chemical composition hamneheš-e šimik Fr.: composition chimique The identities, and relative abundances of the → chemical elements or → compounds that make up a substance. → chemical; → composition. |
chemical compound hamnât-e šimiyâyi Fr.: composé chimique A substance whose molecules are made up of atoms of at least two different elements. |
chemical element bonpâr-e šimiyâyi (#), onsor-e ~ (#) Fr.: élément chimique A substance which consists entirely of atoms of the same → atomic number and cannot be decomposed or changed into another substance using chemical means. Currently 118 chemical elements are known, the most abundant being → hydrogen. → periodic table. |
chemical enrichment pordâri-ye šimiyâyi Fr.: enrichissement chimique The → process by which the relative → abundance of a given → chemical element or → species in an → astrophysical object is increased. For example the the → increase of the → heavy element content of the → interstellar medium due to → stellar evolution. → chemical; → enrichment. |
chemical equation hamugeš-e šimiyâyi Fr.: équation chimique The symbolic representation of a chemical reaction where the formulae of the → reactants are placed on the left and the formulae of → products on the right of an arrow. |
chemical evolution fargašt-e šimiyâyi (#) Fr.: évolution chimique A cumulative change in the chemical properties, or more specifically, the relative abundances of chemical elements in an astrophysical system. |
chemical mixing âmizeš-e šimiyâyi, ~ šimik Fr.: mélange chimique |
chemical potential tavand-e šimik Fr.: potentiel chimique For a given component in a → gas mixture, the change in → Gibbs free energy (G) with respect to change in amount of the component (n), when pressure, temperature, and amounts of other components remain constant: ∂G/∂n. Components are in equilibrium if their chemical potentials are equal. |
chemical reaction vâžireš-e šimiyâyi, vâkoneš-e ~ Fr.: réaction chimique A → change or → transformation in which a → substance → decomposes, → combines with other → substances, or interchanges constituents with other substances. |
chemical separation jodâyi-ye šimiyâyi Fr.: séparation chimique The physical processes that can cause certain elements to migrate in a → stellar atmosphere. These processes are thought to be important in creating the chemical peculiarities seen in → Am stars and → Ap stars. → chemical; → separation. |
chemical species âraz-e šimiyâyi Fr.: espèce chimiique A set of chemically → identical → atomic or → molecular entities. |
chemically peculiar star setâre-ye šimikâné afd Fr.: étoile chimiquement particulière A → main sequence star of
→ spectral type A or B
(→ A-type star, → B-type star)
identified by the presence of anomalously strong or weak
→ absorption lines of certain elements
in their spectra.
CP stars have been divided into four main classes on the basis of their
spectra: 1) non-magnetic metallic-lined (CP1,
→ Am star), magnetic (CP2,
→ Ap star), non-magnetic mercury-manganese (CP3,
→ HgMn star), and
helium-weak (CP4, → He-weak star). |
complex dynamical variable vartande-ye tavânik-e hamtâft Fr.: variable dynamique complexe A → dynamical variable which has an → imaginary number part. |
dynamical tavânik Fr.: dynamique Of or pertaining to force or power; of or pertaining to force related to motion. Adj. from → dynamics. |
dynamical age senn-e tavânik Fr.: âge dynamique Age based on dynamical properties of a system. For example, the time derived for a system to evolve from an initial state to its present state, based on velocity and dimension (size) measurements. |
dynamical disruption gosixt-e tavânik Fr.: rupture dynamique The process whereby a → bound system, such as a → binary system or a → globular cluster, is broken apart. → dynamical; → disruption. |
dynamical equilibrium tarâzmandi-ye tavânik Fr.: équilibre dynamique Of a physical system, a condition in which the parts of the system are in continuous motion, but they move in opposing directions at equal rates so that the system as a whole remains in equilibrium. → dynamical; → equilibrium. |
dynamical friction mâleš-e tavânik Fr.: frottement dynamique The gravitational interaction between a relatively massive body and a field of much less massive bodies through which the massive body travels. As a result, the moving body loses → momentum and → kinetic energy. An example of dynamical friction is the sinking of massive stars to the center of a → star cluster, a process called → mass segregation. Dynamical friction plays an important role in → stellar dynamics. It was first quantified by Chandrasekhar (1943). |
dynamical law qânun-e tavânik Fr.: loi dynamique A law that describes the motion of individual particles in a system, in contrast to → statistical laws. |
dynamical mass jerm-e tavânik Fr.: masse dynamique The mass of an object derived indirectly from theoretical formulae based on the laws governing the behavior of a → dynamical system. |