<< < -it ang bis cit cre dim ele flu gra ima iso lum men nec opt per pri rad rel sim spe the uti vis > >>
relativity theory negare-ye bâzânigi Fr.: théorie de la relativité The → theory of relativity. → theory; → relativity. |
reliability ostigâni Fr.: fiabilité 1) The state or quality of being reliable. |
repulsive gravity gerâni-ye vâzanadé Fr.: gravité répulsive In → general relativity, the gravity resulting from a → negative pressure. See also → cosmological constant. |
resistivity baristmandi Fr.: resistivité A property of a → conductor which is defined as the ratio of the → electric intensity (E) to the → current density (J): ρ = E/J. The greater the resistivity, the greater the intensity needed to establish a given current density, or the smaller the current density for a given intensity. A "perfect" conductor would have zero resistivity, and a "perfect" → insulator an infinite resistivity. |
responsibility pâsoxdâri Fr.: responsabilité 1) The state or fact of being responsible, answerable, or accountable for something
within one's power, control, or management. → responsible; → -ity. |
responsivity pâsoxandegi Fr.: responsivité A performance criterion for an electronic detector, the ratio of the detector's electrical output to its optical input. → responsive; → -ity. |
rigidity saxtpâyi Fr.: rigidité 1) The quality or state of being → rigid.
See also → modulus of rigidity. |
Rosseland mean opacity kederi-ye miyângin-e Rosseland Fr.: opacité moyenne de Rosseland The → opacity of a gas of given composition, temperature, and density averaged over the various wavelengths of the radiation being absorbed and scattered. The radiation is assumed to be in → thermal equilibrium with the gas, and hence have a → blackbody spectrum. Since → monochromatic opacity in stellar plasma has a complex frequency dependence, the Rosseland mean opacity facilitates the analysis. Denoted κR, it is defined by: 1/κR = (π/4σT3) ∫(1/kν) (∂B/∂T)νdν, summed from 0 to ∞, where σ is the → Stefan-Boltzmann constant, T temperature, B(T,ν) the → Planck function, and kν monochromatic opacity (See Rogers, F.J., Iglesias, C. A. Radiative atomic Rosseland mean opacity tables, 1992, ApJS 79, 507). Named after Svein Rosseland (1894-1985), a Norwegian astrophysicist, who obtained the expression in 1924; → mean; → opacity. |
rotational velocity tondâ-ye catxeši Fr.: vitesse de rotation The velocity of a → rotational motion; same as → angular velocity. → rotational; → velocity. |
scalability marpel-paziri Fr.: scalibilité, extension graduelle, évolutivité,
facteur d'échelle, extensibilité The ability of something, especially a computer system, to adapt to increased demands. |
scalar density cagâli-ye marpeli Fr.: densité scalaire A → tensor density of → order 0. |
Schwarzschild singularity takini-ye Schwarzschild Fr.: singularité de Schwarzschild A region of infinite → space-time curvature postulated to lie within a → black hole. |
scientificity dânešigi Fr.: scientificité The quality of the practices and theories that aim at establishing reproducible regularities in phenomena by using experimental method and providing a clearly formulated description. → scientific + → -ity. |
secular instability nâpâydâri-ye diryâz Fr.: instabilité séculaire Instability caused by a slow dissipation of energy. → secular; → instability. |
secular stability pâydâri-ye diryâz Fr.: stabilité séculaire 1) The condition in which the equilibrium configuration of a system is
stable over long periods of time. |
security zilegi Fr.: sécurité 1) Freedom from care, anxiety, or doubt; well-founded confidence. |
self-gravity xod-gerâni Fr.: auto-gravité The → gravitational attraction of a system of masses, such of a planet, that allows the system to be held together by their mutual gravity. Self-gravity between atoms allows a → star to hold together, despite tremendous temperature and pressure. Similarly, to be considered a → planet, a body must have enough mass so that its self-gravity pulls it into a near-spherical shape. |
self-similarity xod-hamânadi Fr.: auto-similarité The property of being → self-similar. → self-; → similarity. |
sensibility hess-paziri Fr.: sensibilité 1) Capacity for sensation or feeling; responsiveness to sensory stimuli. |
sensitivity hessmandi Fr.: sensibilité 1) The required brightness for an object in order to be detected by an observing instrument.
A highly sensitive telescope can detect dim objects, while a telescope
with low sensitivity can detect only bright ones. State noun from → sensitive. |
<< < -it ang bis cit cre dim ele flu gra ima iso lum men nec opt per pri rad rel sim spe the uti vis > >>