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tidal heating garmeš-e kešandi Fr.: chauffage par marées The heating of the → interior of a → planet or → satellite due to the → friction caused by → tidal forces. For example, the huge tidal forces by → Jupiter heat its close satellite → Io, making it a seismically very active body. |
tidal locking qoflšod-e kešandi Fr.: verrouillage gravitationnel The process whereby the → rotation period of a → primary body becomes identical to the → orbital period of a → secondary body. Tidal locking results from → tidal braking and leads to → synchronous rotation. |
tidal radius šo'â'-e kešandi Fr.: rayon de marée Same as → Roche limit. |
tidal stretching dargeš-e kešandi Fr.: étirement de marée The stretching of an object under → tidal force. Tidal stretching results from a difference in the gravitational pull felt on two sides of a body. It is proportional to the inverse cube of the distance to the source of gravity (1/r3). As a consequence, nearby objects, even small ones like the Moon, raise high tides, whereas distant giants like Jupiter do not produce much of an effect. → tidal; → stretching. |
tidal stripping loxtâneš-e kešandi Fr.: balayage par effet de marées The phenomenon whereby gas and stars are ripped out from a gravitationally → bound system, such as a galaxy or → globular cluster, by the action of → tidal forces from an external, more massive object. See also → ram pressure stripping. |
tidal tail donbâle-ye kešandi Fr.: queue de marée A long stream of stars and gas, often in the form of a spectacular tail, thrown off a galaxy when it collides with another galaxy. → interacting galaxies; → merger. Two tidal tails form in each galaxy, and they are more spectacular when the masses of the two galaxies are comparable, and when their relative orbit is in the same sense as the rotation inside each spiral galaxy. |
tidally locked kešandâné qofl Fr.: The description of a → system of two bodies undergoing → tidal locking. |
tidally stripped kešandâne loxtânide Fr.: balayé par effet de marées Describing a → stellar system that has undergone → tidal stripping. |
tide kešand (#) Fr.: marée 1) The periodic rising and falling of the waters of the ocean and its inlets.
The tides result from the → gravitational attraction
of the → Moon and → Sun
acting upon the rotating → Earth.
See also:
→ ebb tide,
→ high tide,
→ low tide,
→ neap tide,
→ spring tide,
→ tidal braking,
→ tidal bulge,
→ tidal capture,
→ tidal coupling,
→ tidal current,
→ tidal disruption,
→ tidal force,
→ tidal friction,
→ tidal heating,
→ tidal locking,
→ tidal radius,
→ tidal stretching. M.E.; O.E. tid "time, hour" (cf. O.S. tid, Du. tijd, O.H.G. zit, Ger. Zeit "time"). Kešand, from Mod./Mid.Pers. kešidan/kašidan "to draw, protract, trail, drag, carry," dialectal Yaqnavi xaš "to draw," Qomi xaš "streak, stria, mark," Lori kerr "line;" Av. karš- "to draw; to plow," karša- "furrow;" Proto-Iranian *kerš-/*xrah- "to draw, plow;" cf. Skt. kars-, kársati "to pull, drag, plow;" Gk. pelo, pelomai "to move, to bustle;" PIE base kwels- "to plow." |
tight tang (#) Fr.: serré Firmly or closely fixed in place. → compact. M.E. thight, from O.N. thettr "watertight, close in texture, solid" (cf. second element in O.E. metethiht "stout from eating;" M.H.G. dihte "dense, thick," Ger. dicht "dense, tight," O.H.G. gidigan, Ger. gediegen "genuine, solid, worthy"), from PIE base *tenk- "to become firm, curdle, thicken;" cf. Ir. techt "curdled, coagulated," Lith. tankus "close, tight;" cognate with Pers. tang "tight," as below. Tang "tight; narrow, straight; tight," also "horse girth, a strap for fastening a load" (Mid.Pers. tang "tight, narrow"), tanjidan "to squeeze, press, pull together;" cf. Skt. tanákti "draws together, contracts;" cognate with E. tight, as above; PIE base *tenk- "to become firm, curdle, thicken." |
