<< < -es -it -sc 201 951 abe abs abs aca acc acc aco act ada adh ado aer aft air Alf alg alk alp Alt alt amb ana And ang ani ann ant ant ant apo app app Apu arc arg Arn art ass ast ast ast atm ato att aur aut avo azi bac bal bar bar bat Bea Bel bet bia big bin bio Bir bla bla blo Blu bol Boo bou box bre Bri bro bur cal cal Can cap car Car cat cau cel cen cen cha Cha cha che Chi chr cir cir civ cla clo clo CMB coa coe coh col col col com com com com com com com com Com con con con con con con con con con con con con coo cor cor cor Cos cos cos cou cou cra cri cro cry cul cur cyc D l dar dat day dea dec dec dec def def deg Del Den dep der det deu dew dic dif dif dil dip dir dis dis dis dis dis diu dog Dop dou Dra Dsc dus dwa dyn Dys Ear ecc eco edg egg Ein Ela ele ele ele ele ell eme emp enc eng ent epi equ equ equ eru eth Eur eve exa exc exe exi exo exp ext ext ext fab fai Fan fea fem fer fie fil fir fir fla fli flu foc for for for fra fre fre fri fun fuz gal gal gal Gam gau Gau gen geo geo geo geo Gib glo gov gra gra gra gra gre gro Gui H-a hal Ham har Hay hea hei hel Hel her het hie hig hoa hom hor hot Hub Hug hur hyd hyd hyl hyp ice ide ima ima imp imp inc inc ind ine inf inf inf ing inn ins ins int int int int int int int int inv inv ion iro Isl iso iso Jab jet Jov Jup Kar Kep kil Kip Kra Lag Lam Lan Lar las law lea Leg Leo lev lig lim lin lin lin lit loc loc log Lor low lum lun lun Lym Mac mag mag mag mag mag mai Mal map mas mas mat Mau mea mea med Men mer Mes Met met mic mic Mie mil min Mir mix mod mol mom Moo mor mov mul mur n-b nan nat nea neg Ner neu new New NGC noc nom non non nor nor nuc nuc nul nut obj obl obs occ oct off old one ope opp opt opt orb ord org Ori osc oth ove Owl P-s Pal par par par par Pas pat pec pen per per per per per Pha pha pho pho pho phy pie pix Pla pla pla pla Pli Poi pol pol pol pol por pos pos pow pre pre pre pre pri pri pri pro pro pro pro pro pro pro pub pul pyc qua qua qua qua qui rad rad rad rad rad rad rai ran rar Ray rea Rea rec rec red red ref ref reg rel rel rel ren res res res res ret rev Ric rig rin roc roo rot rot rur S5- Sal sat sca sca Sch sci Scu sec sec sed sel sel sem seq set sha she sho sid sie sil sim sin sit sky slo sno sod sol sol sol sol son sou spa spa spe spe spe spe sph spi spo squ sta sta sta sta ste ste ste Sti sto str str sub sub sub sul sup sup sup sup sur sur syl syn sys tal Tay tel ten ter tex the the the the Tho thr tid tim Tit too Tor tra tra Tra tra Tra tri Tri tru tub tur two Typ ult ult unc uni uni uni upl ura uti val var vec vel ver Ver vie vir vis vis vol W-R war wav wav wea Wei wha wid win WN3 Wol wri xen yok zen zij > >>
moment of force gaštâvar (#) Fr.: moment, couple A measure of a force's tendency to cause a body to → rotate about a specified → axis. It is given by the force times the perpendicular → distance of the → line of action from the axis. Same as → torque |
moment of inertia gaštâvar-e laxti (#) Fr.: moment d'inertie A quantity which is a measure of the inertness of a body in rotatory motion about an axis. It is equal to the sum of the products of the masses of all particles of the body by the squares of their distances from this axis: I = Σmiri2, where ri is the distance of the particle of mass mi from the axis. Moment of inertia depends only upon the shape of the body and the arrangement of its mass with respect to the axis. For a solid sphere it is (2/5)MR2. Moment of inertia is used in place of mass in problems involving rotation. Thus, the → angular momentum is Iω and → angular kinetic energy is (1/2)Iω2, where ω is → angular velocity. |
moment of momentum gaštâvar-e jonbâk Fr.: moment cinétique Same as → angular momentum. |
momentum jonbâk Fr.: quantité de movement In → Newtonian mechanics, the momentum p of a body with → mass m and → velocity v is the product of these two quantities: p = mv. Momentum usually means → linear momentum as opposed to → angular momentum. From L. momentum "movement, moving power," from movere "to move," → move. Jonbâk, from jonb present stem of jonbidan "to move" (Mid.Pers. jumbidan, jumb- "to move," Lori, Laki jem "motion," related to gâm "step, pace;" O.Pers. gam- "to come; to go," Av. gam- "to come; to go," jamaiti "goes," gāman- "step, pac;" Mod.Pers. âmadan "to come;" Skt. gamati "goes;" Gk. bainein "to go, walk, step," L. venire "to come;" Tocharian A käm- "to come;" O.H.G. queman "to come;" E. come; PIE root *gwem- "to go, come") + -âk noun suffix. |
monism yektâgerâyi (#), yektâbâvari (#) Fr.: monisme 1) Philo.: The doctrine that reality consists of an unchanging whole
in which change is mere illusion. → pluralism. |
monitor 1) pahridan; 2) pahregar Fr.: 1) contrôler; 2) moniteur, écran de contrôle 1) (v.) To watch closely or evaluate something on a constant or regular basis. From L. monitor "one who reminds, admonishes, or checks," from monere "to remind, warn, advise," related to memini "I remember, I am mindful of," mens "mind," from PIE base *men- "to think;" Pers. cognates under → idea. Pahregar "watch, guard,"
agent noun from pahré (Dehxodâ) "watch, guarding," from Mid.Pers.
