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exponentially nemâyivâr Fr.: exponentiellement In an exponential manner. → exponential; → -ly. |
exposition osneheš Fr.: exposition 1) The act of setting forth information or a viewpoint. Verbal noun of → expose. |
expression zohâveš Fr.: expression 1) The act or an instance of expressing. |
extension ostaneš (#) Fr.: extension 1) An act or instance of extending; the state of being extended. Verbal noun of → extend. |
externalization boruneš Fr.: extériorisation Verbal noun of → externalize. → externalize + → -tion. |
extinction xâmuši (#) Fr.: extinction 1) Dimming of light by an intervening medium (the Earth's atmosphere or the interstellar medium).
It is usually due to both scattering and absorption. Noun of extinct, from L. extinctus, p.p. of extinguere "to quench, wipe out," from → ex- "out" + stinguere "to quench," from PIE base *steig- "to prick, stick, pierce;" cf. Mod.Pers. tiz, tež, tig, tej, tij, tiq "sharp;" Av. tiγra- "pointed," tiγray- "arrow;" → deblur. Xâmuši, noun of xâmuš "extinguished; silent," Mid.Pers. xâmôš "silent;" cf. Skt. amrs- "to bear patiently." |
extinction coefficient hamgar-e xâmuši Fr.: coefficient d'extinction Gradient of apparent magnitude with air mass. → extinction; → coefficient. |
extinction correction aršâyeš-e xâmuši Fr.: correction d'extinction In → photometric calibration, the correction for energy loss undergone by radiation due to the → atmospheric extinction. Extinction correction is done using → standard stars observed at different → airmasses. → extinction; → correction. |
extinction curve xam-e xâmuši Fr.: courbe de l'extinction interstellaire A graph representing the variation of the → interstellar extinction against → wavelength. Usually it displays the → normalized values of extinction as a function of (the → inverse) of the wavelength (in → microns). See, e.g., Sandage & Mathis, 1979, Ann. Rev. Astron. Astrophys. 17, 73. → extinction; → curve. |
extinction stars setâregân-e xâmuši Fr.: étoiles d'extinction Stars specifically observed at selected air masses in view of determining the atmospheric extinction coefficients. → extinction; → star. |
extraction barhanješ Fr.: extraction 1) The act of extracting or the condition of being extracted. |
extragalactic astronomy axtaršenâi-ye ostar-kahkašâni, ~ borun-kahkašâni Fr.: astronomie extragalactique The branch of astronomy that deals with objects beyond the Milky Way, especially galaxies and quasars. → extragalactic; → astronomy. |
extrapolation borunyâbeš (#) Fr.: extrapolation Predicting the value of unknown data points by projecting a function beyond the range of known data points. Verbal noun of → extrapolate. |
extreme horizontal branch star (EHB) setâre-ye šâxe-ye ofoqi-ye ostom Fr.: étoile de la branche horizontale extrême The hottest variety of stars on the → horizontal branch with temperatures ranging from 20,000 to 40,000 K. EHB stars are distinguished from normal horizontal branch stars by having extremely thin, inert hydrogen envelopes surrounding the helium-burning core. They are hot, dense stars with masses in a narrow range near 0.5 Msun. These stars have undergone such extreme mass loss during their first ascent up the giant branch that only a very thin hydrogen envelope survives. Stars identified as EHB stars are found in low metallicity globular clusters as an extension of the normal HB. → extreme; → horizontal; → branch; → star. |
extrinsic photoconductivity šidhâzandegi-ye borungin Fr.: photoconductivité extrinsèque Photoconductivity due to the addition of impurities or external causes. → extrinsic; → photoconductivity. Šidhâzandegi, → photoconductivity; borungin, → extrinsic. |
extrinsic semiconductor nimhâzâ-ye borungin Fr.: semiconducteur extrinsèque A semiconductor, such as silicon, whose responsive properties can be altered by the addition of impurities. Copper- and mercury-doped germanium are both examples of this semiconductor material. → extrinsic; → semiconductor. |
F corona tâj-e F Fr.: couronne F The exterior part of the → solar corona, illuminated by solar light scattered or reflected by dust particles. The same phenomenon also produces the → zodiacal light, much farther away from the Sun. The dust particles are at most several microns in size and make up a disk stretching over almost 1 solar radius (700,000 km) from the Sun's surface. Unlike electrons, which are responsible for the → K corona, the dust particles move relatively slowly. Thus, the light scattered by them has the same spectrum as the → photosphere and shows the → Fraunhofer lines. The F corona is the most luminous part of the corona at 1.5 solar radii from the Sun's surface (M.S.: SDE). F referring to the Fraunhofer lines; → corona. |
Faber-Jackson relation bâzâneš-e Faber-Jackson Fr.: relation Faber-Jackson An empirical power-law correlation between the luminosity (L) and the velocity dispersion of stars (σ) in the center of a elliptical galaxies. The original relation can be expressed mathematically as: L ∝ σγ, where the index γ is observed to be approximately equal to 4, but depends on the range of galaxy luminosities that is fitted. → Tully-Fisher relation. After the astronomers Sandra M. Faber and Robert Earl Jackson, who first noted this relation in 1976 (ApJ 204, 668); → relation. |
fabulation afsâné-bâfi (#) Fr.: fabulation, affabulation 1) To tell invented stories; create fables or stories filled with fantasy. |
face-on galaxy kahkešân-e runemâ Fr.: galaxie vue de face A → spiral galaxy oriented such that it is viewed from above or below. → edge-on galaxy. |
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