potential well câh-e tavand Fr.: puit de potentiel Region in a → field of force in which the potential decreases abruptly, and in the surrounding region of which the potential is larger. |
potentiality tavandi Fr.: potentialité 1) The state or quality of being potential. Something potential. |
potentially tavandâné Fr.: potentiellement With a possibility of becoming actual; possibly. |
potentially hazardous asteroid (PHA) seyyârak-e tavandâné âpenâk Fr.: astéroïde potentiellement dangereux An asteroid that could make a threatening close approach to the Earth. In technical terms a PHA is defined as having an → absolute magnitude of 22 or brighter and an → Earth Minimum Orbit Intersection Distance (MOID) of less than 0.05 → astronomical unit or 7.5 million km. → potentially; → hazardous; → asteroid. |
retarded potential tavand-e dirras Fr.: potentiel retardé The → electromagnetic potential at an instant in time and a point in space as a function of the charges and currents that existed at earlier times. |
thermodynamic potential tavand-e garmâtavânik Fr.: potentiel thermodynaique A measure of the energy level of a → thermodynamic system. It represents the amount of → work obtainable when the system undergoes a → change. The main types of thermodynamic potential are: → internal energy, → enthalpy, the → Helmholtz free energy, and the → Gibbs free energy. → thermodynamic; → potential. |
Yukawa potential tavand-e Yukawa Fr.: potentiel de Yukawa The potential function that is associated with the strong, short-ranged force resulting from the exchange of massive particles between two → nucleons in the same atomic nucleus. The potential has the form of V(r) = C. (1/r) exp (-K.r), where r is the distance between the nucleons and C and K are constants, giving measures of the strength and range of the force respectively. In honor of the Japanese physicist Hideki Yukawa (1907-1981), winner of the 1949 Nobel Prize in Physics; → potential. |