elemental abundance farâvâni-ye bonpâr, ~ onsor Fr.: abondance élémentaire, ~ d'un élément Emission nebulae: The relative amount of a given → chemical element in an ionized nebula with respect to another element, usually → hydrogen. Elemental abundance ratios of → emission nebulae are obtained either by adding the observed → ionic abundances of the element or by using → ionization correction factors. Same as → total abundance. Elemental, from M.L. elementalis, → element + -al; abundance, from O.Fr. abundance, from L. abundantia "fullness," from abundare "to overflow," from L. ab- "away" + undare "to surge," from unda "water, wave;" → abundance. |
fundamental bonyâdin (#) Fr.: fondamental 1) Being an original or primary source. L.L. fundamentalis "of the foundation," from L. fundamentum "foundation," from fundare "to found." Bonyâdin, adj. of bonyâd "foundation, basis," from *bondâd (Mid.Pers. bune dâtak "foundation, basis"), from bon "basis; root; foundation; bottom" (Mid.Pers. bun "root; foundation; beginning," Av. būna- "base, depth," cf. Skt. bundha-, budhná- "base, bottom," Pali bunda- "root of tree") + dâd "given," from dâdan "to give" (Mid.Pers. dâdan "to give," O.Pers./Av. dā- "to give, grant, yield," dadāiti "he gives;" Skt. dadáti "he gives," Gk. didomi "I give," tithenai "to put, set, place;" L. dare "to give, offer;" Rus. delat "to do;" O.H.G. tuon, Ger. tun, O.E. don "to do"). |
fundamental constant pâyâ-ye bonyâdin (#) Fr.: constante fondamentale A physical constant that cannot be expressed in terms of other constants of nature, such as the charge of the electron. → fundamental; → constant. |
fundamental force niru-ye bonyâdin (#) Fr.: force fondamentale Same as the → fundamental interaction. → fundamental; → force. |
fundamental frequency basâmad-e bonyâdin (#) Fr.: fréquence fondamentale The lowest frequency in a complex wave. → fundamental; → frequency. |
fundamental interaction andaržireš-e bonyâdin Fr.: interaction fondamentale Any of the four interactions in nature between bodies of matter and that are mediated by one or more particles. Also called the → fundamental force. In order of decreasing strength, the four fundamental interactions are the → strong interaction, the → electromagnetic interaction, the → weak interaction, and the → gravitational interaction. → fundamental; → interaction. |
fundamental particle zarre-ye bonyâdin (#) Fr.: particule élémentaire Same as → elementary particle. → fundamental; → particle. |
fundamental star setâré-ye bonyâdin Fr.: étoile fondamentale A relatively bright star for which coordinates and proper motion have been determined to a very high degree of accuracy. → fundamental; → star. |
instrumental sâzâli Fr.: instrumentale Of, relating to, or performed by or with one or more instruments. Adj. of → instrument. |
instrumental broadening pahneš-e sâzâli Fr.: élargissement instrumental The broadening of a point source caused by the response functions of the telescope and the instrument used. → instrumental; → broadening. |
instrumental flexure caftegi-ye sâzâl Fr.: flexion d'instrument An image defect caused by the mechanical flexure of materials; for example the curved-shape image of a long slit in a spectrograph. → instrumental; → flexure. |
instrumental magnitude borz-e sâzâli Fr.: magnitude instrumentale The magnitude derived directly using → Pogson's relation. The instrumental magnitude depends on → detector→ sensitivity, telescope → aperture, exact filter → bandpass, etc. It must be → calibrated to some standard → photometric system. → instrumental; → magnitude. |
instrumental profile farâpâl-e sâzâli Fr.: profil instrumental The shape of instrument's response to the input signal. The Fourier transform of the source function by the instrument function. → instrumental; → profile. |
instrumental response function karyâ-ye pâsox-e sâzâl Fr.: fonction de la réponse instrumentale The mathematical form of the way an instrument affects the input signal. → instrumental; → response; → function. |
instrumentalism sâzâlbâvari Fr.: instrumentalisme In the philosophy of science, the pragmatic view that a scientific theory is no more than a useful instrument or tool for getting our experiences in some order. → instrumental; → -ism. |
instrumentalist sâzâlgar Fr.: instrumentaliste An astronomer, engineer, or technician who is concerned with the construction of astronomical instruments. → instrumental + → -ist. |
mental menti, mentâl Fr.: mental Of or pertaining to the → mind. M.E., from M.Fr. mental, from L. mentalis "of the mind," from mens (genitive mentis) "mind," from PIE root *men- "to think." |
mentality mentigi Fr.: mentalité 1) Mental capacity or endowment. |