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accretion time zamân-e farbâl, direš-e ~ Fr.: temps d'accrétion The time necessary for the → accretion of a definite amount of mass with a fixed → accretion rate. |
accusation mârzeš Fr.: accusation A charge or claim that someone has done something illegal or wrong; the action or process of accusing someone (OxfordDictionaries.com). |
acoustic wave equation hamugeš-e mowj-e sedâyi Fr.: équation de l'onde acoustique A → differential equation that describes the time evolution of the → scalar potential of the field φ. It is expressed by: ∇2φ = (1/c2)∂2φ/∂t2, where c is → velocity of → longitudinal waves and ∇2 is the → Laplacian operator. |
action žireš, koneš (#) Fr.: action 1) The process or state of acting or of being active. Action, from O.Fr. action, from L. actionem, from agere "to do," → act. Žireš, verbal noun from žir stem of žiridan "to act;" → act. Koneš, noun from kardan "to do, to make," Mid.Pers. kardan, O.Pers./Av. kar- "to do, make, build," Av. kərənaoiti "makes," cf. Skt. kr- "to do, to make," krnoti "makes," karma "act, deed;" PIE base kwer- "to do, to make." |
action at a distance žireš az dur Fr.: action à distance The instantaneous action of a body on another body independently of the distance separating them. The description of → gravity by → Newton's law and → electrostatics by → Coulomb's law are examples of action at a distance. According to Newton, → gravitation acts directly and instantaneously between two objects. For example, if the Sun should suddenly break apart, the Earth's orbit would be affected instantaneously. However, action at a distance violates the → principle of relativistic causality. According to → general relativity, gravitational effects travel at the → speed of light. For modern physics there is no instantaneous action at a distance. |
action variable vartande-ye žireš Fr.: variable d'action The time integral associated with the evolution of a physical system in the phase space. |
activation žirâneš Fr.: activation 1) The process of inducing or creating a state of → activity. |
activation energy kâruž-e žirâneš Fr.: énergie d'activation Chemistry: The minimum amount of energy that is required to activate → atoms or → molecules to a condition in which they can undergo a → chemical reaction. Most reactions involving neutral molecules cannot take place at all until they have acquired the energy needed to stretch, bend, or otherwise distort one or more → bonds. In most cases, the activation energy is supplied by → thermal energy. → activation; → energy. |
active region nâhiye-ye žirâ Fr.: région active An area of the Sun exhibiting → solar activity with the presence of → sunspots, → flares, → faculae, → prominences, and other phenomena associated with intense magnetic fields. |
actualization živandeš, živandkard Fr.: actualisation The act or process of actualizing. |
actuation baržireš Fr.: actionnement, déclenchement The act or process of putting into action; activation. Verbal noun of → actuate. |
acuity of vision tiznâ-ye did Fr.: acuité visuelle The ability of the → eye to see separately two points close to each other. It is a measure of the → resolving power of the eye's → optical system and depends on the density of cells in the → retina. The maximum acuity of the normal human eye is around 0.5 minutes of arc. |
adaptation niyâveš Fr.: adaptation 1) The act or process of adapting. → adapt. |
adaptation of the eye niyâveš-e cašm Fr.: adaptation de l'oeil Physiological process whereby the eye adjusts its sensitivity for different levels of illumination. → adaptation, → eye. |
adaption niyâveš Fr.: adaptation Same as → adaptation. → adaptation. |
addition bardâyeš Fr.: addition The operation of combining two or more quantities to obtain a third quantity called their → sum. The result of adding. Verbal noun of → add. |
addition sign nešân-e bardâyeš Fr.: signe d'addition The → plus sign +. It is believed to be a shortened form of the letters e and t in the L. word et, which, in early German manuscripts was the term for addition. The signs + and - were first used by Johann Wiedmann in 1489. |
adhesion âduseš Fr.: adhésion 1) The act or state of adhering; state of being adhered or united. |
adiabatic initial conditions butârhâ-ye âqâzin-e bidarrow Fr.: conditions initiales adiabatiques The assumption whereby the density fluctuations in the very → early Universe would be produced by compressing or decompressing of all components of a homogeneous Universe. The adiabatic initial conditions lead to coherent oscillations in the form of peaks in the → temperature anisotropy spectrum. See also → acoustic peak, → baryon acoustic oscillation. |
adoption baropteš Fr.: adoption The act of adopting. The state of being adopted. |
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