ice point noqte-ye yax (#) Fr.: point de congélation The temperature at which a mixture of air-saturated pure water and pure ice may exist in equilibrium at a pressure of one standard atmosphere. |
iceberg yaxberg, kuh-e yax (#) Fr.: iceberg A large mass of floating or stranded ice that has broken away from a glacier; usually more than 5 m above sea level. Iceberg, half Anglicization, half adoption of Du. ijsberg "ice mountain," from ijs, → ice, + berg "mountain" (cf. Ger. Eisberg, Sw. isberg), from P.Gmc. *bergaz; cf. M.H.G. berc, O.H.G. berg "mountain;" cognate with Pers. boland, borz, berg, as below; PIE base *bheregh- "high, elevated." Yaxberg, from yax, → ice,
+ berg "mountain, hill," in Laki dialect, related to Pers.
boland "high," variants bâlâ
"up, above, high, elevated, height," borz "height, magnitude"
(it occurs also in the name of the mountain chain Alborz),
Laki 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." |
interstice andarjâ (#) Fr.: interstice 1) A minute gap between the adjacent parts of a body or
objects close together. From L. interstitium "space between; interval," from intersistere, from → inter- "between," + stem of stare "to stand," cognate with Pers. istâdan, → stand Andarjâ, literally "a place between," from andar "between," → inter-, + jâ, → place. |
JUpiter ICy moons Explorer (JUICE) Puyešgar-e Mânghâ-ye Yaxi-ye Hormoz Fr.: Jupiter ICy moons Explorer An interplanetary mission currently in development by the → European Space Agency planned for launch in 2020. It is aimed mainly at in-depth studies of three potentially ocean-bearing satellites, → Ganymede, → Europa, and → Callisto. JUICE will complete a unique tour of the Jupiter system including several flybys of each planet-sized world, culminating with orbit insertion around Ganymede, the largest moon in the Solar System, followed by nine months of operations in its orbit. JUICE will carry the most powerful scientific payload ever flown to the outer Solar System. It consists of 10 state-of-the-art instruments plus one experiment that uses the spacecraft telecommunication system with ground-based instruments. |
justice dâd, dâmandi, dâdgari, dâdgostari Fr.: justice 1) The quality of being just; righteousness, equitableness, or moral rightness. M.E., from O.Fr. justice "justice, legal rights, jurisdiction," from L. iustitia "righteousness, equity," from iustus "upright, → just." Dâd "justice, law" from Mid.Pers. dâd "law, justice,
scriptures with legal content;" related to Mid.- and Mod.Pers. daheš
"creation," dâdan "to give;" Av. dā- "to place upon, give;"
→ datum. |
lattice jâré Fr.: réseau 1) A regular geometric arrangement of points in a plane or in space. From O.Fr. latiz "lattice," from late "lath, board, plank, batten" (Fr. latte); cf. O.H.G. latta "lath." Jâré, from jarra "net; snare," Afghan jâli "reticulated garment," Tabari jarazin "grilled apparatus used in a watercourse to gather thatch and trash;" cf. Skt. jāla- "net, snare, lattice." |
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. |
Little Ice Age asr-e yax-e kucek Fr.: petit âge glaciaire A roughly 400-year period from the mid-16th through the mid-19th centuries when temperatures over much of Europe were unusually cold. Glaciers in the Alps advanced and European rivers froze much more often than during the past century. Harvests failed, livestock perished, and poor people suffered from famine and disease. The Little Ice Age coincided with two successive low → solar activity periods, the → Sporer minimum and the → Maunder minimum. |
nonlinear device dastgâh-e nâxatti Fr.: dispositif non-linéaire An electronic device whose output is not directly proportional to its input. For example, in a → diode the current is a nonlinear function of the voltage; its voltage-current characteristics do not obey → Ohm's law. |
pericenter pirâmarkaz Fr.: péricentre The point in the orbit of one component of a binary system which is closest to the center of mass of the system; opposite of → apocenter. |
practice 1) varzidan (#); 2) varzé (#) Fr.: 1) pratiquer; 2) pratique 1a) To do habitually or regularly. M.E. practisen, practizen; O.Fr. practiser "to practice," from M.L. practicare "to do, perform," from L.L. practicus "practical," from Gk. praktikos "practical." 1) Varzidan "to practice, perform; to accustom oneself to; to labor; to sow a field;"
Mid.Pers. warz- "to work, do, practice;"
Av. varəz- "to work, do, perform, exercise;" cf.
