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coupled systems râžmânhâ-ye jafsar, ~ joftidé Fr.: systèmes couplés A set of two or more mechanical vibrating systems connected so that they interact with one another. |
coupling jafsari, jofteš Fr.: couplage The act of linking together or forming couples; a connection between two things so they
move together. |
coupling coefficient hamgar-e jafsari Fr.: coefficient de couplage A parameter that indicates the strength of the interaction between two systems. → coupling; → coefficient. |
coupling constant pâyâ-ye jafsari Fr.: constante de couplage In nuclear physics, a constant that indicates a measure of how strongly two particles interact. |
Cupid Kupid (#) Fr.: Cupid A natural satellite of Uranus discovered in 2003 (Uranus XXVII); mean diameter about 18 km, orbital semi-major axis about 74 km. Discovered in 2003 using the Hubble Space Telescope. Named after a character in William Shakespeare's play Timon of Athens. |
Cupido Kupido Fr.: Cupidon Asteroid 763 Cupido, which belongs to the Main Belt. Cupido "desire," the Roman god of love (also known as Amor), often equated with Eros, one of the primordial gods in Greek mythology. |
cyclic group goruh-e carxe-yi Fr.: groupe cyclic A group in which each element can be expressed as a power of any other element. |
decouple vâjafsaridan, vâjoftidan Fr.: découpler 1) To separate or detach; to cause to become disconnected or divergent. |
decoupling vâjafsari, vâjofteš Fr.: découplage Cosmology: In the early history of the Universe, separation of matter and radiation due to their non-interaction. At a redshift of 1000, that is about 400,000 years after the Big Bang, the temperature would have cooled to the point (4000 degrees Kelvin) where electrons and nuclei can recombine and form neutral hydrogen atoms. Since atoms do not scatter the radiation appreciably, free electrons were lacking, and the Universe became transparent to radiation. Same as → recombination. See also → decoupling era. |
decoupling era dowrân-e vâjafsari, ~ vâjofteš Fr.: époque du découplage The era some 400,000 years after the → Big Bang, when the cosmic → blackbody radiation was last scattered by the matter. → decoupling. Same as → recombination era and → last scattering epoch. → decoupling; → era. |
delayed supernova explosion oskaft-e bâderang-e abar-novâ, ~ ~ abar-now-axtar Fr.: explosion retardée de supernova A mechanism predicted by theoretical models of → supernova explosion that operates after the → supernova shock fails to deliver a → prompt supernova explosion. The delayed supernova explosion mechanism assumes that a few tenth of a second after the → iron core collapse, the supernova shock is stalled due to energy dissipation. The material between the → protoneutron star and the stalled shock is mainly disintegrated into neutrons and protons due to the high temperatures (a few MeV) in this region. As the → neutrinos coming from the protoneutron star run through this material, a fraction of the neutrinos are captured by the → nucleons, and their energy is deposited in the material. As a result, the material behind the shock is heated by the neutrinos. If this neutrino heating is efficient enough, the stalled shock can be reinvigorated to bring about a supernova explosion. |
disruption gosixt Fr.: rupture Forcible division into pieces of an object. → tidal disruption. From L. disruptio "a breaking asunder," noun of action from p.p. stem of disrumpere "break apart, split, shatter, break to pieces," from → dis- "apart" + rumpere "to break." Gosixt, past stem of gosixtan "to tear away, to beark off." |
dredge-up borunkašid Fr.: dragage, remontée A process by which the nucleosynthesis products inside a star are drawn to upper layers of the star. → first dredge-up; → second dredge-up; → third dredge-up. From M.E. (Scots) dreg-, O.E. draeg- (in drægnet "dragnet"), akin to dragan "to draw" + up. Birunkašid, past stem of birun kašidan, from birun "out, the outside" (Mid.Pers. bêron, from bê "outside, out, away" + rôn "side, direction," Av. ravan- "(course of a) river") + kašidan "to draw," Mid.Pers. kašitan, Av. karš- "to draw," Skt. kars-, kársati "to pull, drag, plough," Gk. pelo, pelomai "to be busy, to bustle." |
dual supermassive black hole siyah-câl-e abar-porjerm-e dogâné Fr.: trou noir supermassif double The outcome of a → merger process between two galaxies, each with its own central → supermassive black hole (SMBH), resulting in a remnant galaxy hosting two SMBHs. Simulations of → galaxy mergers show there should be lots of dual → active galactic nuclei (AGN) visible at less than 10 kpc separations. As of 2015 more than 100 known dual supermassive black holes have been found. See also → binary supermassive black hole. → dual; → supermassive; → black; → hole. |
duplicate 1) dotâyidan, dotâ kardan; 2) dotâkard Fr.: 1) faire un double de; 2) double, copie exacte 1) To make an exact copy of. From L. duplicatus, p.p. of duplicare "to double," from duo, → two + plicare "to fold," → multiply. Dotâyidan, "to double," infinitive from dotâyi, → double. |
duplication dotâyeš, dotâkard Fr.: duplication An act or instance of duplicating; the state of being duplicated. Verbal noun of → duplicate. |
dynamical disruption gosixt-e tavânik Fr.: rupture dynamique The process whereby a → bound system, such as a → binary system or a → globular cluster, is broken apart. → dynamical; → disruption. |
Elara (Jupiter VII) Elârâ Fr.: Elara The thirteenth known moon of Jupiter, discovered in 1905 by Charles Perrine. In Gk. mythology, Elara was the mother by Zeus of the giant Tityus. |
electromagnetic coupling constant pâyâ-ye jafsari-ye barqâmeqnâti Fr.: constante de couplage electromagnétique Same as → fine-structure constant. → electromagnetic; → coupling; → constant. |
entrance pupil mardomak-e darâyeš Fr.: pupille d'entrée In an → optical system, the image of the → aperture stop formed in → object space. See also → exit pupil. |
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