<< < "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 > >>
emission gosil (#) Fr.: émission In an atom, a characteristic amount of energy radiated (as line emission) when an electron moves from an outer orbit to an inner orbit around the nucleus, corresponding to the lost energy of the electron. From L. emissionem "a sending out," from emiss-, stem of emittere "send forth," from → ex- "out" + mittere "to send." Gosil, variant gosi "sending away, dismission;" Mid.Pers. wisé "to despatch" (Parthian Mid.Pers. wsys- "to despatch;" Buddhist Mid.Pers. wsydy "to despatch;" Sogdian 'ns'yd- "to exhort"), from Proto-Iranian *vi-sid- "to despatch, send off," from prefix vi- "apart, away, out," + *sid- "to call." |
emission band bând-e gosili Fr.: bande d'émission In a spectrum, a combination of several closely spaced, often unresolved, → emission lines occurring across a limited range of wavelengths. |
emission coefficient hamgar-e gosil Fr.: coefficient d'émission Electromagnetic flux emitted by a source per unit volume per unit time. → emission; → coefficient. |
emission feature ârang-e gosil Fr.: motif d'émission Any emission mark in the spectrum of a celestial object resulting from line formation or of unknown origin. |
emission line xatt-e gosili (#) Fr.: raie d'émission A bright line in the electromagnetic spectrum of a radiating substance caused by emission at a particular wavelength. |
emission measure andâze-ye gosil Fr.: mesure d'émission The product of the square of the electron density times the linear size of the emitting region (in parsecs). |
emission nebula miq-e gosil-i Fr.: nébuleuse en émission An ionized nebula whose spectrum consists of → emission lines. → planetary nebula; → H II region. |
emission spectrum binâb-e gosili (#) Fr.: spectre d'émission A spectrum consisting of emission lines, produced when the light does not undergo absorption between the source and the spectrograph. |
encryption darnehâneš (#) Fr.: cryptage A process that transforms data into another format in such a way that only specific individual(s) can reverse the transformation. Encryption is for maintaining data confidentiality. See also → decryption and → encoding. |
energy generation equation hamugeš-e âzâneš-e kâruž Fr.: équation de génération d'énergie Of a stellar → nuclear fusion, the equation describing the → energy generation rate as a function of → density and → temperature. → energy; → generation; → equation. |
energy generation rate nerx-e âzâneš-e kâruž Fr.: taux de génération d'énergie Of a stellar → nuclear fusion, the energy produced per unit mass per unit time, usually denoted ε (erg g-1s-1). The general form of the energy generation equation is: ε = ε0ρλTν, where ε0, ρ, and λ are constants over some efficiently restricted range of → temperature T, → density ρ, and → chemical composition. The temperature exponent ν is about 4, 15, and 40 for → proton-proton chain, → CNO cycle, and → triple alpha process, respectively. → energy; → generation; → rate. |
epicyclic oscillation naveš-e apicarxe-yi Fr.: oscillation épicyclique In a → disk galaxy, the motion of a star about the orbital → guiding center when it is displaced radially. See also → epicyclic frequency, → epicyclic theory. → epicyclic; → oscillation. |
epoch of reionization (EoR) zime-ye bâzyoneš Fr.: époque de réionisation → epoch; → reionization. |
epoch of thermalization zime-ye yekgarmâyi Fr.: époque de thermalisation The period during the → early Universe before the → recombination era when the photons were hot enough to ionize hydrogen. The density was so high that the interactions between → matter and → radiation were very numerous. Therefore, matter and photons were in constant contact and their → temperatures were the same. As a result, the radiation became → thermalized, i.e. the → electromagnetic spectrum of the radiation became that of a → blackbody, a process called → thermalization. Since the time of recombination the photons of → cosmic background radiation have been free to travel uninhibited by interactions with matter. Thus, their distribution of energy is a perfect → blackbody curve, as predicted by the → Big Bang theory and shown by several observations, such as → Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE), → Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), and → Planck Satellite. → epoch; → thermalization. |
equalization hamugsâzi Fr.: égalisation; équalisation The act of making equal or uniform. Noun of equalize. |
equation hamugeš Fr.: équation A statement asserting the equality of two numbers or two expressions. It consists of two parts, called sides or members of the equation, separated by the Same as → equality sign. From L. æquation- "an equalizing," noun of → equate. Verbal noun of hamugidan, → equate. |
equation of motion hamugeš-e jonbeš Fr.: équation de mouvement 1) Any equation that describes the motion of objects, i.e., variation of
velocity, distance covered, acceleration, etc., as a function of time;
e.g., V = V0 +
at, S = Vt + (1/2)at2. |
equation of state hamugeš-e hâlat Fr.: équation d'état In physics and thermodynamics, the equation that describes the relationship between pressure, density, and temperature, e.g. → ideal gas law, → van der Waals equation, → polytropic process, → virial equation of state. |
equation of state parameter pârâmun-e hamugeš-e hâlat Fr.: paramètre de l'équation d'état In cosmology, a → dimensionless parameter introduced by the → equation of state representing the ratio of the pressure to the energy density of a fluid, such as the → dark energy: w = p/ρ. The → deceleration or → acceleration of an → expanding Universe depends on this parameter (→ accelerating Universe). A number of numerical values of this parameter are as follows: for the → cosmological constant: w = -1, for → non-relativistic matter (present-day → baryons): w = 0, and for → relativistic matter (photons, neutrinos): w = +1/3. Together with Ω(dark energy) and Ω(matter), w provides a three-parameter description of the dark energy. The simplest parametrization of the dark energy is w = constant, although w might depend on → redshift. |
equation of the equinoxes hamugeš-e hamugânhâ Fr.: équation des équinoxes The difference between → apparent sidereal time and → mean sidereal time. It is due to the nutation of the Earth's polar axis of rotation about its precessional motion. It ranges from +0.8 to +1.2 seconds. Also known as → nutation in right ascension. |
<< < "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 > >>