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radar râdâr (#) Fr.: radar An emitting/receiving device in which the echo of a pulse of microwave radiation is used to detect and locate distant objects. From ra(dio) d(etecting) a(nd) r(anging). |
radargram râdârnegâšt Fr.: radargramme Graphic display of measurements by a → radar of mineral deposits on a planetary surface. |
radial šo'â'i (#) Fr.: radial Emanating from a common central point; arranged like the radii of a circle. |
radial migration kuc-e šo'â'i Fr.: migration radiale The process whereby a → disk star changes its → galactocentric distance. Radial migration involves → angular momentum transfer, resulting from → resonances created by transient → density waves such as → bars or → spiral arms in → galactic disks. According to → galactic dynamics models, → churning is the main cause of radial migration. Radial migration of stars plays an important role in shaping the properties of galactic disks. |
radial motion jonbeš-e šo'â'i Fr.: mouvement radial A motion away from or toward a central point or axis. |
radial spoke parre-ye šoâyi Fr.: spoke radial Any of short-lived (generally lasting less than 24 hours) radial features that periodically appear over the outer half of → Saturn's → B ring, when the ring tilt angle is small. These features revolve at the same rate as the planet's → magnetic field and maintain their shape over much of the course of their existence even though they extend tens of thousands of kilometers across the rings. It is believed that the tiny particles that make up these spokes are electrically charged and temporarily "frozen" into the planet's magnetic field (Ellis et al., 2007, Planetary Ring Systems, Springer). |
radial velocity tondâ-ye šo'â'i Fr.: vitesse radiale The component of a three-dimensional velocity vector of an object directed along the line of sight. It is measured by examining the Doppler shift of lines in the spectrum of astronomical objects. |
radial velocity curve xam-e tondâ-ye šo'â'i Fr.: courbe de vitesse radiale A curve describing the variation of the radial velocity of a star, due to the Doppler effect, under the gravitational effect of a secondary body (companion or exoplanet). The amplitude of these variations depends upon the mass of the secondary and its distance from the star. → radial velocity; → curve. |
radial velocity method raveš-e tondâ-ye šo'â'i Fr.: méthode de vitesses radiales The technique based on the analysis of the → radial velocity curve, used to detect the presence of an invisible secondary around a host star. This method holds the majority of exoplanet discoveries. → radial velocity; → method. |
radian râdiyân (#) Fr.: radian A unit of angular measure; one radian is that angle with an intercepted arc on a circle equal in length to the radius of the circle. From radi(us) + -an an originally adj. suffix. |
radiance tâbešmandi Fr.: luminance 1) Generally, the → radiant energy
per unit → solid angle per unit of
→ projected area of the → source.
It is usually expressed in → watt per
→ steradian per → square
→ meter (W m-2 sr-1). Same as
steradiancy. From radia(nt), → radiant, + → -ance. Tâbešmandi, noun from tâbešmand "possessing radiation," from tâbeš, → radiation, + -mand a suffix denoting possession; Mid.Pers. -ômand suffix forming adjectives of quality. |
radiant 1) tâbandé, tâbeši; 2) tâbsar Fr.: radiant 1) Sending out rays of light; bright; shining. M.E., from M.Fr. radiant, from L. radiantem (nominative radians) "shining," pr.p. of radiare "to shine, radiate," → radiation. 1) Tâbandé, tâbeši adj. from tâbidan,
→ radiate. |
radiant drift delek-e tâbsar Fr.: dérive de radiant The apparent slow motion of the → radiant of a → meteor shower from night to night against the background stars due to the Earth moving in its orbit around the Sun. |
radiant energy kâruž-e tâbeši Fr.: énergie radiative The energy that is transmitted in the form of → radiation, in particular as → electromagnetic radiation. |
radiant flux šâr-e tâbeši (#) Fr.: flux radiatif Rate of flow of energy as → radiation. |
radiant intensity dartanuyi-ye tâbeši Fr.: intensité de rayonnement A measure of the amount of radiation emitted from a point expressed as the radiant flux per unit solid angle leaving this source. |
radiate tâbidan (#) Fr.: rayonner To send out → energy, such as → heat or → light, in the form of → rays or → waves. From L. radiat(us), p.p. of radiare "to shine, to beam" + -ate verbal suffix. Tâbidan, variants tâftan "to shine," tafsidan "to become hot;" Mid.Pers. tâftan "to heat, burn, shine;" taftan "to become hot;" Parthian t'b "to shine;" Av. tāp-, taf- "to warm up, heat," tafsat "became hot," tāpaiieiti "to create warmth;" cf. Skt. tap- "to heat, be/become hot; to spoil, injure, damage; to suffer," tapati "burns;" L. tepere "to be warm," tepidus "warm;" PIE base *tep- "to be warm." |
radiation tâbeš (#) Fr.: radiation, rayonnement The emission of any → rays, → waves, or → particles from a source; usually applied to the → emission of → electromagnetic energy. Verbal noun of → radiate. |
radiation belt kamarband-e tâbeš (#), ~ tâbeši (#) Fr.: ceinture de radiations A ring-shaped region in the → magnetosphere of a planet in which charged particles are trapped by the planet's magnetic field. The radiation belts surrounding Earth are known as the → Van Allen belts. |
radiation constant pâypa-ye tâbeš Fr.: constante de rayonnement Same as → radiation density constant. |
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