pahr, pahrag "guard;" Av. pāθra.vant "guard, watchman," from
*pāθra-, from
Av. pā- "to protect," pāti "guards,"
nipā(y)- (with → ni-)
"to watch, observe, guard,"
nipātar- "protector, watcher," nipāθri- "protectress;"
cf. Skt. pā- "to protect, keep," tanû.pā- "protecting
the body," paś.pā- "shepherd;" Gk. poma "lid, cover,"
poimen "shepherd;" L. pascere "to put out to graze," pastor
"shepherd;" Lith. piemuo "shepherd;" PIE base *pā- "to protect, feed." |
mono- tak- (#), yek- (#), yektâ- (#), mono- (#) Fr.: mono- 1) A combining form meaning "alone, single, one," as in monochromatic,
Monoceros, monotonic. From Gk. mono-, from monos "single, alone," from PIE base *men- "small, isolated," also represented by Gk. manos "rare, sparse." Tak "single, alone", from Mid.Pers. tak "single, alone," maybe related to
tâk, tâi "unit, piece." |
Monoceros Takšâx (#) Fr.: Licorne The Unicorn. An extensive but faint constellation across the celestial equator , at 7h right ascension, 4° south declination. Abbreviation: Mon; genitive: Monocerotis. Monoceros "the unicorn," from O.Fr., from L., from Gk. monokeros, from → mono- "single" + keras "horn," kara "head," karena "head, top;" cf. Pers. soru "horn," sar "head;" L. cornu "horn," cerebrum "brain;" Skt. śiras- "head, chief;" O.E. horn "horn of an animal," also "wind instrument" (originally made from animal horns), from P.Gmc. *khurnaz (Ger. Horn, Du. horen), from PIE *ker- "head, horn, top, summit." Takšâx, from tak "single" → mono- + šâx "horn, branch" (Mid.Pers šâk; cf. Skt. sakha- "a branch, a limb;" Arm. cax; Lith. šaka; O.S. soxa; PIE *kakhâ "branch"). |
Monoceros Loop gerdâl-e takšâx Fr.: Boucle de la Licorne A faint filamentary loop of nebulosity about 1 kpc distant, the remnant of a supernova that occurred about 300,000 years ago. It contains the Rosette Nebula as well as the Cone Nebula. |
monochromatic takfâm (#) Fr.: monochromatique Characterized by light of one color or by radiation of a single wavelength or narrow range of wavelengths. |
monochromatic opacity kederi-ye takfâm Fr.: opacité monochromatique The sum of → absorption coefficient (κν) and → scattering coefficient (σν) at a given frequency: kν = κν + σν. See also the → Rosseland mean opacity. → monochromatic; → opacity. |
monomial taknâmin Fr.: 1) monôme; 2) monomial 1) A single algebraic term, such as 2xy, 125, 2x2.
