energy transfer tarâvaž-e kâruž Fr.: transfert d'énergie The → conversion of one → form of energy into another, or the movement of energy from one place or system to another. |
energy-momentum tensor tânsor-e kâruž-jonbâk Fr.: tenseur énergie-quantité de mouvement A tensor (Tμν) related to the → Einstein tensor through → Einstein's field equations. The energy-momentum tensor depends upon the distribution of the → energy and → matter in the space. |
equipartition of energy hamugparkeš-e kâruž Fr.: équipartition de l'énergie 1) General: Equal sharing of the → total energy among all
→ components of a → system. |
excitation energy kâruž-e barangizeš Fr.: énergie d'excitation Amount of energy (usually measured in → electron-volts) required to bring an electron from its → ground state to a given → excited state. → excitation; → energy. |
Fermi energy kâruž-e Fermi Fr.: énergie de Fermi The energy of the highest occupied quantum state in a system of fermions at absolute zero temperature. See also → Fermi sea. |
Gibbs free energy kâruž-e âzâd-e Gibbs Fr.: énergie libre de Gibbs The total energy needed to create a thermodynamic system minus the energy provided the environment. It is defined by G = U + PV -TS, where U is the → internal energy, T the → absolute temperature, S the → entropy, P the → pressure, and V is the final → volume. Same as the → Gibbs function and → thermodynamic potential. Named after Josiah Willard Gibbs (1839-1903), an American physicist who played an important part in the foundation of analytical thermodynamics; → free; → energy. |
gravitational energy kâruž-e gerâneši Fr.: énergie gravitationnelle Same as → gravitational potential energy. → gravitational; → energy. |
gravitational potential energy kâruž-e tavand-e gerâneši Fr.: énergie potentielle gravitationnelle 1) The energy that an object possesses because of its position in a
→ gravitational field, especially an object near the
surface of the Earth where the → gravitational acceleration
can be assumed to be constant, at about 9.8 m s-2. → gravitational; → potential; → energy. |
Helmholtz free energy kâruž-e âzâd-e Helmholtz Fr.: énergie libre de Helmholtz Of a system, the quantity whose decrease gives the maximum amount of external work which is performed when any physical or chemical process is carried out reversibly at constant temperature. It is defined by F = U - TS, where U is the → internal energy, T the → absolute temperature, and S the final → entropy. After the German physicist and physician Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz (1821-1894), who made important contributions to the thermodynamics of gaseous systems; → free; → energy. |
High Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.) râžmân-e estereyo-ye meh kâruž (H.E.S.S.) Fr.: Système stéréoscopique de haute énergie (H.E.S.S.) An array of → IACT telescopes for studying cosmic → gamma rays in the 100 GeV to 100 TeV energy range. The HESS observatory is located in Namibia, southern Africa, at an altitude of 1800 m, and the project is an international collaboration of more than 100 scientists from nine countries. In its Phase I, HESS used four telescopes each consisting of a light collector with a diameter of 13 m and a focal length of 15 m placed at the corners of a square 120 m apart. Each telescope is segmented into 380 round mirror facets of 60 cm diameter and uses a camera consisting of 960 closely packed → photomultiplier tubes. The first of the telescopes went into operation in Summer 2002. Phase II includes a fifth telescope, called Large Cherenkov Telescope (LCT), of 27 m diameter, located in the centre of the initial array. This upgrade lowers the triggering threshold of the HESS array to about 20 GeV, thus broadening the energy window in which gamma-ray astronomy can be done, opening up more opportunities in astrophysical research (see, e.g., Bernlöhr et al. 2003, Astroparticle Physics 20, 111). H.E.S.S., short for High Energy Stereoscopic System, is also intended to pay homage to Victor F. Hess (1883-1964), an Austrian-American physicist who received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1936 for his discovery of → cosmic rays. |
high-energy astrophysics axtarfizik-e meh-kâruž Fr.: astrophysique des hautes énergies A branch of astrophysics that deals with objects emitting highly energetic radiation, such as X-ray astronomy, gamma-ray astronomy, and extreme ultraviolet astronomy, as well as neutrinos and cosmic rays. → high; → energy; → astrophysics. |
high-energy cosmic rays partowhâ-ye keyhâni-ye meh-kâruž, ~ ~ por-kâruž Fr.: rayons cosmiques de hautes énergies Cosmic rays which typically have energies in the range 1015 to 1020 electron volts. For the most part, they are protons and other atomic nuclei, and come from distant cosmos, perhaps even from outside our own Galaxy. |
high-energy neutrino notrino-ye meh-kâruž Fr.: neutrino haute énergie A neutrino produced in high-energy particle collisions, such as those occurring when → cosmic rays strike atoms in the Earth's → atmosphere. Their energy range expands from a few → MeVs up to tenths of a → peta- (P) → electron-volts. |
internal energy kâruž-e daruni Fr.: énergie interne The difference between the energy added to a system and the energy given up by the system in performing work. |
ionization energy kâruž-e yoneš Fr.: énergie d'ionisation Same as → ionization potential. → ionization; → energy. |
kinetic energy kâruž-e jonbeši Fr.: énergie cinétique The energy which a body possesses as a consequence of its motion, defined as one-half the product of its mass m and the square of its speed v, i.e. 1/2 mv2. |
lattice energy kâruž-e jâré Fr.: énergie réticulaire The energy required to separate an ion from a → crystal to an infinite distance. In other words, the energy released when one → mole of a crystal is formed from gaseous ions. |
low-energy neutrino notrino-ye kamkâruž Fr.: neutrino faible énergie A neutrino which is mainly produced in → nuclear processes, such as the ones in the → Sun (→ solar neutrino), or in the center of an exploding → supernova. Such neutrinos are, however, more energetic than those making up the → cosmic neutrino background. |
magnetic energy kâruž-e meqnâtisi Fr.: énergie magnétique The energy stored in a magnetic field. It is the → work that must be done to establish a magnetic field in terms of the → magnetic induction. Magnetic energy varies as the square of the magnetic induction. It can be expressed in several other ways, for example in terms of the current and of the magnetic flux, or in terms of the current density and vector potential. |
mass energy kâruž-e jerm Fr.: énergie de masse The energy (E) associated with a mass (m), as specified by the → mass-energy equivalence E = mc2, where c is the → speed of light. For a moving body the total energy of the particle is expressed by: E2 = m2c4 + p2c2, where m is → rest mass and p → momentum. |