-tropic -gard (#) Fr.: -trope A suffix denoting "turned toward" that specified by the initial element; → barotropic, → isotropic, → polytropic. From Gk. -tropos "a turn, way, manner," from tropein "to turn," from PIE base *trep- "to turn" (cf. L. trepit "he turns"). Gard "turning, changing," from gardidan "to turn, to change," Mid.Pers. vartitan, Av. varət- "to turn, revolve," Skt. vartati, L. vertere, O.H.G. werden "to become;" PIE *werto, *wer-. |
anisotropic nâ-izogard Fr.: anisotrope Describing a medium in which certain physical properties are different in different directions. → anisotropy; → -ic. |
anisotropic homogeneous cosmological model model-e keyhânšenâxti-ye hamgen o nâ-izogard Fr.: modèle cosmiologique homogène mais anisotrope A solution to Einstein's theory of → general relativity that is spatially homogeneous but allows for rotation and/or shear. See also → Bianchi cosmological model. → anisotropic; → homogeneous; → cosmological; → model. |
barotropic fešârgard Fr.: barotrope In a fluid, conditions where surfaces of constant pressure are parallel to surfaces of constant temperature. This state is equivalent to zero → baroclinicity. |
barotropic gas gâz-e fešârgard Fr.: gaz barotrope A gas whose density is a function solely of pressure. → barotropic; → gas. |
barotropic instability nâpâydâri-ye fešârgard Fr.: instabilité barotrope A hydrodynamical instability that arises when the horizontal → shear gradient becomes very large. Barotropic instabilities grow by extracting kinetic energy from the mean flow field. → barotropic; → instability. |
Cancer, Tropic of Hurgard-e Xarcang Fr.: Tropique du Cancer |
Capricorn, Tropic of hurgard-e vahig Fr.: Tropique du Capricorne → Capricornus. |
hylotropic mâdegard Fr.: hylotropique Physical chemistry: Describing a substance that is capable of undergoing a change in phase (as from a liquid to a gas), with no change in chemical composition. If the substance is hylotropic over a limited range of pressure and temperatures, it is a pure chemical substance. If it is hylotropic over all pressure and temperatures except the most extreme ones, it is a → chemical element. See also → hylotrope. First suggested by Wilhelm Ostwald (1904, in Annalen der Naturphilosophie 3, 355), from Gk. hylo-, combining form of hyle "matter; wood," because of the dependence on the composition, + → -tropic. |
isentropic izodargâšt Fr.: isentrope Having a constant entropy. |
isentropic flow tacân-e izodargâšt Fr.: écoulement isentrope A → reversible flow in which the value of → entropy remains → constant; i.e. no energy is added to the flow, and no energy losses occur due to friction or dissipative effects. → isentropic; → flow. |
isentropic process farâravand-e izodargâšt Fr.: process isentrope A → thermodynamic process for which there is no → heat transfer with the surroundings, and no change in → entropy. → isentropic; → process. |
isotropic izogard, hamsângard (#) Fr.: isotrope Having physical properties that do not vary with direction. |
isotropic Universe giti-ye izogard, ~ hamsângard (#) Fr.: Univers isotrope A Universe having observed properties that appear identical in every direction. |
polytropic bolgašti Fr.: polytropique 1) Math.: Describing a function which has different values for one variable. |
polytropic change degaršod-e bolgašti, degareš-e ~ Fr.: changement polytropique A change in the → pressure or → volume of a → gas in a → polytropic process. → polytropic; → change. |
polytropic gas gâz-e bolgašti Fr.: gaz polytropique A gas capable of undergoing a → polytropic process. → polytropic; → gas. |
polytropic index dišan-e bolgašt Fr.: index polytropique A number appearing in the equation describing a → polytropic process. → polytropic; → index. |
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. |
tropic hurgard Fr.: tropique Either of the two parallels of latitude on Earth at which the Sun appears overhead at the → summer and → winter solstices each year: → Tropic of Cancer, → Tropic of Capricorn . The tropics lie at latitudes 23°26', north and south, an angle defined by the Earth's → axial inclination. M.E., from L. tropicus, from Gk. tropikos "of or pertaining to a turn or change; of or pertaining to to the turn of the Sun's apparent motion at solstice," from trope "a turning." Hurgard, literally "Sun's turning," from hur, → Sun, + gard "turning, changing," from gardidan "to turn, to change;" Mid.Pers. vartitan; Av. varət- "to turn, revolve;" Skt. vrt- "to turn, roll," vartate "it turns round, rolls;" L. vertere "to turn;" O.H.G. werden "to become;" PIE base *wer- "to turn, bend." |