antipodal pâdpâyi Fr.: antipodal 1) Of or relating to the → antipodes. |
antipode pâdpây Fr.: antipode 1) The exact or direct opposite. M.E., from L., from Gk. antipod-, antipous, literally "with feet opposite," from → anti- "against," + pod-, pous, → foot. |
antiproton pâdproton Fr.: antiproton The antiparticle of a proton, identical in mass and spin but of opposite (negative) charge. |
antiquark pâdkuârk Fr.: antiquark The → antiparticle of a → quark. |
antisolar point noqte-ye pâdxoršidi Fr.: direction antisolaire Meteo.: The point on the → celestial sphere that lies directly opposite the Sun from the → observer, observer, that is, on the line from the Sun through the observer. The antisolar point is the center of the rainbow, and can be easily found on a sunny day: it it located at the shadow of one's head; it is 180° away from the Sun. If the Sun is in the sky, the antisolar point is below the horizon. If the Sun has set, the antisolar point is above the horizon. |
antitail pâddom Fr.: contre-queue A small tail-like structure on a comet that, unlike most comet tails, seems to point toward the Sun. This rare event is an optical illusion due to larger dust particles left along the comet's orbit. And typically occurs when the Earth crosses the plane of the comet's orbit. It seen when the observer is in the plane of the cometary orbit. Antitail, from → anti- "opposite, opposing, against" + → tail. Pâddom, from pâd-, → anti-, + dom "tail." |
antithesis pâd-dâyan Fr.: antithèse Logical or verbal opposition. |
antithetic pâd-dâyani Fr.: antithétique 1) Of the nature of or involving → antithesis. → antithesis; → -ic. |
Atlantic Atlasi (#) Fr.: atlantique Of or pertaining to the Atlantic Ocean. M.E., from L. Atlanticum (mare) "the Atlantic (ocean)," from Gk. Atlantikos "of Atlas," adj. of → Atlas, in reference to Mount Atlas in NW Africa. So called because it lay beyond that mountain. |
conserved quantity candâ-ye patâyide Fr.: quantité conservée A → quantity that remains → constant when its corresponding → physical system undergoes a → transformation. |
dimensionless quantity candâ-ye bivâmun Fr.: quantité sans dimension A quantity without an associated → physical dimension. Dimensionless quantities are defined as the ratio of two quantities with the same dimension. The magnitude of such quantities is independent of the system of units used. A dimensionless quantity is not always a ratio; for instance, the number of people in a room is a dimensionless quantity. Examples include the → Alfven Mach number, → Ekman number, → Froude number, → Mach number, → Prandtl number, → Rayleigh number, → Reynolds number, → Richardson number, → Rossby number, → Toomre parameter. See also → large number. → dimension |
existential quantifier candâgar-e hastiyâl Fr.: quantificateur existentiel A symbol of → predicate logic which expresses that the statements within its scope are → true for at least one instance of something. The symbol ∃ is used as the existential quantifier. Existential quantifiers are normally used in logic in → conjunction with → predicate symbols, which say something about a → variable or → constant, in this case the variable being quantified (→ quantify, → quantification). → existential; → quantifier. |
Galactic anticenter pâdmarkaz-e kahkešân Fr.: anticentre galactique The point in the → Galactic plane that lies directly opposite the → Galactic center. It lies in the constellation → Auriga at approximately R.A. 05h 46m, Dec. +28° 56'. → galactic; → anticenter. |
mantissa pârsang, mântis (#) Fr.: mantisse The fractional or the decimal part of a → common logarithm. For example, log10 4000 = 3.602, where the → characteristic is 3 and the mantissa 0.602. From L. mantis "makeweight, addition," of unknown origin. Introduced by Henry Briggs (1561-1630). → makeweight. |
Mid-Atlantic Ridge ruk-e miyân Atlasi Fr.: dorsale médio-atlantique An immense chain of underwater mountains that runs down the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. The MAR, approximately 500-1000 km wide, extends 16,000 km from Iceland to the Antarctic Circle. The MAR is so high that it actually rises above sea level in many places, forming volcanic islands. The Azores, Ascension, St. Helena, and Iceland all arise from this great Atlantic range. The chain results from the movement of the continental plates. As these plates slowly separate, they leave gaps in the → Earth's crust. This allows molten rock from beneath the Earth's crust to reach the surface and forms a ridge. The MAR is a part of the global → mid-ocean ridge system. |
obscurantism târikandiši, târikvarzi Fr.: obscurantisme 1) Opposition to the spread of knowledge; a policy of withholding
knowledge from the general public. From Fr. obscurantisme (1819), from obscurant, from obscure, from L. obscurus "dark, dusky," figuratively "unknown; unintelligible," from ob- "over" + -scurus "covered," from PIE *(s)keu- "to cover, conceal;" → -ism. |
physical quantity candâ-ye fiziki (#) Fr.: quantité physique A physical → property that can be measured and/or calculated. |
Protestantism pâxosângerâyi, pâxosânbâvari Fr.: protestantisme The religion of → Protestants. → protestant; → -ism. |
Quadrantids Cârakâniyân Fr.: Quadrantides An annual → meteor shower reaching a peak about 3 January and having its → radiant in the constellation → Boötes. From L. Quadrant-, from Quadrans Muralis , → mural quadrant. |
quantification candâyeš Fr.: quantification The fact or process of quantifying. Verbal noun of → quantify. |