early âqâzin (#) Fr.: précoce; jeune Occurring at or near the beginning of a period of time, process, or sequence of events. M.E. erlich (adj.), erliche (adv.); O.E. ærlice, from ær "soon, ere" (from P.Gmc. *airiz, from PIE *āier- "day, morning," cf. Av. ayar- "day, day time," ayarə.drājah- "duration of one day," ayarə.bara- "day's ride," Mid/Mod.Pers. parēr "the day before yesterday," from *parā.ayer- "the day before") + -lice "-ly," adverbial suffix. Âqâzin adj. of âqâz "beginning," from Proto-Iranian *āgaHz-, from prefix ā- + *gaHz- "to run, start," cf. Sogdian āγāz "beginning, start" (Cheung 2007). |
early AGB phase fâz-e AGB-ye âqâzin Fr.: phase initiale de l'AGB A fairly long-lived step in the evolution of → low-mass and → intermediate-mass stars when helium burning shifts from the center to a shell around the core. At this phase the stellar luminosity is provided almost entirely by → helium shell burning. The He-shell burning generally adds mass to the growing carbon/oxygen core, resulting in → degenerate matter due to its increasing density. |
early solar system râžmân-e xoršidi-ye âqâzin Fr.: système solaire primordial A period in the evolution of the → solar system when the planets and satellites were in the process of formation. |
early spectral class star setâré bâ rade-ye binâbi-ye âqâzin Fr.: étoile de type spectral précoce A star near the beginning of the → spectral classification sequence. A star of → spectral type O, B, A, or F0 to F5. Same as → early-type star. |
early Universe giti-ye âqâzin (#) Fr.: Univers jeune A qualitative term used to describe a phase in the history of the Universe, from the → Big Bang event to the apparition of the first structures (seeds of future galaxies), at a → redshift around 30. |
early-type galaxy (ETG) kahkešân-e gune-ye âqâzin Fr.: galaxie de type précoce In the → Hubble classification, galaxies on the left part of the → Hubble sequence. Early-type galaxies tend to have redder colors, higher average surface brightnesses, and lower → neutral hydrogen content than → late-type galaxies. This terminology is based on the obsolete and erroneous idea that → elliptical and → lenticular galaxies might be evolutionary precursors to → spiral and → barred spiral galaxies. |
early-type star setâre-ye gun-ye âqâzin (#) Fr.: étoile de type précoce Hot, luminous stars of → spectral type O, B, A, and F0 to F5. They were originally thought, wrongly, to be at an earlier stage of evolution than → late-type stars. See also → spectral classification. |
faint early Sun paradox pârâdaxš-e xoršid-e tâm-e âqâzin, ~ ~ kamtâb-e ~ Fr.: paradoxe du Soleil jeune faible The contradiction between a colder Sun (about 30% less luminous) some 4 billion years ago, as predicted by models, and the warm ancient Terrestrial and Martian climates derived from geological evidence. |
linearly xattâné Fr.: linéairement In a manner characterized by first-degree algebraic terms. Adverb of → linear. |
linearly dependent xattâné vâbasté Fr.: linéairement dépendant A set of objects x1, x2, ..., xn (→ vectors, → matrices, → polynomials, etc.) on a given set if there is a linear combination of them: a1x1 + a2x2 + ... + anxn, which is zero, but at least one of the coefficients is non-zero. For example the binomials (2x + y) and (6x + 3y) are linearly dependent, since 3(2x + y) - (6x + 3y) = 0. |
linearly independent xattâné nâvâbasté Fr.: linéairement indépendant 1) A set of objects x1, x2, ..., xn
(→ vectors, → matrices,
→ polynomials, etc.) if it si not
→ linearly dependent. → linearly; → independent. |
linearly polarized light nur-e qotbide-ye xatti Fr.: lumière polarisée linéairement Light exhibiting → linear polarization. |