Keplerian Kepleri Fr.: keplerien Of or pertaining to Johannes Kepler or to his works or discoveries. From → Kepler + -ian a suffix forming adjectives. |
Keplerian angular velocity tondâ-ye zâviye-yi-ye Kepleri Fr.: vitesse angulaire keplérienne The angular velocity of a point in a circular orbit around a central mass. It is given by: ΩK = (GM/r3)1/2, where G is the → gravitational constant, M is the mass of the gravitating object, and r is the radius of the orbit of the point around the object. |
Keplerian disk gerde-ye Kepleri, disk-e ~ Fr.: disque keplérien A circumstellar disk (such as an → accretion disk or a → protoplanetary disk) in which the → angular velocity at each radius is equal to the angular velocity of a circular → Keplerian orbit at the same radius. The main characteristic of the Keplerian disk is that → orbital velocity varies as r-1/2. This means that an object on an orbit closer to the central mass turns more rapidly than that on a farther orbit. This velocity difference is at the origin of internal friction or kinematic viscous forces between disk particles, which heats up the material. |
Keplerian orbit madâr-e Kepleri (#) Fr.: orbit keplérienne The orbit of a spherical object of a finite mass around another spherical object, also of finite mass, governed by their mutual → gravitational forces only. |
Keplerian orbital velocity tondâ-ye madâr-e Kepleri Fr.: vitesse d'orbite képlérienne The velocity of an object orbiting another object according to → Kepler's laws. |
Keplerian rotation curve xam-e carxeš-e Kepleri (#) Fr.: courbe de rotation keplérienne A → rotation curve in which the speed of the orbiting body is inversely proportional to the → square root of its distance from the mass concentrated at the center of the system. |
Keplerian shear karn-e Kepleri Fr.: cisaillement keplerien Shearing motion of an ensemble of particles, each on a nearly circular, → Keplerian orbit. → Orbital velocity decreases as orbital radius increases, yielding shear. Viscous drag on such shear, due to ring-particle collisions, plays a key role in ring processes (Ellis et al., 2007, Planetary Ring Systems, Springer). |
Keplerian telescope durbin-e Kepler, teleskop-e ~ (#) Fr.: télescope de Kepler A → refracting telescope which has simple → convex lenses for both → objective and → eyepiece. It suffers from → chromatic aberration, which can be reduced by increasing the → focal ratio. It was first devised by Kepler in 1615. |