cut boridan (#) Fr.: couper To penetrate or divide something, as with a sharp-edged instrument. M.E. cutten, kytten, kitten; O.E. *cyttan, cognate with O.Swed. kotta "to cut;" O.N. kuti "little knife," or from O.Fr. couteau "knife." Boridan "to cut off;" Mid.Pers. brin-, britan, brinitan "to cut off," brin "cut, delimitation, determined;" Av. (pairi-) brī- "to shave, shear;" cf. Skt. bhrī- "to hurt, injure," bhrinanti "they hurt." |
cutoff boré Fr.: coupure 1) A designated limit beyond which the passage of something must be stopped. Boré, from bor- present stem of boridan "to → cut" + noun suffix -é. |
cutoff filter pâlâye-ye boré Fr.: filtre à coupure Filter rejecting all light with wavelengths on one side of the cutoff wavelength. |
cutoff voltage voltâž-e boré Fr.: tension de coupure The electrode voltage which reduces the value of a dependent variable, e.g. anode current, to a specified low value. |
cutoff wavelength mowj-tul-e boré Fr.: longueur d'onde de coupure Wavelength at which the transmittance of a filter, or the detectivity of a detector, has fallen to one-half its peak value. → cutoff; → wavelength. |
Delta Scuti variable vartande-ye δ-Separ Fr.: variable δ Scuti A member of a class of → pulsating stars with periods less than 0.3 days, → spectral types A or F, and visual light amplitudes in the range from a few thousands of a magnitude to about 0.8 mag. On the → H-R diagram, δ Scuti stars form a group which lies in an → instability strip which includes the classical → Cepheids at its brightest end and the pulsating → white dwarfs at its faintest limit. These stars can show very complex light variations since, while some of them are pulsating in one radial mode only, others may be pulsating simultaneously in several radial and non-radial modes. Named after the prototype star δ of constellation → Scutum; → variable. |
executable zokârdani Fr.: exécutable 1) Computers: Describing a computer program that is able to be run.
→ executable program. |
executable file parvande-ye zokârdani Fr.: fichier exécutable A type of binary file designed to be directly executed by a computer system. → executable program. → executable; → file. |
executable program barnâme-ye zokârdani Fr.: programme exécutable A program that can run on a → computer. It uses an → executable file. → executable; → program. |
execute zokârdan Fr.: exécuter 1) To carry out; accomplish. M.E. executen, from O.Fr. executer, from M.L. executare, from L. execut-/exsecut-, p.p. stem of exequi/exsequi "to follow out, carry out," from → ex- "out" + sequi "to follow, come after," from PIE root *sekw- "to follow," → sequence; cf. Av. hac- "to follow," Gk. hepesthai "to follow," Skt. sacate "accompanies, follows" Zokârdan, from prefix zo-, variants os-, so-, âz-, → ex-, + kâr variant of kar-, kardan "to do, to make," → -ize. |
execution zokâreš Fr.: exécution The act of executing something; the state of being executed. |
executive 1) zokâreši; 2) zokârgar Fr.: exécutif 1a) Of, pertaining to, or suited for carrying out plans, duties, etc. |
executor zokârandé Fr.: exécuteur A person who executes, carries out, or performs some duty, job, assignment, artistic work, etc. (Dictionary.com). |
GZK cutoff bore-ye Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuzmin Fr.: limite de Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuzmin Same as → Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuzmin cutoff. |
prosecutor dâdsetân (#) Fr.: procureur A person who institutes or conducts legal proceedings, especially in a criminal court. M.L. prosecutor, agent noun from prosequi "follow after, accompany; chase, pursue;" from → pro- "forward" + sequi "to follow," → sequence. Dâsetân, literally "justice obtainer," from dâd, → justice, + setân agent noun of setândan "to obtain, to take," from Mid.Pers. statan "to take, seize;" Av. (+ *fra-) frastan- "to take, convey forward;" Proto-Ir. *staHn- "to take;" cf. L. prae-stināre "to buy, fix a price" (Cheung 2007). |
Schmidt-Kennicutt relation bâzâneš-e Schmidt-Kennicutt Fr.: relation Schmidt-Kennicutt Same as the → Schmidt law. Named after the American astrophysicists Maarten Schmidt (1929-), the pioneer of research in this field, and Robert C. Kennicutt, Jr. (1951-), who developed the study; → relation. |
Scutum Separ (#) Fr.: Ecu de Sobieski The Shield. A small constellation in the southern Milky Way, at 18h 40m right ascension, 10° south declination. Its brightest star has a visual magnitude of 3.85. Scutum contains several open clusters, as well as a globular cluster and a planetary nebula. The two best known deep sky objects in Scutum are M11 (NGC 6705), a dense open cluster, and M26, another open cluster also known as NGC 6694. The globular cluster NGC 6712 and the planetary nebula IC 1295 can be found in the eastern part of the constellation. Abbreviation: Sct; Genitive: Scuti. Scutum was created by Johannes Hevelius in 1683, who originally named it L. Scutum Sobiescianum "the shield of Sobieski" to commemorate the victory of the Polish forces led by King John III Sobieski in the Battle of Vienna, and thus refers to Sobieski's Janina Coat of Arms. Later, the name was shortened to Scutum "shield." Separ "shield," from Mid.Pers. spar "shield;" cf. Skt. phalaka- "board, lath, leaf, shield," phálati "(he) splits;" Gk. aspalon "skin, hide," spolas "flayed skin," sphalassein "to cleave, to disrupt;" O.H.G. spaltan "to split;" Goth. spilda "board;" PIE base *(s)p(h)el- "to split, to break off." |
Scutum-Crux Arm bâzu-ye Separ-Calipâ Fr.: bras Écu-Croix A spiral arm of our Galaxy located between the Sagittarius Arm and the Norma Arm, though it is rather less prominent than either of these two better defined spiral arms. It originates relatively close to the Sun's present position in the Galaxy, and follows a sweeping arc of about 80,000 light years to the opposite side of the Galactic disk. |
upper mass cut-off bore-ye bâlâyi-ye jerm, ~ zabarin-e ~ Fr.: coupure aux masses élevées Same as → upper mass limit. |