<< < ali fos mag mag mag tor > >>
fossil magnetic field meydân-e meqnâtisi-ye sangvâré, ~ ~ sangvâre-yi Fr.: champ magnétique fossile In a physical system, the → magnetic field belonging to an earlier magnetic process or event. A fossil magnetic field may be a vanished one or exist in relic forms. As an example, the solar magnetic field, which was present during the formation of the Sun, has disappeared over the last 4.6 billions years. |
frozen magnetic field line xatt-e meydân-e meqnâtisi-ye yax basté, ~ ~ ~ rocidé Fr.: ligne de champ magnétique gelée A → magnetic field line in a → fluid when the motion of the fluid carries the magnetic field along with it. |
geomagnetic zamin-meqnâtisi, zamin-meqnâti Fr.: géomagnétique Of or pertaining to → geomagnetism. |
geomagnetic activity žirandegi-ye zamin-meqnâtisi, ~ zamin-meqnâti Fr.: activité géomagnétique The natural variations in the → geomagnetic field due to interactions of the Earth's field and → magnetosphere with energetic particles from the Sun. → geomagnetic; → activity. |
geomagnetic excursion zocâr-e zamin-meqnâti Fr.: excursion géomagnétique A geophysical event, distinguished from the → magnetic reversal, in which the Earth's magnetic field departs for a relatively short time from its usual near axial configuration, without establishing a reversed direction. During the excursion the intensity and direction of the Earth's magnetic field undergo drastic changes. Palaeomagnetic measurements have revealed that since the last full reversal the Earth's magnetic field has, for brief intervals, deviated from the behavior expected during "normal" secular variation. → geomagnetic; → excursion. |
geomagnetic field meydân-e zamin-meqnâtisi, ~ zamin-meqnâti Fr.: champ géomagnétique The magnetic field that is generated within the Earth and extends out around the Earth. The intensity of the magnetic field at the Earth's surface is about 0.32 → gauss at the equator and 0.62 gauss at the north pole. → geomagnetic; → field. |
geomagnetic storm tufân-e zamin-meqnâtisi, ~ zamin-meqnâti Fr.: orage géomagnétique A violent disturbance of the Earth's magnetic field, distinct from regular diurnal variations, following a → solar flare or → coronal mass ejection. → geomagnetic; → storm. |
hydromagnetics hidromeqnâtik Fr.: hydromagnétisme Same as → magnetohydrodynamics. |
interplanetary magnetic field meydân-e meqnâtisi-ye andarsayyârei Fr.: champ magnétique interstellaire The magnetic field that is carried along with the solar wind and fills the solar system space. It is wound into a spiral structure by the rotation of the Sun. At the Earth's distance from the Sun, it has a strength of about 5 x 10-5 gauss. → interplanetary; → magnetic; → field. |
interstellar magnetic field meydân-e meqnâtisi-ye andaraxtari Fr.: champ magnétique interstellaire A large-scale, weak magnetic field, with an estimated strength of about 1 to 5 microgauss, that pervades the disk of the Milky Way Galaxy and controls the alignment of interstellar dust grains. → interstellar; → magnetic; → field. |
longitudinal magnetic field meydân-e meqnâtisi-ye derežnâyi Fr.: champ magnétique longitudinal 1) A → magnetic field whose lines of force
(→ line of force)
run parallel to the long axis of the → magnet.
Longitudinal magnetization
of a component can be accomplished using the longitudinal field set
up by a → coil or
→ solenoid. It can also be accomplished using
permanent magnets or electromagnets. → longitudinal; → magnetic; → field. |
magnetic meqnâtisi (#), meqnâti, âhanrobâyik Fr.: magnétique Of or pertaining to a magnet or magnetism. Meqnâtisi, meqnâti, from meqnâtis, → magnet; âhanrobâyik, from âhanrobâ, → magnet, + → -ik, → -ic. |
magnetic advection pahnbaz-e meqnâtisi Fr.: advection magnétique The transport of the magnetic field by a fluid. It is given by the term ∇ x (v x B) in the → induction equation. |
magnetic axis âse-ye meqnâtisi Fr.: axe magnétique The imaginary straight line joining the two → poles of a → magnet. |
magnetic bottle botri-ye meqnâtisi (#) Fr.: bouteille magnétique Any configuration of → magnetic fields used in the containment of a → plasma during controlled → thermonuclear reaction experiments. |
magnetic braking legâmeš-e meqnâtisi Fr.: freinage magnétique The process whereby a star which loses mass slows down under the action of its → magnetic field. The stellar material follows the → magnetic field lines extending well beyond the stellar surface. The material gain → angular momentum and the underlying object is slowed down. Magnetic braking is an efficient mechanism for removing angular momentum from the the rotating object. See also → disk locking. |
magnetic braking catastrophe negunzâr-e legâmeš-e meqnâtisi Fr.: catastrophe du freinage magnétique The failure of numerical star formation calculations to produce rotationally supported → Keplerian disks because of the → magnetic braking effect, when → magnetic fields of strengths comparable to those observed in → molecular clouds are accounted for. The formation and early evolution of disks is a long-standing fundamental problem in → star formation models. Early work in the field had concentrated on the simpler problem of disk formation from the → collapse of a rotating dense core in the absence of a magnetic field. However, dense star-forming cores are observed to be significantly magnetized. There is increasing theoretical evidence that disk formation is greatly modified, perhaps even suppressed, by a dynamically important magnetic field. This has been found in analytic studies, axisymmetric numerical models and in 3D calculations using → ideal magnetohydrodynamics. By contrast, recent observations suggest the presence of massive, 50-100 AU disks and evidence for associated → outflows in the earliest (→ class 0) stages of star formation around both low and high mass stars. Two primary solutions have been proposed: → turbulence and → non-ideal magnetohydrodynamics. Calculations of the collapse of a massive 100 Msun core have shown that 100 AU scale disk formation in the presence of strong magnetic fields was indeed possible, with some argument over whether this is caused by turbulent reconnection or another mechanism. Studies, using simulations of collapsing 5 Msun cores, have found that turbulence diffuses the strong magnetic field out of the inner regions of the core, and that the non-zero → angular momentum of the turbulence causes a misalignment between the rotation axis and the magnetic field. Both of these effects reduce the magnetic braking, and allow a massive disk to form (Wurster et al. 2016, arxiv/1512.01597 and references therein). → magnetic; → braking; → catastrophe. |
magnetic bremsstrahlung legâm-tâbeš-e meqâtisi Fr.: rayonnement de freinage magnétique Same as → synchrotron radiation. → magnetic; → bremsstrahlung. |
magnetic buoyancy bâlârâni-ye meqnâtisi Fr.: flottabilité magnétique The phenomenon whereby the presence of a → magnetic field can make a portion of → compressible fluid less dense than its surroundings, so that it floats upward under the influence of gravity. This magnetic buoyancy is thought, in fact, to be the mechanism by which magnetic flux tubes rise through the Sun's → convection zone and break at the surface in the form of → sunspots. The Sun's rotation would have a major effect on the rate at which these magnetic flux tubes rise. The rotation substantially lengthen the time taken for the flux tubes to reach the surface (D. J. Acheson, 1979, Nature 277, 41). |
magnetic cataclysmic binary dorin-e gatluri-ye meqnâtisi Fr.: binaire cataclysmique magnétique A cataclysmic binary in which the white dwarf primary has a strong magnetic field that radically affects the accretion flow in the system. → polar → magnetic; → cataclysmic; → binary. |
<< < ali fos mag mag mag tor > >>