<< < "no abs acc ads amb ann arg ato B-m bla bro cat Che co- col com com con con con cor cro dec def dep dif dil dis dis dur eje emi equ evo exp fab fis fra fus geo gra gra har Huy ima ind inf ins int int ion jum law lin low mag mat mic Moo nec non nuc obs opp Ori par per per phy ple pop pre pro pro pul rad rad Ray rec reg rep Ric rot Sch sec Sha soc spe sta ste sub syn the tot tri uni Ven vis wor > >>
discrimination vâkarbeš Fr.: discrimination 1) An act or instance of discriminating, or of making a distinction. Verbal noun of → discriminate. |
discussion bahs Fr.: discussion An act or instance of discussing; → consideration or → examination by → argument, → comment, etc., especially to explore solutions; informal debate (Dictionary.com). Verbal noun from → discuss. |
disintegration vâpâši, forupâši (#) Fr.: desintégration The breaking up of a body into fragments. For example, that of an unstable nuclei either spontaneously or as a result of bombardment by fast-moving particles, or the breaking up of a comet. Disintegration, verbal noun of disintegrate, from → dis- + → integration. Vâpâši, forupâši, from vâ-, frou-→ de- + pâši, noun of pâšidan→ disperse. |
disjunction vâjuheš Fr.: disjonction A → proposition of the form "A or B" (A ∨ B), where A and B are themselves propositions. A disjunction is → true when one or the other of its components (called → disjuncts) is true, and false otherwise. |
disk accretion farbâl-e gerde-yi, ~ pat geredé, ~ ~ disk Fr.: accrétion par disque An accretion process involving an → accretion disk. |
disk partition parkeš-e disk, ~ gerde Fr.: partition de disque A logical division of a hard disk that is treated as a separate unit by operating systems and file systems. |
disk population porineš-e gerdé, ~ disk Fr.: population disque Of a spiral galaxy, those stars that lie in a flattened disk and move in nearly circular orbits around its centre. They are Population I stars of all ages up to the age of the disk, but in general are younger than stars in → halo population. → disk; population, from L.L. populationem "a people, multitude," from populatio, from populare "to inhabit," from populus "people," related to plebes "the common people," cf. Gk. plethos "people, multitude, great number," from PIE base *pel- "to be full;" Mod.Pers. por "full," O.Pers. paru- "much, many," Av. pouru- "much, many," pərəna- "full," par- "to fill," Skt. puru-, Gk. polus, O.E. full "completely, full," from P.Gmc. *fullaz, O.H.G. fol, Ger. voll, Goth. full. Like Gk., Pers. uses the concepts of "multitude, many, full" to denote "people, group, herd, flock". The following examples are all terms derived from O.Pers. paru- "much, many," Av. par- "to fill," pouru- "much, many," pərəna- "full" (Mod.Pers. por "full"): literary Pers. bâré "herd, flock," parré "a rank or file of soldiers, a circular disposition of troops," Lori, Qâyeni bor "group, tribe, herd," Torbat-Heydariyeyi, Qomi borr "heap, bundle, group," Qomi borreh "group, assemblage of people," Pashtu parrak "flock, herd," Urdu para "flock, herd," Lârestâni baila "group, tribe," Tabari balik "herd, flock." With this introduction, porineš "population," verbal noun of porinidan "to populate," infinitive of porin "populous," from por "mutitude, many, full" + -in attribution suffix. |
disk truncation kolkard-e disk, ~ gerdé Fr.: troncature de disque In models of magnetized → accretion disks, the process whereby the disk is disrupted at a radius where the → magnetic pressure overcomes the → ram pressure of the accreted material. This occurs at a distance typically 3-7 stellar radii, below the → corotation radius. → disk; → truncation. |
dispersion pâšeš (#) Fr.: dispersion 1) The resolution of white light into its component wavelengths,
either by → refraction or by → diffraction.
Dispersion is actually an effect in which radiations having → different
wavelengths travel at different speeds in the medium. Since
the → angle of refraction
of each radiation vary as a function of
its → wavelength, the component waves deviate from each other. Verbal noun of → disperse. |
dispersion curve xam-e pâšeš Fr.: courbe de dispersion A graph displaying the variation of the → refractive index of a substance against the wavelength of the electromagnetic wave passing through the substance. → dispersion; → curve. |
dispersion equation hamugeš-e pâšeš Fr.: équation de dispersion An equation representing the variation of → refractive index as a function of → wavelength; for example → Cauchy's equation and → Sellmeier's equation. → dispersion; → equation. |
dispersion measure andâze-ye pâšeš Fr.: mesure de dispersion A parameter used in radio astronomy which describes the amount of dispersion in a radio signal due to its passage through an intervening plasma. It is proportional to the product of the interstellar electron density and the distance to the source. → dispersion; → measure. |
dispersion relation bâzâneš-e pâšeš Fr.: relation de dispersion An equation that describes how the → angular frequency, ω, of a wave depends on its → wave number, k. For the simplest of waves, where the speed of propagation, c, is a constant, ω(k) = ck. If the → phase velocity depends on k, that is for a dispersive medium, the function ω(k) is nonlinear. → dispersion; → relation. |
disqualification vâcunâyeš Fr.: disqualification An act or instance of disqualifying; the state of being disqualified. → disqualify; → -tion. |
disruption gosixt Fr.: rupture Forcible division into pieces of an object. → tidal disruption. From L. disruptio "a breaking asunder," noun of action from p.p. stem of disrumpere "break apart, split, shatter, break to pieces," from → dis- "apart" + rumpere "to break." Gosixt, past stem of gosixtan "to tear away, to beark off." |
dissection vâsekanješ Fr.: dissection The act of dissecting. |
dissipation eftâl, eftâleš Fr.: dissipation The loss of energy over time by a → dynamical system, typically due to the action of → friction or → turbulence. The lost energy is converted into heat, raising the temperature of the system. See also: → Ohmic dissipation. → viscous dissipation. Noun form of → dissipate. |
dissociation vâhazeš Fr.: dissociation General: An act or instance of dissociating; the state of being dissociated. From → dis- + (as)sociation, → association. |
dissociation energy kâruž-e vâhazeš Fr.: énergie de dissociation Energy required to dissociate a molecule. → dissociate. → dissociation; → energy. |
dissociative recombination bâzmiyâzeš-e vâhazeši Fr.: recombinaison dissociative A process where a positive molecular ion recombines with an electron, and as a result it dissociates into two neutral products. For example, AB+ + e-→ A + B, where e- is an electron, AB+ is a diatomic or polyatomic molecular ion, and A and B are the neutral fragmentation products. Dissociative recombination is the dominant recombination process in planetary ionospheres and interstellar clouds. → dissociative; → recombination. |
<< < "no abs acc ads amb ann arg ato B-m bla bro cat Che co- col com com con con con cor cro dec def dep dif dil dis dis dur eje emi equ evo exp fab fis fra fus geo gra gra har Huy ima ind inf ins int int ion jum law lin low mag mat mic Moo nec non nuc obs opp Ori par per per phy ple pop pre pro pro pul rad rad Ray rec reg rep Ric rot Sch sec Sha soc spe sta ste sub syn the tot tri uni Ven vis wor > >>