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nebular line xatt-e miqi Fr.: raie nébulaire A → forbidden line that is found in the spectra of → interstellar → ionized gas. The nebular lines are emitted by several atomic species (e.g. O, O+, O++, N+, S++) and correspond to the → transition from the electronic → metastable state 1D to the → ground state 3P. Examples are the doubly ionized oxygen lines [O III] at 4959 and 5007 Å (→ [O III] doublet) and the ionized nitrogen doublet [N II] at 6548 and 6583 Å. See also → auroral line; → transauroral line. |
Neumann line xatt-e Neumann Fr.: raie de Neumann In → iron meteorites, any of very fine parallel lines that cross each other at various angles. They can be seen after cutting diagonally across the sample. Named after Johann G. Neumann, who discovered them in 1848 in the iron meteorite Braunau, which fell in 1847; → line. |
nodal line xatt-e gerehhâ Fr.: ligne des noeuds The line connecting the ascending and descending nodes of an orbit. |
nonhomogeneous linear differential equation hamugeš-e degarsâne-yi-ye xatti nâhamgen Fr.: équation différentielle linéaire non homogène A → linear differential equation if Q(x)≠ 0 on interval I. → nonhomogeneous; → linear; → differential; → equation. |
nonlinear nâxatti (#) Fr.: non-linéaire Not a linear function of the relevant variables. |
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. |
nonlinear dynamics tavânik-e nâxatti Fr.: dynamique non-linéaire Same as → chaos. |
nonlinear instability nâpâydâri-ye nâxatti Fr.: instabilité non-linéaire The instability of a physical or mathematical system that arises from the nonlinear nature of relevant variables and their interactions within the system. → nonlinear; → instability. |
nonlinear system râžmân-e nâxatti Fr.: système non-linéaire A system in which small changes can result in large effects, and large changes in small effects. |
nonlinearity nâxattigi Fr.: non-linéarité The property, condition, or state of being → nonlinear. |
off-line ap-tân, ap-xatt Fr.: Of computers, operating independently of, or disconnected from, an associated computer. |
OH line xatt-e OH Fr.: raie de OH Emission or absorption lines on an electromagnetic spectrum generated by hydroxyl, → OH molecules. At present, four principal lines are known in the radio domain at frequencies of 1612, 1665, 1667, and 1720 MHz, or wavelengths of approximately 18 centimeters. |
on-line bar-xatt Fr.: en ligne The state when two or more devices are directly connected and are communicating efficiently. |
on-line reduction bâzhâzeš-e bar-xatt Fr.: réduction enligne Preliminary reduction of observational data at a telescope simultaneously with their acquisition. |
open magnetic field line xatt-e bâz-e meydân-e meqnâtisi-ye Fr.: ligne ouverte de champ magnétique In the context of solar physics, a → magnetic field line when it crosses the solar surface only once, i.e., when it goes from surface to infinity. This is the case at a sufficiently large scale in → coronal holes. This is mostly not the case in → active regions. |
orthogonal lines xatthâ-ye ardâkonj Fr.: droites orthogonales Perpendicular lines. → orthogonal; → line. |
path line xatt-e pah Fr.: trajectoire particulaire The path followed by an individual particle of fluid over an interval of time. It contrasts with the → streamline that represents an instantaneous picture of the motion of particles. |
permitted line xatt-e parzâmidé Fr.: raie permise An ordinary spectral line emitted by atoms undergoing energy transitions that are allowed by the selection rules of quantum mechanics. → forbidden lines. |
pipeline xatt-e lulé (#) Fr.: pipeline, conduite, gazoduc, oléoduc, canalisation 1) A long tubular conduit or series of pipes used to transport crude oil,
natural gas, water, etc., often underground and over great distances. |
plumb line šâqul (#) Fr.: fil à plomb A cord with a weight attached to one end, used to verify a true vertical alignment or to find the depth of water. Šâqul, variants šâhul, sâhul, probably from sahi + suffix -ul, variant -âl. The first element sahi "upright, right," variants (Tabari, Torbat-Heydariyeyi: šax) "right, upright, straight, level," colloquial Pers. šaq (o raq = râst) "upright, erect." For the second element → -âl. |
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