The → degree of the monomial is the sum of the exponents of
all included variables. Constants have the monomial degree of 0. |
monomorphism tak-rixtmandi Fr.: monomorphisme A → morphismf : Y → X if, for any two morphisms u,v : Z → Y, f u = f v implies that u =v. |
monosemy takcemi Fr.: monosémie The fact of having only a single meaning. Same as → univocity. Compare with → polysemy. From → mono- "single," + sem, from sema "sign," → semantic, + -y. Takcemi, from tak-, → mono-, + cem, → meaning, + noun suffix -i. |
monotheism yektâ-yazdân-bâvari, yektâ-parasti (#) Fr.: monothéisme The belief or doctrine that there is only one → God. |
monotonic yeknavâxt (#) Fr.: monotone Of a mathematical function, either continuously increasing or decreasing. From Fr. monotone, from Gk. monotonos "monotonous, of one tone," from monos, → mono- "single, alone" + tonos "tone" + → -ic. Yeknavâxt "monotonous," from yek "one, single," + navâxt"rhythm," from navâxtan, navâzidan "to play an instrument; to gratify," navâ "music, song, melody;" Mid.Pers. nw'c "to treat kindly, honour," niwag "music, melody;" Proto-Iranian *ni-uac-, from *ni- (→ ni-) + *uac- "to speak, treat kindly," → word. |
monsoon bâdhâ-ye mowsemi (#) Fr.: mousson A seasonal change in wind direction bringing dry air or heavy rain in India and nearby lands. Monsoon, from Du. monssoen, from Port. monçao, from Ar. mausim "season." It was first applied to the winds over the Arabian Sea, which blow for six months from northeast and for six months from southwest, but it has been extended to similar winds in other parts of the world. Bâd, → "wind;" mowsem, related to mowsem, from Ar. mausim, as above. |
Monte Carlo Method raveš-e Monte Carlo Fr.: méthode de Monte Carlo A computer-intensive technique that relies on repeated random sampling of a statistical population to compute its results. Monte Carlo simulation is often used for approximate numerical computations when application of strict methods requires too much calculation, or when it is infeasible or impossible to compute an exact result with a deterministic algorithm. The term Monte Carlo was coined in the 1940s by physicists (Stanislaw Ulam, Enrico Fermi, John von Neumann, and Nicholas Metropolis) working on nuclear weapon projects in the Los Alamos National Laboratory. The name is a reference to a famous casino in Monaco which, it is said that, Ulam's uncle would borrow money to gamble at. → method. |
month mâh (#) Fr.: mois A period of time based on the revolution of the Moon around the Earth. Several types of months are defined: → anomalistic month; → draconic month; → sidereal month; → synodic month; → tropical month. O.E. monað, from P.Gmc. *mænoth- (O.N. manaðr, M.Du. manet, Du. maand, O.H.G. manod, Ger. Monat, Goth. menoþs "month"), related to *mænon-, → moon. Mâh and mâng in Pers. are variants of the same term, the dominant form being
mâh, while mâng (Av. from, see below) is used in classical literature
as well as in some dialects: Tabari, Kurd. mâng, Laki, Tâti, Taeši
mong, Šahmirzâdi,
Sangesari mung; Mid.Pers. mâh "moon, month;" O.Pers. māha-
"moon, month;" Av. māh- "month, moon," also māwngh-; cf.
Skt. mās- "moon, month;" Gk.
mene "moon," men "month;" L. mensis "month;"
O.C.S. meseci, Lith. menesis "moon, month;" O.Ir. mi,
Welsh mis, Bret. miz "month;"
O.E. mona; E. moon, month; Ger. Mond, Monat;
Du. maan; PIE base *me(n)ses- "moon, month." |
moon mâh (#), mâng (#) Fr.: Lune 1) Natural satellite of the Earth. Mass 7.35 x 1025 g = 1/81 or
0.0123 Earth's. Mean radius 1740 km = ~ 1/4 the Earth's; this relatively small
size ratio makes the Earth-Moon
system unique in the → solar system.
Mean density 3.34 g cm-3.
Mean distance from Earth 384,400 km.
→ Escape velocity 2.38 km s-1.
→ Surface gravity 162.2 cm s-2 = 0.165 Earth's.
→ Sidereal period 27d 7h 43m 11s. → Eccentricity
0.0549. → Inclination of → orbital plane
to → ecliptic 5° 8' 43''.
→ Obliquity 6° 41'.
→ Synodic period 29d 12h 44m 2s.9.
→ Orbital velocity 1.02 km s-1.
The Moon's average visual → Albedo is 0.12, a factor of
three smaller than that of Earth.
The Moon's → center of mass is displaced about 2 km in the
direction of Earth.
The average temperature on the surface of the Moon during the day is
107 °C. During the night, the average temperature drops to -153 °C.
Studies of lunar rock have shown that melting and separation must have begun
at least 4.5 x 109 years ago, so the → crust
of the Moon was beginning to form
a very short time after the → solar system itself.
Thickness of crust ~ 60 km; of mantle ~ 1000 km. Temperature of core ~ 1500 K.
It would have taken only 107 years to slow the Moon's rotation into
its present lock with its → orbital period.
