photography. |
astrophotometry axtar-šidsanji, šidsanji-ye axtari Fr.: astrophotométrie The measurement of the intensity of light of celestial bodies. Astrophotometry, from → astro- + → photometry. Axtar-šidsanji, from axtar-, → astro-, + -šidsanji, → photometry. |
automatic photometric telescope durbin-e šidsanjik-e xodkâr, teleskop-e ~ ~ Fr.: télescope photométrique automatique A telescope developed to perform photometric observations automatically. → automatic; → photometric; → telescope. |
baryon-photon ratio vâbar-e bâriyon-foton Fr.: rapport baryon-photon The → baryon number compared with the number of photons in the → Universe. The baryon-photon ratio can be estimated in a simple way. The → energy density associated with → blackbody radiation of → temperature T is aT4, and the mean energy per photon is ~kT. Therefore, the number density of blackbody photons for T = 2.7 K is: nγ = aT4/kT = 3.7 x 102 photons cm-3, where a = 7.6 x 10-15 erg cm-3 K-4 (→ radiation density constant) and k = 1.38 x 10-16 erg K-1 (→ Boltzmann's constant). The number density of baryons can be expressed by ρm/mp, where ρm is the mass density of the Universe and mp is the mass of the → proton (1.66 x 10-24 g). → CMB measurements show that the baryonic mean density is ρm = 4.2 x 10-31 g cm-3 (roughly 5% of the → critical density). This leads to the value of ~ 2 x 10-7 for the number density of baryons. Thus, the baryon/photon ratio is approximately equal to η = nb/nγ = 2 x 10-7/3.7 x 102 ~ 5 x 10-10. In other words, for each baryon in the Universe there is 1010 photons. This estimate is in agreement with the precise value of the baryon-photon ratio 6.14 x 10-10 derived with the → WMAP. Since the photon number and the baryon number are conserved, the baryon-photon ratio stays constant as the Universe expands. |
blackbody photosphere šidsepehr-e siyah-jesm Fr.: photosphère de corps noir The → blackbody surface of the → Universe defined at a → redshift of about z ≥ 2 × 106. This is distinct from the → last scattering surface, in other words the → cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR), which refers to z = 1100. Prior to the epoch of the blackbody photosphere the distortions from the → Big Bang are exponentially suppressed. → blackbody; → atmosphere. |
broad-band photometry šidsanji-ye pahn-bând Fr.: photométrie à bande large Photometric measurements carried out through filters with a band-width (about one-tenth the central wavelength) in the range 30-100 nm. Typical examples are Johnson photometry, Krons-Cousins RI photometry, and the six-color system. → broad; → band; → photometry. |
dichotomy dopâregi Fr.: dichotomie 1) General: A division in two parts or kinds that differ widely from or contradict
each other. From Gk. dichotomia "cutting in two," from dicho- "apart, in two," combining form of dicha "in two, asunder," akin to → di-, + temnein "to cut." Dopâregi, from do→ two + pâré "piece, part, portion, fragment" (Mid.Pers. pârag "piece, part, portion; gift, offering, bribe;" Av. pāra- "debt," from par- "to remunerate, equalize; to condemn;" PIE *per- "to sell, hand over, distribute; to assign;" cf. L. pars "part, piece, side, share," portio "share, portion;" Gk. peprotai "it has been granted;" Skt. purti- "reward;" Hitt. pars-, parsiya- "to break, crumble") + -(g)i a noun/state suffix. |
external photoelectric effect oskar-e šid-barqi-ye boruni Fr.: effet photoélectrique externe The → photoelectric effect in solids where free electrons are emitted from the surface of a substance (e.g., → semiconductor) when radiation of appropriate frequency falls on it. Also called → photoemissive effect. → external; → photoelectric; → effect. |
extrinsic photoconductivity šidhâzandegi-ye borungin Fr.: photoconductivité extrinsèque Photoconductivity due to the addition of impurities or external causes. → extrinsic; → photoconductivity. Šidhâzandegi, → photoconductivity; borungin, → extrinsic. |
gravitational slingshot falâxan-e gerâneši Fr.: fronde gravitationnelle Same as → gravity assist. → gravitational; slingshot, from sling, from M.E. slyngen, from O.N. slyngva "to sling, fling" + shot, from M.E., from O.E. sc(e)ot, (ge)sceot; cf. Ger. Schoss, Geschoss. Falâxan "sling;" from Av. fradaxšana- "sling," fradaxšanya- "sling, sling-stone;" → gravitational. |
