degeneracy vâgeni (#) Fr.: dégénérescence 1) General: Degenerate state or character. Reverting to an earlier, simpler, state. From degener(ate), → degenerate, + -acy suffix of nouns of quality and state. Vâgeni, from vâgen, → degenerate, + noun suffix -i. |
degeneracy pressure fešâr-e vâgeni (#) Fr.: pression de dégénérescence Pressure in a degenerate electron or neutron gas. → degenerate matter. → degeneracy; → pressure. |
electron degeneracy vâgeni-ye elektron (#) Fr.: dégénérescence des électrons A → degenerate matter in which electrons are very tightly packed together, as in a white dwarf, but cannot get closer than a certain limit to each other, because according to quantum mechanics laws (→ Pauli exclusion principle) the lowest energy levels can be occupied by only one electron. Therefore, electrons are forced into high energy states. And the significant pressure created by these high energy electrons supports white dwarf stars against their own gravity. → electron; → degeneracy. |
lepton degeneracy vâgeni-ye lepton Fr.: dégénérescence des leptons Postulate that the magnitude of the lepton number density is comparable to or larger than the thermal radiation photon number density, so relaxation to equilibrium produces a degenerate sea of neutrinos. Degenerate neutrinos would suppress the number of neutrons relative to protons in the very early Universe; degenerate antineutrinos would suppress the number of protons relative to neutrons. Either case would affect BBNS (Peebles, P. et al., 2009, Finding the Big Bang, Cambridge: UK, Cambridge Univ. Press). → lepton; → degeneracy. |
microlensing degeneracy vâgeni-ye riz-lenzeš Fr.: dégénérescence des paramètres de l'effet de microlentille Determining the three various parameters of a microlensing event (the lens-source relative parallax and proper motion, and the mass of the lens) from only one physical parameter (the event time scale). Currently the microlensing degeneracy affects the vast majority of events and makes any individual event impossible to interpret with certainty. → microlensing; → degeneracy. |
neutron degeneracy vâgeni-ye notron Fr.: dégénérescence des neutrons The state of degeneracy created when the density of matter is so high that neutrons cannot be packed any more closely together. This condition occurs in the core of stars above 1.44 solar masses (→ Chandrasekhar limit) where under the gravitational collapse electrons and protons are forced to combine into neutrons. Therefore, in a → neutron star all the lowest neutron energy levels are filled and the neutrons are forced into higher and higher energy levels, since according to Pauli Exclusion Principle no two neutrons (fermions) can occupy identical states. This creates an effective pressure which prevents further gravitational collapse. However, for masses greater than 3 solar masses, even neutron degeneracy cannot prevent further collapse and it continues toward the black hole state. → neutron; → degeneracy. |
spectroscopic degeneracy vâgeni-ye binâbnemâyi Fr.: dégénérescence spectroscopique The situation in which spectroscopic features in a certain optical region are not sensitive enough to distinguish adjacent → luminosity classes, for instance → dwarf stars from → giant stars. → spectroscopic; → degeneracy. |