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instrumental sâzâli Fr.: instrumentale Of, relating to, or performed by or with one or more instruments. Adj. of → instrument. |
instrumental broadening pahneš-e sâzâli Fr.: élargissement instrumental The broadening of a point source caused by the response functions of the telescope and the instrument used. → instrumental; → broadening. |
instrumental flexure caftegi-ye sâzâl Fr.: flexion d'instrument An image defect caused by the mechanical flexure of materials; for example the curved-shape image of a long slit in a spectrograph. → instrumental; → flexure. |
instrumental magnitude borz-e sâzâli Fr.: magnitude instrumentale The magnitude derived directly using → Pogson's relation. The instrumental magnitude depends on → detector→ sensitivity, telescope → aperture, exact filter → bandpass, etc. It must be → calibrated to some standard → photometric system. → instrumental; → magnitude. |
instrumental profile farâpâl-e sâzâli Fr.: profil instrumental The shape of instrument's response to the input signal. The Fourier transform of the source function by the instrument function. → instrumental; → profile. |
instrumental response function karyâ-ye pâsox-e sâzâl Fr.: fonction de la réponse instrumentale The mathematical form of the way an instrument affects the input signal. → instrumental; → response; → function. |
instrumentalism sâzâlbâvari Fr.: instrumentalisme In the philosophy of science, the pragmatic view that a scientific theory is no more than a useful instrument or tool for getting our experiences in some order. → instrumental; → -ism. |
instrumentalist sâzâlgar Fr.: instrumentaliste An astronomer, engineer, or technician who is concerned with the construction of astronomical instruments. → instrumental + → -ist. |
instrumentation 1) sâzâlgari; 2) sâzâlgân Fr.: instrumentation 1) The design and use of scientific instruments for detection, measurement, control,
computation, and so on. From → instrument + -ation a combination of -ate and -ion, used to form verbal nouns. Sâzâlgari, noun from sâzâlgar, → instrumentalist. Sâzâlgân, with plurality suffix -gân. |
insulate âyeq kardan (#) Fr.: isoler To cover or to separate from conducting bodies by means of nonconductors so as to prevent or reduce the passage, transfer, or leakage of heat, electricity, or sound. → insulation, → insulator. From L. insulatus "made into an island," from L. insula "island." |
insulation âyeqkâri (#) Fr.: isolation 1) The act or fact of insulating. Verbal noun from → insulate. |
insulator âyeq (#) Fr.: isolant 1) A material or an object that does not easily allow heat, electricity,
light, or sound to pass through it. Agent noun from → insulate + → -or. Âyeq, loan from Ar. |
insurance bimé (#) Fr.: assurance The act, system, or business of insuring property, life, one's person, etc., against loss or harm arising in specified contingencies, as fire, accident, death, disablement, or the like, in consideration of a payment proportionate to the risk involved (Dictionary.com). Bimé, from bim "fear, danger" (variant bâk "fear, hesitation"); Mid.Pers. bīm "fear, fright, dread;" Av. b(a)ii- "to fear;" cf. Skt. bhayi- "to fear," bhīmá- "terrible;" Lith. bijoti(s), Latv. bîtiês "to fear, be afraid;" O.H.G. biben "to shiver;" PIE *bheiH2- "to fear" (Cheung 2007). |
insure 1) bimé kardan; 2) dartenzidan Fr.: s'assurer 1) To provide or obtain → insurance on or for. Variant of → ensure. 1) Bimé kardan, from bimé, → insurance,
+ kardan "to do, make," → -ize. |
integer doroste Fr.: entier Same as → integer number. From L. integer "whole," literally "intact, untouched," from → in- "not" + root of tangere "to touch." Doroste, from dorost "whole, complete; healthy; right," → integral. |
integer number adad-e doruste Fr.: nombre entier, entier Any member of the set consisting of → positive and → negative whole numbers and → zero. Examples: -5, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 5. |
integer partition parkeš:-e doroste Fr.: partition des entiers An expression of an integer nas the sum of one or more positive integers. The number of different partitions of n is denoted p(n). This function is called the partition function. For example, p(5) = 7, because 5 can be partitioned as: 5 = 5 = 4 + 1 = 3 + 2 = 3 + 1 + 1 = 2 + 2 + 1 = 2 + 1 + 1 + 1 = 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1. |
integral 1) dorost; 2) dorostâl Fr.: 1) intégral; 2) intégrale 1) Consisting of whole numbers or integers. Integral, from M.Fr. intégral, from M.L. integralis "forming a whole," → integer "whole." 1) Dorostâl, from dorost "whole, complete; healthy; right," related to
dorud "benediction, praise, thanksgiving," from
Mid.Pers. drust "whole; healthy; well, right," drôd "health, thriving;"
O.Pers. duruva- "firm, certain, immune;"
Av. druua- "healthy;" cf. Skt. dhruvá- "fixed, firm, immovable,
lasting, certain;" Russ. zdorovyjj "healthy;" See also
→ sound. |
integral calculus afmârik-e dorostâli Fr.: calcul intégral Branch of the calculus that deals with integration and its use in finding volumes, areas, equations of curves, solutions of differential equations, etc. |
integral equation hamugeš-e dorostâli Fr.: équation intégrale An equation involving an unknown function that appears as part of an integrand. |
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