multiplication bastâyeš Fr.: multiplication In general, the process of repeatedly adding a quantity to itself a certain number of times, or any other process which has the same result. Verbal noun of → multiply. |
multiplication sign nešâne-ye bastâyeš Fr.: croix de multiplication The sign used to indicate multiplication, either a times sign (×), a centered dot (·), or an asterisk. The multiplication sign was introduced by William Oughtred in 1631. → multiplication; → sign. |
multiplicative bastâyeši Fr.: multiplicatif Involving → multiplication. |
multiplicative identity idâni-ye bastâyeši Fr.: identité multiplicative The number which when used as the multiplier of another number leaves the second unchanged; one. → multiplicative; → identity. |
multiplicative inverse vârun-e bastâyeši Fr.: inverse multiplicative The number which when used as a multiplier of another number (except 0) produces 1. For example (1/5) x 5 = 1; each of the numbers is the multiplicative inverse of the other. → multiplicative; → inverse. |
multiplicity bastâyigi Fr.: multiplicité 1) The state of being multiple, made of several components. |
multiplier bastâgar Fr.: multiplicateur Arithmetic: A number by which another is multiplied. Physics: A device for intensifying some effect. Agent noun of → multiply. |
multiply bastâyidan Fr.: multiplier To make many or manifold; increase the number, quantity, etc., of. O.Fr. multiplier, from L. multiplicare "to increase," from multiplex (gen. multiplicis) "having many folds, many times as great in number," from multi- "many" + base of plicare "to lay, fold, twist." Bastâyidan, from bastâ, → multiple, + -idan infinitive suffix. |
multipole basqotbé Fr.: multipôle An entity consisting of several poles. |
multipole index dišan-e basqotbé Fr.: indice multipolaire A variable used in → spherical harmonic expansions. Each spherical harmonic is characterized by its multipole index l: l = 0 for a → monopole, l = 1 for a → dipole, and so on. It is used in particular to describe the → cosmic microwave background anisotropy: ΔT/T0 (θ,φ) = Σ almYlm(θ,φ), where θ and φ are the → spherical polar coordinates, Ylm is the → spherical harmonic functions, and the sum runs over l = 1, 2, ..., ∞ and m = -l, ..., l, where the multipole index l corresponds to angular scales ≅ 180°/l. |
multipole moment gaštâvar-e basqotbé Fr.: moment multipolaire The quantity that gives the electric potential field due to a distribution of charges, such as a → dipole, → quadrupole, → octupole, etc. A multipole moment usually involves powers of the distance to the origin, as well as some angular dependence. |
nested multiplication bastâyeš-e tu-dar-tu Fr.: multiplication imbriquée A method in the evaluation of polynomials which involves fewer basic operations and allows simpler computation, especially for polynomials of high degree. More specifically, the polynomial P(x) = a0 + a1x + a2x2 + a3x3 + ... + anxn can be written in the nested form as: P(x) = a0 + x(a1 + x(a2 + ... + x(an - 1 + anx) ...)). For example, the polynomial P(x) = x3 - 5x2 + 10x - 3 has the following nested form: P(x) = ((x - 5)x + 10)x - 3. Same as the → Ruffini-Horner method. → nested; → multiplication. |
non-hierarchical multiple system râžmân-e bastâyi-ye nâpâygâni Fr.: système multiple non hiérarchique A → multiple star system that lacks the characteristics of a → hierarchical multiple system. → non-; → hierarchical; → multiple; → system. |
photomultiplier šid-bastâgar, nur-bastâgar Fr.: photomultiplicateur Electronic tube which converts photons into electrons, multiplies the electrons via a series of electrodes, and produces a measurable current from a very small input signal. → photo- + → multiplier. |
supermultiplet abar-bastâyé Fr.: supermultiplet A generalization of the concept of multiplet to the case when there are several quantum numbers that describe the quantum-mechanical states. |
tip 1) nok (#) Fr.: haut, pointe, bout 1) The top, summit, or apex. 1) M.E. tip, from M.L.G. or M.Du. tip "utmost point, extremity"
(cf. Ger. zipfel, a diminutive formation). 1) Nok "tip," variant tok. |
tip of the red giant branch method (TRGB) raveš-e nok-e šâxe-ye qulhâ-ye sorx Fr.: méthode du haut de la branche des géantes A technique for deriving extragalactic distances which uses the → luminosity of the brightest → red giant branch stars in old → stellar populations as a → standard candle. For old (> 2-3 Gyr), → metal-poor ([Fe/H] < -0.7) stellar populations, this luminosity is relatively well determined, and the → absolute magnitude of these stars in the I band is roughly constant (MI = -4.1 ± 0.1). |
tip-tilt mirror âyene-ye kaj-o-râst-gar Fr.: miroir inclinable A rapidly moving → mirror used in → adaptive optics to correct overall movements of the incoming → wavefront of light caused by → atmospheric turbulence. The simplest form of adaptive optics is tip-tilt correction, which corresponds to correction of the tilts of the wavefront in two dimensions. This is done by tipping and tilting the mirror rapidly in response to overall changes in position of a reference star. See also → deformable mirror. From, tip noun from tip (v.) "to overturn, upset," from M.E. typen "to upset, overturn" + tilt noun from tilt (v.) "to cause to lean, incline, slope, or slant," → tilt; → mirror. Âyené, → mirror; kaj "turned aside; crooked, bent" (cf. Skt. kubja- "hump-backed, crooked," Pali kujja- "bent," L. gibbus "hump, hunch," Lith. kupra "hump") + -o- "and" + râst→ right + -gar agent noun suffix → -or. |