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interaction andaržireš Fr.: interaction General: Mutual or reciprocal action or influence. |
interactional andaržireši Fr.: Capable of acting on or influencing each other From → interaction; + → -al. |
interactive andaržiri Fr.: interactif 1) Acting one upon or with the other. |
interarm region nâhiye-ye andarbâzu, ~ andararm Fr.: région interbras A low-density region separating the spiral arms of a galaxy. Interarm, from → inter- + arm "body part," from O.E. earm "arm," from P.Gmc. *armaz (cf. M.Du., Ger. arm, O.N. armr, O.Fris. erm), from PIE base *ar- "to fit, join;" Mod.Pers. arm "arm, from the elbow to the shoulder;" Av. arma-, arəmo- "arm;" Skt. irma- "arm;" Gk. arthron "a joint," L. armus "shoulder;" → region. Andarbâzu, from andar-, → inter-, + bâzu "arm," from Mid.Pers. bâzûk "arm;" Av. bāzu- "arm;" cf. Skt. bāhu- "arm, forearm;" Gk. pechys "forearm, arm, ell;" O.H.G. buog "shoulder;" Ger. Bug "shoulder;" Du. boeg; O.E. bôg, bôh "shoulder, bough;" E. bough " a branch of a tree;" PIE *bhaghu- "arm"); nahiyé, → region. Andararm, from andar-, → inter-, + arm, as above. |
interatomic andaratomi Fr.: interatomique Between atoms; relating to the interaction of different atoms. |
interoperability andar-âpârešpaziri Fr.: interopérabilité The ability of different types of computers, networks, operating systems, and software applications to work together by exchanging and sharing information in a standardized, accurate, and effective manner. → inter-; → operability. |
iterate itaridan Fr.: itérer 1) To utter or to do something over again or repeatedly.
→ repeat. Iterate "to do again, repeat," back-formation from iteration, from L. iterationem (nom. iteratio) "repetition," noun of action from iterare "to do again, repeat," from iterum "again, for the second time;" cf. Skt. itara- "the other (of the two), another." Itaridan, from L. iter(um), Skt. itar(a-), as above, and Pers. dialects Kâšâni (Voništun) târ "the other;" Kurd. tir "the other" + -idan Pers. infinitive suffix. |
iteration itareš Fr.: itération A computational process involving a succession of approximations, which consists of repeating the operation by inputting the outcome of each preceding operation to improve the final result until a desired accuracy is achieved. Compare → repetition. Verbal noun of → iterate. |
iterative method raveš-e itareši Fr.: méthode itérative A method of computation in mathematics using → iteration. Iterative, characterized by or involving → iteration; → method. |
Jurassic era dowre-ye Žurasik (#) Fr.: ère jurassique A period of the Mesozoic era, spanning the time between the Triassic and the → Cretaceous periods, about 200 to 145 million years ago. The start of the period is marked by the major Triassic-Jurassic → mass extinction event. |
kinetic temperature damâ-ye jonbeši (#) Fr.: température cinétique The temperature of a gas defined in terms of the average kinetic energy of its atoms or molecules. → kinetic; → temperature. |
Laplace operator âpârgar-e Laplace Fr.: opérateur de Laplace Same as → Laplacian. |
lateral bari, kenâri, pahluyi Fr.: latéral Of or relating to the → side; situated at, proceeding from, or directed to a side (Dictionary.com). M.E., from O.Fr. latéral and directly from L. lateralis "belonging to the side," from latus "the side, flank; lateral surface." Kenâri, relating to kenâr, → side. |
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. |
lepton era dowrân-e leptoni (#) Fr.: ère leptonique The era following the hadronic era, when the Universe consisted mainly of leptons and photons. It began when the temperature dropped below 1012 degrees kelvin some 10-4 seconds after the Big Bang, and it lasted until the temperature fell below 1010 degrees kelvin, at an era of about 1 second. |
linear acceleration šetâb-e xatti Fr.: accélération linéaire The rate of change of the → linear velocity with time. It is defined by the expression Δv/Δt and is equal to the → first derivative of the → linear velocity. → linear; → acceleration. |
literature neveštârgân (#) Fr.: littérature 1) Writings in which expression and form, in connection with ideas of
permanent and universal interest, are characteristic or essential
features, as poetry, novels, history, biography, and essays. From L. literatura/litteratura "writing, grammar, learning," from litera/littera "letter." Neveštârgân, from neveštâr, literally "written; writing," verbal noun from neveštan, nevis- "to write;" Mid.Pers. nibištan, nibes- "to write;" Av./O.Pers. nī- "down; in, into," → ni- (PIE), + paēs- "to paint; to adorn," paēsa- "adornment" (Mid.Pers. pēsīdan "to adorn"); O.Pers. pais- "to adorn, cut, engrave" (Mod.Pers. pisé "variegated"); cf. Skt. piśáti "adorns; cuts;" Gk. poikilos "multicolored;" L. pingit "embroiders, paints;" O.C.S. pisati "to write;" O.H.G. fēh "multicolored;" Lith. piēšti "to draw, adorn;" PIE base *peik- "colored, speckled," + -gân suffix of suffix forming plural entities, from Mid.Pers. -gânag. |
magnetocentrifugal acceleration šetâb-e meqnât-markazgoriz Fr.: accelération magnetocentrifuge The acceleration exerted on the plasma particles according to the → magnetocentrifugal model. |
matter era dowrân-e mâddé (#) Fr.: ère dominée par la matière A critical change in the history of the Universe, which occurred after the radiation era, when the density of energy contained within matter exceeded the density of energy contained within radiation. This transition started about 5000 years after the Big Bang, when the temperature had fallen to 3 x 104 K. Later, 380 000 years after the Big Bang, when the temperature was 3000 K, matter and radiation were no longer coupled together and the Universe became transparent. |
Merak (β Ursae Majoris) Merâq (#) Fr.: Merak A blue → dwarf star of → spectral type A1 with an → apparent magnitude of 2.37 in the constellation → Ursa Major. It lies 79 → light-years away and has a → luminosity almost 60 times solar, and a mass about triple that of the Sun. Although Merak ranks fifth in brightness in the → Big Dipper, it received the Beta designation from Bayer, who lettered the Dipper's stars from front to back. From Ar. al-Maraqq ( |
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