Gk. ergon "work;" Arm. gorc "work;" Lith. verziu "tie, fasten, squeeze,"
vargas "need, distress;" Goth. waurkjan; O.E. wyrcan "work,"
wrecan "to drive, hunt, pursue;" E. work;
PIE base *werg- "to work." |
service zâvari, zâvareš (#) Fr.: service 1) A helpful act by somebody for somebody else as a job, duty, or favor. M.E., from O.Fr. servise, from L. servitium "slavery, servitude," from servus "slave," servire "to serve," originally "be a slave;" cognate with Av. har- "to guard, watch," → server. Zâvari "service" (Dehxodâ) → server. |
service observing nepâheš bâ zâvari, ~ zâvareši Fr.: observation de service Observation approved by the selection committee of an observatory which is carried out by the staff astronomers of the observatory. → service; → observation. |
similar matrices mâtrishâ-ye hamânand (#) Fr.: matrices similaires Two → square matrices A and B that are related by B = X-1AX, where X is a square → nonsingular matrix. |
slice 1) qâc (#); 2) qâcidan Fr.: 1) tranche; 2) trancher 1) A thin, broad piece cut from something. O.Fr. escliz "splinter, fragment" (Fr. éclisse), a back-formation from esclicier "to splinter, shatter, smash;" cf. O.H.G. slihhan. Qâc, contraction of qârc, from karj "slice, a slice of melon; a piece cut out of the collar of a garment;" ultimately from Proto-Ir. *kartaka-, from *kart- "to cut," cf. Av. karət- "to cut;" Skt. kart- "to cut," karəta- "knife;" Mid.Pers. kârt, → knife. |
solstice xoristân (#) Fr.: solstice Either of the two points on the → ecliptic at which the apparent → longitude of the → Sun is 90° or 270°. Also the time at which the Sun is at either point. Solstices occur when the Earth's axis is oriented directly toward or away from the Sun, causing the Sun to reach its northernmost and southernmost extremes. → summer solstice, → winter solstice. M.E., from O.Fr. solstice, from L. solstitium "point at which the sun seems to stand still," from sol, → sun, cognate with Pers. xor, xoršid, hur, as below, + p.p. stem of sistere "to come to a stop, make stand still," akin to Pers. istâdan "to stand," as below. Xoristân, is composed of two components. The first one xor "sun," variant hur; Mid.Pers. xwar "sun;" Av. hū-, hvar- "sun;" cf. Skt. surya-, Gk. helios, L. sol, cognate with E. sun, as above; PIE base *sawel- "sun." The second component istân "standing," from istâdan "to stand;" Mid.Pers. êstâtan; O.Pers./Av. sta- "to stand, stand still; set;" Av. hištaiti; cf. Skt. sthā- "to stand;" Gk. histemi "put, place, weigh," stasis "a standing still;" L. stare "to stand;" Lith. statau "place;" Goth. standan; PIE base *sta- "to stand." |
summer solstice xoristân-e tâbestâni Fr.: solstice d'été The moment in the northern hemisphere when the → Sun attains its highest → declination of 23°26' (or 23°.44) with respect the → equator plane. It happens when the Earth's axis is orientated directly toward the Sun, on 21 or 22 June. During the northern solstice the Sun appears to be directly overhead at noon for places situated at → latitude 23.44 degrees north, known as the → tropic of Cancer. The summer solstice can occur at any moment during the day. Two successive summer solstices are shifted in time by about 6 h. The summer solstice in the northern hemisphere is the → winter solstice in the southern hemisphere. |
Torricelli's law qânun-e Torricelli Fr.: loi de Torricelli In fluid dynamics, a theorem that relates the speed of fluid flowing out of an opening to the height of fluid above the opening: v = (2gh)1/2, where v is the exit velocity of the water, h is the height of the water column, and g is the acceleration due to gravity (9.81 m/s2). It was later shown to be a particular case of → Bernoulli's theorem. After the Italian scientist Evangelista Torricelli (1608-1647), who found this relationship in 1643. |
twice dobâr (#) Fr.: deux fois Two times, as in succession; on two occasions. M.E. twies, from O.E. twiga, twigea "two times," from twi-, → two; cf. L. bis, Gk. dis, Skt. dvis, Av. biš. Dobâr, from do, → two, + bâr "time, fold," from Mid.Pers. bâr; Proto-Ir. *uara-; cf. Av. var- "to choose; to convince;" Skt. vāra- "time, turn." |
vertices târakhâ Fr.: sommets, vertex Plural of → vertex. → vertex. |