<< < "no cen cos for for for inf lin Pla sim top wea > >>
centripetal force niru-ye markaz-gerâ (#) Fr.: force centripète The force exerted on an object in → circular motion which is directed toward the center and keeps the body in motion. Centripetal force produces → centripetal acceleration, according to → Newton's second law: Fc = mac. Its direction is always inward along the → radius vector, and its magnitude is given by: Fc= mac = mvt2/r = mω2r. → centripetal; → force. |
cluster formation efficiency (CFE) kârâyiè-ye diseš-e xuše Fr.: efficacité de formation d'amas The fraction of → star formation which happens in → bound clusters. It is defined as the ratio between the → cluster formation rate and → star formation rate (Bastian, 2008, MNRAS 390, 759, arxiv/0807.4687). → cluster; → formation; → efficiency. |
cluster formation rate (CFR) nerx-e diseš-e xuše Fr.: taux de formation d'amas A parameter used in star formation models representing the ratio of the total mass in → star clusters to the corresponding age range (Bastian, 2008, MNRAS 390, 759, arxiv/0807.4687). |
CO formation diseš-e CO Fr.: formation de CO The chemical reaction that gives rise to → carbon monoxide in the → interstellar medium. According to models, several processes may lead to CO formation. For example, HCO+ + e → CO + H. The molecule HCO+ is itself produced through several paths, for example: H3+ + C → CH2+ + H, CH2+ + H2 → CH3+ + H, CH3+ + O → HCO+ + H. Alternatively: C+ + H2O → HCO+ + H. Another possibility: C+ + OH → CO+ + H, CO+ + H2→ HCO+ + H. → carbon monoxide; → formation. |
co-formation theory negare-ye ham-diseš Fr.: théorie de co-formation A theory according to which the Earth and Moon formed from the → protoplanetary disk at the same time. See also → giant impact hypothesis, → capture theory, → fission theory. |
coercive force niru-ye pazurandé Fr.: force coercitive The strength of an external → magnetic field that brings to zero the → magnetic flux density of a magnetic material when that field is caused to operate in the opposite direction from the orientation of the → magnetization of the material. Also called coercivity. Coercive force is a measure of the magnetization of a → ferromagnetic material. It is usually measured in the units of → oersted or ampere/m. |
cohesive force niru-ye hamduseš Fr.: force cohésive, ~ de cohésion The force of → attraction between the molecules of the same substance. |
collective star formation diseš-e gerdâmdi-ye setâregân Fr.: formation collective d'étolies Formation of stars, especially → massive stars, in group as opposed to individual formation. → collective; → star; → formation. |
collinear forces niruhâ-ye ham-xatt Fr.: forces collinéaires A system of two or more forces that lie along the same → line of action. |
color transformation tarâdis-e rang Fr.: transformation de couleur Empirical mathematical transformation applied to the observed magnitudes in order to convert them into a standard system, or into a different system. → color; → transformation. |
compound angle formula disul-e zaviye-ye hamnât Fr.: formule d'angle composé One of eight equations that give the → trigonometric functions
of → compound angles. |
concurrent forces niruhâ-ye hâtazandé Fr.: forces concourantes A system of forces applied to a → rigid body in such manner that their lines of action intersect at a single point. A system of concurrent forces acting on a rigid body can be replaced by an equivalent force applied at the same point. → line of action. → concurrent; → force. |
conform 1) hamdisidan; 2) hamdis šodan Fr.: 1) conformer; 2) se conformer 1a) To make similar in form, nature, or character. |
conformal hamdis Fr.: conforme 1) That conforms, especially to the shape of something. |
conformal compactification hampakâneš-e hamdi Fr.: compactification conforme A mapping of an infinite → space-time onto a finite one that may make the far away parts of the former accessible to study. The technique invented by Penrose defines an equivalence class of → metrics, gab being equivalent to ĝab = Ω2gab, where Ω is a positive scalar function of the space-time that modifies the distance scale making the asymptotics of the physical metric accessible to study. → conformal; → compactification. |
conformal cyclic cosmology (CCC) keyhânšenâsi-ye carxe-yi-ye hamdis Fr.: cosmologie cyclique conforme A cosmological model developped by Roger Penrose and colleagues according which the Universe undergoes repeated cycles of expansion. Each cycle, referred to an aeon, starts from its own "→ big bang" and finally comes to a stage of accelerated expansion which continues indefinitely. There is no stage of contraction (to a "→ big crunch") in this model. Instead, each aeon of the universe, in a sense "forgets" how big it is, both at its big bang and in its very remote future where it becomes physically identical with the big bang of the next aeon, despite there being an infinite scale change involved, on passing from one aeon to the next. This model considers a conformal structure rather than a metric structure. Conformal structure may be viewed as family of metrics that are equivalent to one another via a scale change, which may vary from place to place. Thus, in conformal space-time geometry, there is not a particular metric gab, but an equivalence class of metrics where the metrics ğab and gab are considered to be equivalent if there is a smooth positive scalar field Ω for which ğab = Ω gab (R. Penrose, 2012, The Basic Ideas of Conformal Cyclic Cosmology). |
conformal geometry hendese-ye hamdis Fr.: géométrie conforme The study of the set of angle-preserving transformations on a space. |
conformal mapping hamtâyeš-e hamdis Fr.: application conforme A continuous mapping u = f(x) of a domain D in an n-dimensional Euclidean space (n≥ 2) into the n-dimensional Euclidean space is called conformal at a point x0∈ D if it has the properties of constancy of dilation and preservation of angles at this point. |
coplanar forces niruhâ-ye ham-hâmon Fr.: forces coplanaires A system of forces acting on a body that all are in the same plane. |
Coriolis force niru-ye Coriolis (#) Fr.: force de Coriolis An apparent, rather than real, force exerted on a body when it moves in a rotating → reference frame. Same as the → Coriolis effect. → Coriolis effect; → force. |
<< < "no cen cos for for for inf lin Pla sim top wea > >>