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retrograde motion jonbeš-e pasrow Fr.: mouvement rétrograde The orbital motion or rotation of a solar system body in a clockwise direction (East to West) when viewed from the north pole of the ecliptic. It is a motion opposed to the → direct motion of the great majority of solar system bodies. → retrograde; → motion. |
revision bâznegari (#) Fr.: révision the act or work of revising. a process of revising. a revised form or version, as of a book. Verbal noun of → revise. |
revocation vâvac Fr.: révocation The act of revoking; annulment. Verbal noun of → revoke. |
revolution gardeš (#) Fr.: révolution The movement of a celestial body which is in orbit around another. It is often measured as the → orbital period. Verbal noun of → revolve. |
rheonomous ravândâtik Fr.: rhéonome Relating to a constraint or system that contains time explicitly. For example, a pendulum with an extensible string of length l rheonomous, the condition of constraint is: x2 + y2 = l2(t), where l(t) is the length of the string at time t. From Gk. rheo-, from rheos "a flowing, stream, current," → rheology, + -nomous, → -nomy. |
Richardson cascade peyšâr-e Richardson Fr.: cascade de Richarson Same as → energy cascade Named after L. F. Richardson (1922), Weather Prediction by Numerical Process (Cambridge Univ. Press); → cascade. |
Richardson criterion sanjidâr-e Richardson Fr.: critère de Richardson A condition for the onset of → instability in multilayer fluids which compares the balance between the restoring force of → buoyancy and the destabilizing effect of the → shear. Named after the British meteorologist Lewis Fry Richardson (1881-1953), who first arrived in 1920 to the dimensionless ratio now called → Richardson number. The first formal proof of the criterion, however, came four decades later for → incompressible flows (Miles, J. W. 1961, J. Fluid Mech., 10, 496; Howard, L. N., 1961, J. Fluid Mech., 10, 509). Its extension to → compressible flows was demonstrated subsequently (Chimonas 1970, J. Fluid Mech., 43, 833); → criterion. |
Richardson number adad-e Richardson Fr.: nombre de Richardson A dimensionless number which is used according to the → Richardson criterion to describe the condition for the → stability of a flow in the presence of vertical density stratification. If the → shear flow is characterized by linear variation of velocity and density, with velocities and densities ranging from U1 to U2 and ρ1 to ρ2 (ρ2>ρ1), respectively, over a depth H, then the Richardson number is expressed as: Ri = (ρ2 - ρ1) gH / ρ0 (U1 - U2)2. If Ri < 0.25, somewhere in the flow turbulence is likely to occur. For Ri > 0.25 the flow is stable. → Richardson criterion; → number. |
right ascension râst afrâz (#) Fr.: ascension droite A coordinate in the → equatorial system measured from the → vernal equinox eastward to the point where the object → hour circle intersects the → celestial equator. Right ascension (symbol α) is expressed in hours, minutes, and seconds. See also: → declination. → right; ascension, M.E. ascencioun, from O.Fr., from L. ascendere "to climb up," from → ad- "to" + scandere "to climb." Râst, → right; afrâz present stem of afrâzidan, afrâštan "to raise, exalt, extole," from Mid.Pers. abrâstan, abrâz- "to lift, raise," from ab-, from O.Pers./Av. abiy-/aiwi- "to, upon, against;" cf. Skt. abhi-, Gk. amphi- + râst "straight, direct, true;" from O.Pers. rāsta- "straight, true," rās- "to be right, straight, true;" Av. rāz- "to direct, put in line, set," razan- "order;" cf. Skt. raj- "to direct, stretch," rjuyant- "walking straight;" Gk. orektos "stretched out;" L. regere "to lead straight, guide, rule," p.p. rectus "right, straight;" Ger. recht; E. right; PIE base *reg- "move in a straight line," hence, "to direct, rule." |
rigorous selection rule razan-e gozineš-e farsaxt Fr.: règle de sélection rigoureuse A → selection rule obeyed by → discrete transitions. Among them are: rigorous selection rules for → electric dipole transitions (→ permitted) requiring: 1) ΔJ must be 0 or ± 1 with J = 0 ↔ 0 forbidden. 2) ΔMJ = 0, ± 1. 3) → Parity change, i.e. even ↔ odd. |
ring longitude derežnâ-ye halqé Fr.: longitude de l'anneau Of → Saturn, the angle measured with respect to the sub-observer point (a line connecting the observer to Saturn) in the direction of the orbital motion. |
Ritz combination principle parvaz-e miyâzeš-e Ritz Fr.: principe de combinaison de Ritz An empirical rule discovered before the advent of quantum mechanics which states that it is possible to find pairs of spectral lines, which have the property that the sum of their wavenumbers is also an observed spectral line. Named after Walther Ritz (1878-1909), a Swiss theoretical physicist; → combination; → principle. |
Robertson-Walker metric metrik-e Robertson-Walker (#) Fr.: métrique de Robertson-Walker The mathematical description of the interval (→ space-time
separation) between → events ("points" in space-time)
in a → homogeneous and
→ isotropic → Universe.
It results from an exact solution of
→ Einstein's field equations
of → general relativity.
Under the assumptions, the
Robertson-Walker interval is expressed by: Named after Howard Percy Robertson (1903-1961), American mathematician and physicist, and Arthur Geoffrey Walker (1909-2001), British mathematician and physicist, for their contributions to physics and physical cosmology; → metric. |
rocket astronomy axtaršenâsi bâ roket Fr.: astronomie par fusée The study of celestial bodies in the wavelengths that are almost completely absorbed by the atmosphere, by using a rocket to carry instruments above 250 km to measure the searched for phenomena. |
rockoon roklon Fr.: fusée-sonde lancée à partir d'un ballon A rocket launched from a balloon at a pre-determined height and fired by a ground-controlled radio relay when some particular event, e.g. a solar flare, occurs. From rocket + balloon. From roket + bâlon, → ballon astronomy. |
rotation carxeš (#) Fr.: rotation The motion of a body about its axis. Verbal noun of → rotate. |
rotation axis âse-ye carxeš Fr.: axe de rotation The imaginary line around which an object rotates. Same as → rotational axis and → axis of rotation. |
rotation curve xam-e carxeš Fr.: courbe de rotation A plot of the variation in → orbital velocity of stars and → interstellar matter with distance from the center of a → galaxy. A "flat" rotation curve indicates that the mass of the galaxy increases linearly with distance from its center. See also: farsi→ Keplerian rotation curve Rotation; → curve. |
rotation energy kâruž-e carxeš Fr.: énergie de rotation The → kinetic energy of rotational motion of an object. It is expressed by ER = (1/2)Iω2, where I is the → moment of inertia and ω → angular velocity (2π/P). |
rotation frequency basâmad-e carxeš Fr.: fréquence de rotation 1) The number of rotations per unit time of a rotating object. |
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