mixing process farâravand-e âmizeš Fr.: processus de mélange A process whereby → angular momentum and chemical species are transported from layer to layer within a star. The main mixing processes include: → convection, → overshooting, → rotation, and → turbulence. The extent to which the interiors of stars are mixed strongly influences their evolution, age, chemical content, and the relationship between their internal and surface → chemical abundances. |
non-radiative process farâravand-e nâtâbeši Fr.: processus non radiatif An process in which an excited state returns to the ground state without emitting radiation. → radiative process. |
nuclear process farâravand-e haste-yi Fr.: processus nucléaire A process in which an → atomic nucleus changes, including → radioactive decay of naturally occurring and man-made → isotopes, → nuclear fission, and → nuclear fusion. |
nucleosynthetic process farâravand-e haste-handâyeši Fr.: processus nucléosynthétique A process involving → nucleosynthesis, such as → r-process and → r-process. → nucleosynthetic; → process. |
Penrose process farâravand-e Penrose Fr.: processus de Penrose A hypothetical means of extracting energy from a rotating black hole. If a particle spirals into the ergosphere of a black hole in a direction counter to the rotation of the black hole, and if the particle then breaks up into two fragments inside the ergosphere, one of the fragments can escape with energy greater than the energy of the original particle. Named after Roger Penrose, English physicist (1931-), who devised the process; → process. |
polytropic process farâravand-e bolgašti Fr.: processus polytropique A thermodynamic process that obeys the relation:
PVn = C, where P is pressure, V is volume,
n is any real number, called the → polytropic index, and
C is a constant. → polytropic; → process. |
process 1) farâravand (#); 2) âmudan (#), âmâyidan (#) Fr.: 1) processus; 2) traiter 1) (n.) A series of actions directed toward a specific aim. M.E., from O.Fr. proces, from L. processus "advance, progress," from p.p. stem of procedere "go forward," from → pro- "forward" + cedere "to go." 1) Farâravand, from farâ- "forward" → pro- +
ravand, contraction of ravandé "goer, going," from raftan
"to go, walk;" Mid.Pers. raftan, raw-, Proto-Iranian *rab/f-
"to go; to attack." |
processing âmâyeš Fr.: traitement Performing some predefined sequence of operations on an input to produce an output. → data processing; → image processing . Noun of the verb → process. |
procession faârraveš Fr.: procession The act of moving along or proceeding in orderly succession or in a formal and ceremonious manner, as a line of people, animals, vehicles, etc (Dictionary.com). Verbal noun from → process. |
processor âmâyandé, âmâyešgar Fr.: processeur Computers: A central processing unit. Agent noun of the verb → process. |
r-process farâravand-e r Fr.: processus r A → nucleosynthesis process in which → chemical elements heavier than → zinc are created through the intense bombardment of other elements by → neutrons in rapid succession. The essential feature of the r-process is the release of great numbers of neutrons in a very short time (less than 100 seconds). The r-process is a "rapid" version of the → s-process, occurring in supernova → core collapse and possibly when a → neutron star merges with a → black hole in a → binary star. r stands for rapid, since the process entails a succession of rapid neutron captures on iron seed nuclei; → process. |
radiative process farâravand-e tâbeši Fr.: processus radiatif An process in which an excited state loses its absorbed energy by emission of radiation. → non-radiative process. |
real-time processing âmâyeš dar zamân-e hasyâ Fr.: traitement en temps réel Data processing that takes place instantaneously upon data entry or receipt of a command. → real; → time; → processing. |
reversible process farâravand-e vâgaštpazir (#) Fr.: processus réversible Any physical process which can be performed in the reverse direction, the whole series of changes constituting the process being exactly reversed. → irreversible process. → reversible; → process. |
s-process farâravand-e s Fr.: processus s A → nucleosynthesis process by which → chemical elements heavier than → copper are formed through a slow flux of → neutrons absorbed by atomic nuclei (→ neutron-capture element). The → capture of neutrons occurs on time scales that are long enough to enable unstable nuclei to decay via the emission of a → beta particle before absorbing another neutron. Prominent s-process elements include → barium, → zirconium, and → yttrium. See also: → r-process. |
Salpeter process farâravand-e Salpeter Fr.: processus de Salpeter An equation describing how the nuclei of helium fuse together, in the interior of giant stars, to form carbon nuclei. → triple-alpha process. Named after the Austrian-Australian-American astrophysicist Edwin Ernest Salpeter (1924-2008); → process. |
scalar processor âmâyeš:gar-e marpeli Fr.: processeur scalaire Computers: A type of central processing unit in which only one operation on data is executed at a time. By contrast, in a vector processor, a single instruction operates simultaneously on multiple data items. |
self-similar process farâravand-e xod-hamânad Fr.: processus auto-similaire A process that is invariant in distribution under scaling of time. Schematically, images taken of such a process at different time scales will look similar. |
stochastic process farâravand-e kâturgin Fr.: processus stochastique Any process involving a sequence of random variables. The future evolution of a stochastic process is therefore described by probability distributions. → stochastic; → process. |
thermodynamic process farâravand-e garmâtavânik Fr.: processus thermodynamique An ordered set of → equilibrium states undergone by a → thermodynamic system. Thermodynamics processes have various types: → cyclic process, → reversible process, and → irreversible process, → isothermal process, → adiabatic process, → isentropic process. → thermodynamic; → process. |