advance of perihelion pišraft-e pirâhur Fr.: avance du périhélie The slow rotation of the major axis of a planet's orbit in the same direction as the revolution of the planet itself, due mainly to gravitational interactions with other planets. The perihelion of the planet Mercury advances about 9'.6 per century. The bulk of the advance was accounted by perturbations from other planets. However, a remaining small advance, by 43'' per century, was eventually explained as an effect predicted by Einstein's theory of → general relativity. In the case of close binary stars, the advance of pericenter may additionally be caused by mass transfer and the stars' distorted (elliptical) shapes. Advance of perihelion (or pericenter) is also known as → apsidal motion. Advance, from O.Fr. avancer "move forward," from V.L. *abantiare, from L.L. abante "from before," from ab- "from" + ante "before," PIE *ant- "front, forehead;" → perihelion. Pišraft "advance," from piš "forward; in front; before," Mid.Pers. peš + raft "going; walk, travel," from raftan "to go." |
argument of perihelion âruzmân-e pirâhur Fr.: argument du périhélie The angular distance between the → ascending node of an object orbiting the Sun and its perihelion. Argument of perihelion is measured in the → orbital plane with respect to the Sun and in the direction of motion. It is one of the → orbital elements and usually shown with the symbol ω. See also: → argument of perigee, → argument of periapsis. → argument; → perihelion. |
perihelion pirâhur Fr.: périhélie The nearest point to the Sun in an orbit around the Sun; opposite of → aphelion. Perihelion, from L. perihelium, from → peri- + helios "sun," cognate with L. sol, Skt. surya, Av. hvar-, Mod.Pers. xor, hur, O.H.G. sunna, Ger. Sonne, E. sun; PIE *sawel- "sun". Pirâhur, from pirâ-, → peri-, + hur "sun," as above; |
perihelion advance pišraft-e pirâhur Fr.: avance du périhélie |
perihelion distance apest-e pirâhuri Fr.: distance au périhélie The distance between the → Sun and an → object in orbit around it when they are at their closest approach. → perihelion; → distance. |
perihelion precession pišÃ¢yân-e pirâhuri Fr.: précession du périhélie → perihelion; → precession. |