Because of this → synchronous rotation,
the Moon revolves once on its axis
each time it orbits the Earth, thus always presenting the same face,
the nearside, toward Earth.
The Moon may have formed during a collision between the early
Earth and a Mars-sized rocky planet about 4.6 billion years ago;
→ Theia. O.E. mona, from P.Gmc. *mænon- (cf. O.S., O.H.G. mano, O.Fris. mona, O.N. mani, Du. maan, Ger. Mond, Goth. mena "moon"), cognate with Pers. mâh, as below, from PIE *me(n)ses- "moon, month." Mâh and mâng in Pers. are variants of the same term, the dominant form being
mâh, while mâng (Av. from, see below) is used in classical literature
as well as in some dialects: Tabari, Kurd. mâng, Laki, Tâti, Taelši
mong, Šahmirzâdi,
Sangesari mung; Mid.Pers. mâh "moon, month;" O.Pers. māha-
"moon, month;" Av. māh- "month, moon," also māwngh-; cf.
Skt. mās- "moon, month;" Gk.
mene "moon," men "month;" L. mensis "month;"
O.C.S. meseci, Lith. menesis "moon, month;" O.Ir. mi,
Welsh mis, Bret. miz "month;"
O.E. mona; E. moon, month; Ger. Mond, Monat;
Du. maan; PIE base *me(n)ses- "moon, month." |
<< < -es -it -sc 201 951 abe abs abs aca acc acc aco act ada adh ado aer aft air Alf alg alk alp Alt alt amb ana And ang ani ann ant ant ant apo app app Apu arc arg Arn art ass ast ast ast atm ato att aur aut avo azi bac bal bar bar bat Bea Bel bet bia big bin bio Bir bla bla blo Blu bol Boo bou box bre Bri bro bur cal cal Can cap car Car cat cau cel cen cen cha Cha cha che Chi chr cir cir civ cla clo clo CMB coa coe coh col col col com com com com com com com com Com con con con con con con con con con con con con coo cor cor cor Cos cos cos cou cou cra cri cro cry cul cur cyc D l dar dat day dea dec dec dec def def deg Del Den dep der det deu dew dic dif dif dil dip dir dis dis dis dis dis diu dog Dop dou Dra Dsc dus dwa dyn Dys Ear ecc eco edg egg Ein Ela ele ele ele ele ell eme emp enc eng ent epi equ equ equ eru eth Eur eve exa exc exe exi exo exp ext ext ext fab fai Fan fea fem fer fie fil fir fir fla fli flu foc for for for fra fre fre fri fun fuz gal gal gal Gam gau Gau gen geo geo geo geo Gib glo gov gra gra gra gra gre gro Gui H-a hal Ham har Hay hea hei hel Hel her het hie hig hoa hom hor hot Hub Hug hur hyd hyd hyl hyp ice ide ima ima imp imp inc inc ind ine inf inf inf ing inn ins ins int int int int int int int int inv inv ion iro Isl iso iso Jab jet Jov Jup Kar Kep kil Kip Kra Lag Lam Lan Lar las law lea Leg Leo lev lig lim lin lin lin lit loc loc log Lor low lum lun lun Lym Mac mag mag mag mag mag mai Mal map mas mas mat Mau mea mea med Men mer Mes Met met mic mic Mie mil min Mir mix mod mol mom Moo mor mov mul mur n-b nan nat nea neg Ner neu new New NGC noc nom non non nor nor nuc nuc nul nut obj obl obs occ oct off old one ope opp opt opt orb ord org Ori osc oth ove Owl P-s Pal par par par par Pas pat pec pen per per per per per Pha pha pho pho pho phy pie pix Pla pla pla pla Pli Poi pol pol pol pol por pos pos pow pre pre pre pre pri pri pri pro pro pro pro pro pro pro pub pul pyc qua qua qua qua qui rad rad rad rad rad rad rai ran rar Ray rea Rea rec rec red red ref ref reg rel rel rel ren res res res res ret rev Ric rig rin roc roo rot rot rur S5- Sal sat sca sca Sch sci Scu sec sec sed sel sel sem seq set sha she sho sid sie sil sim sin sit sky slo sno sod sol sol sol sol son sou spa spa spe spe spe spe sph spi spo squ sta sta sta sta ste ste ste Sti sto str str sub sub sub sul sup sup sup sup sur sur syl syn sys tal Tay tel ten ter tex the the the the Tho thr tid tim Tit too Tor tra tra Tra tra Tra tri Tri tru tub tur two Typ ult ult unc uni uni uni upl ura uti val var vec vel ver Ver vie vir vis vis vol W-R war wav wav wea Wei wha wid win WN3 Wol wri xen yok zen zij > >>