acceleration parameter pârâmun-e šetâb Fr.: paramètre d'accéleration A measure of the departure from a constant rate of the acceleration of the Universe, expressed by: q(t) = R(t)R ..(t)/R .2(t), where R(t) represents the size of the Universe at time t. Traditionally, a negative sign is inserted in the above equation for the → deceleration parameter. → acceleration; → parameter. |
angular momentum parameter pârâmun-e jonbâk-e zâviye-yi Fr.: paramètre de moment angulaire The ratio J/M, where J is the → angular momentum of a → rotating black hole and M the mass of the black hole. |
deceleration parameter pârâmun-e vâšetâb Fr.: paramètre de décéleration A parameter designating the rate at which the expansion of the Universe would slow down owing to the braking gravitational effect of the matter content of the Universe. It is expressed by: q(t) = -R(t)R ..(t)/R .2(t), where R(t) represents the size of the Universe at time t. See also → expansion parameter; compare with → acceleration parameter. → deceleration; → parameter. |
density parameter pârâmun-e cagâli Fr.: paramètre de densité One of the four terms that describe an arranged version of the
→ Friedmann equations. They are all time dependent. |
Eddington parameter pârâmun-e Eddington Fr.: paramètre d'Eddington A → dimensionless parameter indicating the degree to which a star is close to the → Eddington limit. It is expressed as Γ = L / LEdd = κ L / (4πGMc), where L and M are the star luminosity and mass respectively, κ is the opacity, c the speed of light, and G the → gravitational constant. At the Eddington limit, Γ = 1, the star would become unbound. Because stellar luminosity generally scales with a high power of the stellar mass (L∝ M3-4), → massive stars with M larger than 10 Msun generally have electron Eddington parameters of order Γ ≅ 0.1-1. After Arthur Stanley Eddington (1882-1944), prominent British astrophysicist; → parameter. |
effective Eddington parameter pârâmun-e Eddington-e oskarmand Fr.: paramètre d'Eddington effectif The effective value of the → Eddington parameter in a non-homogeneous system (porous opacity). → effective; → Eddington limit; → parameter. |
equation of state parameter pârâmun-e hamugeš-e hâlat Fr.: paramètre de l'équation d'état In cosmology, a → dimensionless parameter introduced by the → equation of state representing the ratio of the pressure to the energy density of a fluid, such as the → dark energy: w = p/ρ. The → deceleration or → acceleration of an → expanding Universe depends on this parameter (→ accelerating Universe). A number of numerical values of this parameter are as follows: for the → cosmological constant: w = -1, for → non-relativistic matter (present-day → baryons): w = 0, and for → relativistic matter (photons, neutrinos): w = +1/3. Together with Ω(dark energy) and Ω(matter), w provides a three-parameter description of the dark energy. The simplest parametrization of the dark energy is w = constant, although w might depend on → redshift. |
expansion parameter pârâmun-e sopâneš Fr.: paramètre d'expansion A → scale factor that relates the size of the Universe R = R(t) at time t to the size of the Universe R0 = R(t0) at time t0 by R = aR0. The expansion parameter represents the history of expansion of the Universe. |
force multiplier parameter pârâmun-e bastâgar-e niru Fr.: paramètre de multiplicateur de force One of the three quantities (k, α, and δ) which are used in the → radiation-driven wind theory to express the radiation pressure due to spectral lines. These coefficients parametrize the radiation acceleration as: grad≅ k(dv/dr)αge, where ge = σeL/4πcR*2 is the radiative acceleration by electron scattering. The parameter k is dependent on the number of lines that produce the radiation pressure. The parameter α depends on the optical depth of the driving lines and varies between 0 (optically thin) and 1 (optically thick). The parameter δ describes the dependence of k on the density with k ≅ ρδ. The velocity law of radiation-driven winds depends on α and δ, but not on k. The → mass loss rate depends on k, α, and δ (Castor et al. 1975, ApJ 195, 157; Lamers et al., 1995, ApJ 455, 269 and references therein). → force; → multiplier; → parameter. |
Fried parameter pârâmun-e Fried Fr.: paramètre de Fried One of the parameters that characterize atmospheric → seeing. It is the diameter of the largest aperture that can be used before → turbulence starts to degrade the image quality. As the turbulence gets stronger, the Fried parameter, denoted r0, becomes smaller. The Fried parameter is wavelength dependent: r0 ∝ λ6/5. On best astronomical mountain tops it ranges between 20 and 30 cm for λ = 5000 A. Named after David L. Fried, who defined the parameter 10 1966; → parameter. |
Hubble parameter pârânmun-e Hubble Fr.: paramètre de Hubble |
Hubble-Lemaitre parameter pârânmun-e Hubble-Lemaître Fr.: paramètre de Hubble-Lemaître The rate pf change of the → cosmic scale factor: H(t) = (dR/dt)/R. The Hubble parameter is a time-dependent quantity and therefore is not constant. The → Hubble-Lemaitre constant is the Hubble-Lemaître parameter measured today. → Hubble-Lemaitre law; → parameter. |
impact parameter pârâmun-e barxord Fr.: paramètre d'impact 1) A measure of the distance by which a collision fails being frontal. |
ionization parameter pârâmun-e yoneš Fr.: paramètre d'ionisation A ratio representing the number of ionizing photons to the number of electrons in a nebular emitting region. → ionization; → parameter. |
mixing length parameter pârâmun-e derâzâ-ye âmizeš Fr.: paramètre de la longueur de mémange In the → mixing length theory, a parameter, α, that relates the → mixing length, l, to the → pressure scale height: α = l/HP. It is usually supposed that α is of order unity. Changes in α correspond to variations in the efficiency of the → convection, hence the transfer of heat. |
normalized Hubble parameter pârâmun-e Hubble-e hanjârvaridé Fr.: paramètre Hubble normalisé A dimensionless parameter expressed by h(z) = H(z)/H0, where H(z) is the → Hubble parameter at → redshift z and H0 is the → Hubble constant. → normalized; → Hubble; → parameter. |
orbital parameter pârâmun-e madâri Fr.: paramètre orbital |
parameter pârâmun Fr.: paramètre General: Any of a set of physical properties whose values determine the
characteristics or behavior of something. → impact parameter;
→ ionization parameter. Mod.L. parametrum, from Gk. → para- + metron "measure," → meter. Parâmun, from parâ-, → para-, + mun/mân "measure," as in Pers. terms pirâmun "perimeter," âzmun "test, trial," peymân "measuring, agreement," peymâné "a measure; a cup, bowl," from O.Pers./Av. mā(y)- "to measure;" cf. Skt. mati "measures," matra- "measure;" Gk. metron "measure;" L. metrum; PIE base *me- "to measure." |
physical parameter pârâmun-e fiziki Fr.: paramètre physique Any of a set of physical properties whose values determine the characteristics or behavior of a system; for example, → mass, → size, → temperature, → luminosity, etc. |
reddening parameter pârâmun-e sorxeš Fr.: paramètre de rougissement A dimensionless quantity characterizing the → interstellar extinction, defined by the total-to-selective extinction ratio: RV = AV/E(B-V). The typical value found for the reddening parameter in the Milky Way is RV ~ 3.1, but it is known to vary from one line of sight to another, from values as 2 to as large as 6. Very large → dust grains would produce extinction with RV → ∞. |