mean sidereal time zamân-e axtari-ye miyângin (#) Fr.: temps sidéral moyen The hour angle of the mean equinox for a given observer. |
mesosiderite mesosiderit Fr.: mesosidérite A class of → meteorites that is → brecciated→ stony-iron with nearly equal amounts of → metal and → silicates. |
preside farneštidan Fr.: présider To occupy the place of authority or control, as in an assembly or meeting; act as president or chairperson (Dictionary.com). |
president farneštgâr Fr.: président 1) The highest executive officer of a modern republic, as the Chief Executive of
the United States (often initial capital letter). Farneštgâr, from farnešt, present stem of farneštidan, → preside, + agent noun suffix -gâr, → -or, on the model of âmuzgâr "teacher." |
reside neštidan Fr.: résider To dwell permanently or for a considerable time. M.E., from M.Fr. resider and directly from L. residere "sit down, settle; remain behind, rest," from → re- "back, again" + sedere "to sit," cognate with Pers. nešastan "to sit down," as below. Neštidan, from Baluci ništ-, Kurd. ništin, Gurani nîšt, Awromani ništay-, Gazi ništ, Shahmerzadi -ništ, Gilaki ništoen "to sit down," variant of Pers. nešastan "to sit down, settle down," nešim "nest," Mid.Pers. nišastan "to sit;" O.Pers. nišādayam [1 sg.impf.caus.act.] "to sit down, to establish," hadiš- "abode;" Av. nišasiiā [1 sg.subj.acr.] "I shall sit down," from nihad- "to sit down," from → ni- "down, below," + had- "to sit;" PIE base *sed- "to sit;" cf. Skt. sad- "to sit," sidati "sits;" Gk. hezomai "to sit," hedra "seat, chair;" L. sedere "to sit;" O.Ir. suide "seat, sitting;" Welsh sedd "seat;" Lith. sedmi "to sit;" Rus. sad "garden;" Goth. sitan, Ger. sitzen; E. sit. |
residence 1) neštgâh; 1,2) neštmân Fr.: résidence 1) The place, especially the house, in which a person lives or resides; dwelling place; home. Neštgâh, from nešt present stem of neštidan→ reside + -gâh a suffix of place and time. Neštmân with -mân a suffix of verbl nouns used with present and past stems, as in zâymân, câymân, sâxtemân, sâzmân, goftemân, râžmân. |
resident neštandé, neštgar Fr.: résident A person who resides in a place. → reside + -ent, a suffix, equivalent to -ant froming nouns and adjectives. |
side bar (#), pahku (#), kenâr (#) Fr.: côté 1) A line segment that forms part of the perimeter of a plane geometric figure. M.E., from O.E. side "flanks of a person, the long part of anything;" cf. O.S. sida, O.N. sitha, M.Du. side, O.H.G. sita, Ger. Seite. Bar "side; breadth; breast,"
variant var; Mid.Pers. var "breast;"
Av. vouru "wide, broad, extended" (vourucašāni- "looking far"),
related to varah- "breast;" cf. Skt. urú- "wide, broad,"
úras- "breast;" Gk. eurus "wide, broad;"
PIE base uer-, ueru-s "wide, broad." |
side lobe lap-e kenâri Fr.: lobe secondaire 1) In → radio astronomy,
smaller amounts of gain found either side of the main lobe. |
sideband bând-e kenâri, kenâr-bând Fr.: bande latérale Either of the two bands of frequencies, one just above (upper side) and one just below (lower side) a carrier frequency, that result from modulation of a carrier wave. Bând, → band; kenâr "side," variant karân "edge, limit;" Mid.Pers. karân, karânak, kenâr "edge, limit, boundary;" Av. karana- "side, boundary, end." |
sidereal axtari (#) Fr.: sidéral Of, relating to, or determined by or from stars. From M.Fr. sidereal, from L. sidereus "starry, astral," from sidus (genitive sideris) "star, constellation." Axtari, pertaining to axtar "star," probably a variant of setâré→ star. |
sidereal day ruz-e axtari (#) Fr.: jour sidéral The period of → Earth's rotation around its axis, the mean value of which is about 23h 56m 04.092s (23.934 470 hours). In other words, the interval between two successive passages of a star across a given → meridian. The sidereal day is 3 minutes 56 seconds shorter than the → mean solar day. The reason is that Earth moves a little less than a degree around the Sun during the time it takes for one full axial rotation. So, for the Sun to appear on the same meridian in the sky again after one full axial rotation, the Earth has to rotate one extra degree to bring the Sun into the same apparent meridian in the sky. This is also why the stars rise and set about 4 min earlier each day. |
sidereal hour angle zâviye-ye sâ'ati-ye axtari (#) Fr.: angle horaire The angle on the celestial sphere measured westward from the hour circle of the vernal equinox to that of the celestial body. → sidereal; → hour angle. |
sidereal month mâh-e axtari (#) Fr.: mois sidéral The time taken by the Moon to complete one → revolution around the Earth with respect to a background, → fixed star. The average time is 27.321 661 days (27d 7h 43m 11.5s). Same as → lunar sidereal orbital period. |
sidereal period dowre-ye axtari (#) Fr.: période sidérale |
sidereal revolution period dowre-ye gardeš-e axtari (#) Fr.: période de révolution sidérale The time taken by a planet or satellite to complete one revolution about its primary with respect to stars. For Earth, same as → sidereal year. Sidereal periods of the solar system planets, interms of the sidereal year, are as follows: Mercury 0.240846 (87.9691 days); Venus 0.615 (225 days); Earth 1 (365.25636 solar days); Mars 1.881; Jupiter 11.86; Satrurn 29.46; Uranus 84.01; and Neptune 164.8. That of the Moon is 0.0748 (27.32 days) and for → Sedna 12050. → sidereal; → revolution; → period. |
sidereal rotation period dowre-ye carxeš-e axtari Fr.: période de rotation sidérale The rotation period of a celestial body with respect to fixed stars. For Earth, same as → sidereal day. |
sidereal time zamân-e axtari (#) Fr.: temps sidéral The time based upon → Earth's rotation with respect to the stars, with the → sidereal day as the unit of measurement. At the moment when the → vernal equinox crosses the → meridian in → upper culmination, sidereal time is equal to zero hours for that observing position. The → hour angle of the vernal equinox is equal to sidereal time. |
sidereal year sâl-e axtari (#) Fr.: année sidérale The interval between two successive passages of the Sun, in its apparent → annual motion around the → celestial sphere, through a particular point relative to stars. It is equal to 365.256356 days for the J2000.0 epoch and is 20m 24.5s longer than the → tropical year. |
siderite siderit (#) Fr.: sidérite 1) A mineral composed of iron carbonate, FeCO3, that is a valuable ore of
→ iron. |