primary naxostân Fr.: primaire, principal 1) First or highest in rank or importance; chief; principal. M.E., from L. primarius "of the first rank, principal," from primus "first." Naxostân, from naxost, from Mid.Pers. naxust "the first," Parthian Mid.Pers. nxwšt, from naxu, Manichean Parthian nwx "beginning" + -ist superlative suffix, Av. -išta-, cf. Skt. -istha-, Gk. -istos, O.H.G. -isto, -osto, O.E. -st, -est, -ost. |
primary body jesm-e naxostân Fr.: corps principal The body that is being orbited; such as the → Sun in the → solar system. As regards → multiple star systems, the most massive, or → primary star. See also: → secondary body. |
primary cell pil-e noxostân Fr.: A → cell in which the electrochemical action producing the current is not normally reversible. Such a cell cannot be recharged by an electric current. → secondary cell. |
primary cosmic rays partowhâ-ye keyhâni-ye naxostân Fr.: rayons cosmiques primaires The → cosmic rays which arrive on the Earth's → atmosphere from the outer space. The primary cosmic rays are very high energy → protons and to a lesser extent heavier nuclei which rain upon the Earth from all diretions in the outer space. They contain about 90% protons, 7% → alpha particles and about 1% still heavier nuclei of amost all the atoms from Li to Ni ( → mass number< 60). See also: → secondary cosmic rays. |
primary eclipse gereft-e noxostân Fr.: éclipse primaire Of a transiting → exoplanet, the event and the interval of time during which the planet passes in front of its host star. The planet occults a portion of the stellar disk, and a fraction of light from the star is seen after traversal through the atmosphere around the planet's limb. → secondary eclipse. |
primary mirror âyene-ye noxostân Fr.: miroir primaire In a → reflecting telescope, the first mirror that collects the light and focuses it to the → focal plane. |
primary rainbow rangin-kamân-e naxostân Fr.: arc-en-ciel primaire The main rainbow that forms between about 40° and 42° from the
→ antisolar point
(or about 50° from the → antisolar point),
as viewed by the observer. The light path involves
→ refraction and a → single
→ reflection inside the water
→ droplet. If the drops are large, 1
millimeter or more in diameter, red, green, and violet are bright but
there is little blue. |
primary star setâre-ye naxostân Fr.: étoile principale In a → multiple star system, the most massive → component. In other words, the star nearest to the system's → center of garvity. |