compact high-velocity clouds (CHVCs) abrhâ-ye hampak-e tondrow Fr.: nuages compacts à grande vitesse A population of relatively small (typically < 2°) → high-velocity clouds, which are spatially and kinematically isolated from the gas distribution in their environment. They are thought to be located in the → intergalactic medium of the → Local Group. → compact; → high-velocity cloud. |
high boland (#); meh (#); por (#) Fr.: haut 1) Situated above the ground or exceeding the common degree or
measure. M.E. heigh, variants hegh, hey, heh; O.E. heh, heah "of great height, lofty, tall," (cf. Du. hoog, O.H.G. hoh, Ger. hoch, Goth. hauhs "high;" also Ger. Hügel "hill"); from PIE *koukos "hill." Boland "high," variants bâlâ
"up, above, high, elevated, height," borz "height, magnitude"
(it occurs also in the name of the mountain chain Alborz),
Lori dialect berg "hill, mountain;"
Mid.Pers. buland "high;" O.Pers. baršan- "height;"
Av. barəz- "high, mount," barezan- "height;" cf.
Skt. bhrant- "high;" L. fortis "strong" (Fr. & E. force);
O.E. burg, burh "castle, fortified place," from P.Gmc.
*burgs "fortress;" Ger. Burg "castle," Goth. baurgs "city,"
E. burg, borough, Fr. bourgeois, bourgeoisie, faubourg);
PIE base *bhergh- "high."
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High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS) HARPS Fr.: HARPS A high-precision echelle spectrograph built for exoplanet findings and installed on the ESO's 3.6m telescope at La Silla Observatory in Chile. The first light was achieved in February 2003. HARPS has discovered dozens of exoplanets, making it the most successful planet finder behind the Kepler space observatory. HARPS can detect movements as small as 0.97 m s-1 (3.5 km h-1), with an effective precision of the order of 30 cm s-1, and a → resolving power of 120,000 (Mayor et al., 2003, ESO Messengar 114, 20). → high; → accuracy; → radial; → velocity; → planet; → search; → -er. |
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 latitudes varunâhâ-ye bâlâ Fr.: hautes latitudes The latitude belt roughly between 60 and 90 degrees North and South. Also referred to as the polar region. |
high redshift object barâxt-e meh-sorxkib Fr.: objet à grand décalage vers le rouge A galaxy or quasar having a → redshift larger than about 0.8, corresponding to a → look-back time half the present age of the Universe. The qualifier "high" is, however, relative and depends on context and authors' assessment. |
high tide owpiš (#), kešand (#), madd (#) Fr.: marée haute The state of the → tide when at its highest level. Owpiš, from Persian Gulf dialects, literally "forward water," from ow,
variant of âb, → water, + piš
"→ forward." |
high water owpiš (#), barkešand (#), madd(#) Fr.: marée haute Also known as → high tide. |
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. |
high-excitation blob (HEB) žig-e por-barangizeš Fr.: A rare class of → H II regions in the → Magellanic Clouds. In contrast to the typical H II regions of the Magellanic Clouds, which are extended structures (sizes of several arc minutes corresponding to more than 50 pc, powered by a large number of exciting stars), HEBs are very dense and small regions (~ 4" to 10" in diameter corresponding to ~ 1-3 pc). They have a higher degree of → excitation ([O III] 5007Å /Hβ) with respect to the typical H II regions, and are, in general, heavily affected by local → dust. They are powered by a relatively smaller number of → massive stars. → high; → excitation; → blob. |
high-mass star setâre-ye meh-jerm (#), ~ por-jerm (#) Fr.: étoile massive A star whose mass exceeds 8 solar masses. Same as → massive star. → intermediate-mass star; → low-mass star. |
high-mass X-ray binary (HMXB) dorin-e partow-e iks-e por-jerm Fr.: binaire X de forte masse A member of one of the two main classes of → X-ray binary systems where one of the components is a neutron star or a black hole and the other one a → massive star. HMXBs emit relatively → hard X-rays and usually show regular pulsations, no X-ray bursts, and often X-ray eclipses. Their X-ray luminosity is much larger than their optical luminosity. In our Galaxy HMXBs are found predominantly in the → spiral arms and within the → Galactic disk in young → stellar populations less than 107 years old. One of the most famous HMXB is Cygnus X-1 which was the first stellar-mass black hole discovered. See also: → low-mass X-ray binary. |
high-power laser leyzer-e por-tavân (#) Fr.: laser de puissance A laser beam with the output power in the range 1012-1015 watts/cm2, capable of depositing kilo-joule order energies during nano-second time intervals in small volumes (about 1 mm3). High power lasers, which can produce temperatures of 10-50 million degrees and pressures of 10-100 million bars, are used to simulate astrophysical conditions in laboratories. leyzer, → laser; por "much, many, full," → full; tavân, → power. |
high-resolution observation nepâheš-e mehvâgošud Fr.: observation à haute résolution An observation that provides a particularly narrow, peaked image of a point source. → point spread function. → high; → resolution; → observation. |
high-velocity clouds (HVCs) abrhâ-ye tondrow Fr.: nuages à grande vitesse A population of neutral or partly ionized gas clouds in the → Galactic halo which are seen as high-altitude structures in the → atomic hydrogen → 21 cm emission at high radial velocities (vLSR > 100 km/sec). They have substantial neutral → column densities (> 1019 cm-2) and their → metallicities range from 0.1 to about 1.0 times solar. The distances to the majority of them remain unknown. They may represent the continuing infall of matter onto the → Local Group. See also → compact high-velocity clouds. |
highland kuhsâr (#) Fr.: région montagneuse, hauts plateaux A mountainous or elevated region; → plateau. Kuhsâr "mountainous, hilly area," from kuh, → mountain, + -sâr suffix denoting profusion, abundance, variant -zâr, → catastrophe. |
highly siderophile element (HSE) bonpâr-e besyâr âhandust Fr.: élément hautement sidérophile A → chemical element that is → geochemically characterized as having a strong → affinity to partition into → metals relative to → silicates. The highly siderophile elements, → ruthenium (Ru), → rhodium (Rh), → palladium (Pd), → rhenium (Re), → osmium (Os), → iridium (Ir), → platinum (Pt), and → gold (Au), are of interest to planetary scientists because they give insights into the early history of → accretion and → differentiation. HSEs prefer to reside in the metal of planetary cores. Therefore, the HSEs found in planetary → mantles are considered to be overabundant relative to their known preferences for metal over silicate. Therefore, it has been inferred that processes other than → equilibrium partitioning have been responsible for establishing the abundances of → mantle siderophiles. A detailed understanding of the absolute → concentrations and relative abundances of the HSEs may therefore give important insights into the earliest history of a planet (Jones et al., 2003, Chemical Geology 196, 21). From Gk. sidero-, from sideros "iron" + → -phile. |
lunar highland kuhsâr-e mângi Fr.: hauts plateaux lunaires A light color area on the → Moon, as contrasted with → lunar maria. Also called terra. |