hot dâq (#) Fr.: chaud Having a relatively high temperature. → hot accretion flow, → hot core, → hot corino, → hot dark matter , → hot dust-obscured galaxy, → hot Jupiter, → hot molecular core, → hot pixel, → hot star. Hot, O.E. hat, "hot; fervent, fierce," from P.Gmc. *haitoz (cf. Du. heet, Ger. heiß "hot," Goth. heito "heat of a fever"). Dâq "hot; brand, marking," from Mid.Pers. dâq, dâk "hot," dažitan
"to burn, scorch," dažišn "burning"
(Mod.Pers. dežan ( |
hot accretion flow tacân-e farbâl-e dâq Fr.: écoulement d'accrétion chaud A type of → accretion flow by a → compact object such as a → black hole which has a high → virial temperature, is → optically thick, and occurs at lower mass → accretion rates compared with → cold accretion flows. In a hot accretion flow with a very low mass accretion rate, the electron mean free path is very large, and so the accreting → plasma is nearly collisionless. In this type of accretion flow, thermal conduction transports the energy from the inner to the outer regions. As the gas temperature in the outer regions can be increased above the → virial temperature , the gas in the outer regions can escape from the gravitational potential of the central black hole and form outflows, significantly decreasing the mass accretion rate. |
hot core maqze-ye dâq Fr.: cœur chaud Same as → hot molecular core. |
hot corino maqzak-e dâq Fr.: petit cœur chaud A warm, compact → molecular clump found in the inner envelope of a → Class 0 → protostar. Hot corinos are low-mass analogs of → hot molecular cores (HMCs) occurring in → massive star formation sites. With a typical size of ≤ 150 → astronomical units, hot corinos are two orders of magnitude smaller than HMCs. They have densities ≥ 107 cm-3 and temperatures ≥ 100 K (Ceccarelli, C. 2004, ASP Conf. Ser. 323, 195). → hot; corino, from → core + -ino a diminutive suffix in It. |
hot dark matter mâdde-ye târik-e dâq (#) Fr.: matière noire chaude Any form of → dark matter which had a significant velocity dispersion (comparable to the velocity of light), when the Universe first became → matter-dominated. |
hot dust-obscured galaxy (HDOG) kahkešân-e tiré bâ qobâr-e dâq Fr.: galaxie obscure à poussière chaude A member of the most extreme galaxies in terms of their luminosities and unusual hot → dust temperatures. The → infrared emission from HDOGs is dominated by obscured accretion onto a central → supermassive black hole (SMBH), in most cases without significant contribution from → star formation. The large contrast between the underlying → host galaxy and the hyper-luminous emission from the → active galactic nucleus (AGN) implies that either the SMBH is much more massive than expected for the stellar mass of its host, or is radiating well above its → Eddington limit. The most extreme of these remarkable systems known is → W2246-0526. |
hot electron diode diod-e elektron-e dâq Fr.:diode à électrons chauds Same as → Schottky diode |
hot Jupiter Hormoz-e dâq Fr.: Jupiter chaud A giant, gaseous, Jupiter-like planet lying too close to its parent star and having an orbital period from a few days to a few weeks. The existence of hot Jupiters is usually interpreted in terms of planetary migration. These planets can, in principle, be formed at larger distances from their stars and migrate to the inner regions due to dynamical interaction with the proto-planetary disk. |
hot molecular core (HMC) maqze-ye molekuli-ye dâq Fr.: cœur moléculaire chaud A relatively small, dense, and hot → molecular clump occurring in regions of → massive star formation. HMCs have diameters ≤ 0.1 pc, densities ≥ 107 cm-3, and temperatures ≥ 100 K. The densest hot cores are traced in → ammonia (NH3) and possess densities of 108 cm-3, sizes down to 0.05 pc and temperatures of up to 250 K. Hot molecular cores are generally associated with → compact H II regions and → ultracompact H II regions. High angular resolution observations suggest that HMCs are internally heated by embedded sources, since temperature and density increases toward the center as expected if star formation is occurring close to the core center. Same as → hot core. |