tight star cluster xuše-ye setâreyi-ye tang Fr.: amas stellaire serré A cluster of stars in which members are closely situated so that high resolution observations are required to distinguish them individually. → tight; → star cluster. |
tightly bound binary star system râžmân-e setâre-yi-ye dorin-e tang bandide Fr.: système d'étoiles binaire très lié → tight; → bound system; → binary star. |
tilt gerâ Fr.: inclinaison Optics: A deviation in the propagation direction of a beam of light. Tilt quantizes the average slope in both the X and Y directions of a → wavefront or phase profile across the pupil of an optical system. M.E. tylten "to upset, tumble," from tealt "unsteady" (cf. O.N. tyllast "to trip," Swed. tulta "to waddle," Norw. tylta "to walk on tip-toe," M.Du. touteren "to swing"). Gerâ, present stem of gerâyidan "to incline toward; to intend; to make for." Gerâ may be a variant of Mod.Pers. kil "bent, inclined" (k/g and l/r interchanges), from PIE base *klei- "to lean, incline," cognate with L. clinare "to bend" (E. declination, inclination, etc.), Gk. klinein "to cause to slope, slant, incline," Skt. sri- "to lean," O.Pers. θray-, Av. sray- "to lean," P.Gmc. *khlinen (Ger. lehnen, E. lean). |
tilt angle zâviye-ye gerâ Fr.: angle d'inclinaison The angle a rocket makes with the vertical as it curves along its trajectory. |
time zamân (#), gâh (#), vaqt (vaxt) (#), tâmen Fr.: temps 1) A non-spatial sequential relation in which events occur in apparently irreversible
succession from the past through the present to the future.
→ time's arrow. M.E.; O.E. tima "limited space of time," from P.Gmc. *timon "time" (cf. O.N. timi "time," Swed. timme "an hour"), akin to L. tempus (genitive temporis) "time" (Fr. temps, Sp. tiempo, It. tempo); maybe related to Pers. Tabari tum, tomon, temen "time;" Aftari ton "time." Zamân "time," from Mid.Pers. zamân, jamân "time," zamânak
"period, epoch;"
loaned into Aramaic and Ar.,
loaned into Arm. žam, žamanak "time;"
prefixed Sogdian nγm "time, moment, hour;"
Proto-Iranian *gām- "to go, to come;"
cf. Av. gam- "to come; to go," jamaiti "goes;"
O.Pers. gam- "to come; to go;" Mod./Mid.Pers. gâm
"step, pace," âmadan "to come;" cf. Skt. gamati "goes;"
Gk. bainein "to go, walk, step;" L. venire "to come;"
Tocharian A käm- "to come;" O.H.G. queman "to come;" E. come;
PIE base *gwem- "to go, come." |
time allocation tesk-e zamân, ~ vaqt Fr.: attribution de temps de télescope The assignment of telescope time by an expert panel to proposals after evaluating the merits of the observation projects. → time; → allocation. |
time constant pâyâ-ye zamâni Fr.: constante de temps Th speed of response of a detector, usually measured as 1/(2πν), where ν is the chopping frequency at which the responsivity fails to 1/√2 of its maximum value. |
time delay derang (#) Fr.: retard 1) The amount of time required for a → signal
to travel from one point to another
in an → electric circuit. |
time delay distance apest-e derang-e zamâni Fr.: A distance-like quantity derived from → gravitational lensing time delay. It is given by a combination of three angular diameter distances in a strong lens system: DΔt = (1 + zL)[DA(EL)DA(ES) / DA(LS)], where zL is the → redshift of the → gravitational lens, while DA(EL), DA(ES), and DA(LS) are the angular diameter distances from the Earth to the lens, from the Earth to the source, and from the lens to the source, respectively. As each of the distance is proportional to the inverse of H0, DΔt is proportional to 1/H0. |
time dilation farâeš-e zamân Fr.: dilatation du temps A phenomenon related to special and general relativity. → time; dilation, verbal noun of dilate, from M.E. dilaten, from O.Fr. dilater, from L. dilatare "make wider, enlarge," from → dis- "apart" + latus "wide." |
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