<< < -ab ab- abo abs abs acc acc ack act acu add adi adv aff agg Ald Alf ali all alp alt Ama amp ana ang ang ann ano ant ant ape apo app app arc are Ari art asp ast ast ast Ata atm ato att aut ave axi > >>
alpha ladder nardebân-e âlfâ Fr.: échelle alpha |
alpha offset apneh-e Âlfâ Fr.: offset en ascension droite A short distance from the target, in right ascension, where the telescope is pointed for various purposes. |
alpha particle zarre-ye Âlfâ Fr.: particule alpha A positively charged particle emitted from the nuclei of certain atoms during radioactive disintegration. The alpha particle has an atomic weight of 4 and a positive charge equal in magnitude to 2 electronic charges; hence it is essentially a helium nucleus. |
alpha process farâravand-e âlfâ Fr.: processus α A class of → nuclear fusion reactions by which stars convert → helium into → heavy elements. Once carbon has been created, through → triple alpha process, in a star's interior, it can then continue to fuse with further → alpha particles to produce progressively heavier elements called → alpha particles. The first stage produces oxygen, followed by neon, magnesium, silicon, sulfur, argon, calcium, titanium, chromium and iron. This is known as the → alpha ladder, with energy released as a photon at each stage. |
Alphard (α Hydrae) Alfard (#) Fr.: Alphard The only bright star in the constellation → Hydra, that has a magnitude of about 2 and a reddish color. Alphard is a giant of spectral type K3, and has a → white dwarf→ companion. Alphard is mild barium star probably contaminated by its companion before becoming a white dwarf. Alphard, from Ar. Al-Frad ash-Shuja' "the solitary of the Serpent," from Frad "solitary" + Shuja' "a species of serpent". |
Alphekka (α Coronae Borealis) Alfakké (#) Fr.: Alphekka Also known as Gemma, the brightest star in Corona Borealis (visual magnitude 2.23). Alphekka is an A type dwarf lying at about 7 → light-years. Actually it has a faint Sun-like (G5 V) companion, that produces an eclipse of the primary every 17.4 days. Alphekka, from Ar. Nayyir al-Fakkah "the bright of the broken" (ring of star), from Nayyir "bright" + fakkah "broken," from fakk "to disjoin, unloose". |
Alpheratz (α Andromedae) Ra's-ol-Mosalsalé Fr.: Alphératz The brightest star in → Andromeda with a visual magnitude of 2.07. Alpheratz is a blue → subgiant star of spectral type B8 IV lying at a distance of about 97 → light-years. It is particularly remarkable because of the unusual strength of mercury and manganese absorption lines in its spectrum. Other names for this star are Alpherat, Sirrah, or Sirah.
These names derive from Ar. As-Surrat al-Faras
( |
already pišnun Fr.: déjà 1) By this or that time; previously; prior to or at some specified or
implied time. From M.E. al redy, literally "fully ready," → all, + M.E. redy "ready," from rædig, from O.E. ræde "prompt" + -ig "-y." Pišnun, literally "prior to now," from piš-, → pre-, + Mid./Mod.Pers. nun "now, at present" (variants aknun, konun, ultimately from Proto-Ir. *hak-nun); Av. nū- "now," nūrəm "now;" O.Pers. nūram "now;" cf. Skt. nú- "now, just, but," nūnám "now, at present, indeed;" Gk. nun "now;" L. nu- "now" (in nu-dis "the day after tomorrow"); Goth. nu "now;" O.E. nu; E. now; PIE base *nu- "now." |
Altair (α Aquilae) Tâyer, Nasr-e Tâyer, Karkas-e Parandé (#) Fr.: Altaïr The brightest star in → Aquila (apparent visual magnitude 0.77), and the twelfth brightest star in the sky. Altair is a whitish A7 → main sequence star. It has one of the fastest known rotational speeds, 242 km/s at the equator, compared with the Sun's about 2 km/s. Altair, from Ar. An Nasr at-Taiir "The Flying Vulture," from Nasr "vulture" + Ta'ir "flying." Karkas-e Parandé "The Flying Vulture" coined by Biruni (around A.D. 1000), from karkas "vulture," Av. kahrkâsa- "devourer hen," from *kahrka "hen" (Mod.Pers. kark "hen," karak "quail") + *âsa "to eat" (Mod.Pers. âš "food, soup") + Parandé "flying," from paridan "to fly" (from Mid./Mod.Pers. par(r) "feather, wing," Av. parəna- "feather, wing;" cp. Skt. parna "feather," E. fern; PIE *porno- "feather"). |
altazimuth farâzâ-sugân Fr.: altazimutal 1) A → mounting for → telescopes
that permits both → vertical and
→ horizontal → rotation. Altazimuth, from alt(itude) + → azimuth. |
altazimuth coordinate system râžmân-e hamârâhâ-ye farâzâ-sugân Fr.: coordonnées azimutales The coordinate system in which the position of a body on the → celestial sphere is described with respect to an observer's → celestial horizon and → zenith. The coordinates of a point in this system are its → altitude on the → vertical circle, and its → azimuth westward (clockwise) along the celestial horizon from the observer's south. Same as → horizon coordinate system. → altazimuth; → coordinate; → system. |
altazimuth instrument sâzâl-e farâzâ-sugâni Fr.: instrument altazimutal A telescope that moves vertically along the → altitude circle of a celestial body and horizontally along its → azimuth circle. → altazimuth; → instrument. |
altazimuth mounting barnešând-e farâzâ-sugân Fr.: monture altazimutale A → telescope mounting which has its two axes of movement aligned with the → horizon and the → zenith. |
alter degargun kardan, degunidan Fr.: altérer (v.tr.) To change or make different. M.E. alteren, from O.Fr. altérer, from M.L. alterre, from L. alter "other," from PIE *al- "beyond" + comp. suffix -ter. Degargun kardan, degargunidan, from degargun, from degar, → change, + -gun "manner, fashion," → elliptical, + kardan, -idan, → -ize. |
alteration degarguni, degarguneš Fr.: altération 1) The act or process of altering; the state of being altered. Verbal noun of → alter. |
alternate 1) peyvâr; 2) peyvâr šodan; 3) peyvâr kardan, peyvâridan Fr.: 1) alterné; 2, 3) alterner 1) Happening or following in turns; succeeding each other continuously. From L. alternus "one after the other," p.p. of alternare "to do first one thing, then the other," from alternus "every other," from alter "the other". 1) Peyvâr from pey "step; after" (as in peyâpey
"successively, repeatedly") + Pers. vâr "turn (succession),
time (repetition), alternation". Compare with Skt. vâra
"one's turn, appointed time, alteration, succession". |
alternating peyvârandé Fr.: alternatif Occuring in a successive manner. Acting or proceeding by turns. → alternating current. |
alternating current (AC) jarayân-e peyvârandé Fr.: courant alternatif An → electric current that reverses direction of flow at regular intervals. The typical alternating current is → sinusoidal in shape. Alternating current has the advantage over → direct current in that its → voltage magnitude can be changed easily through a → transformer. Moreover, it is safer to transfer over the longer city distances and can provide more → power. The frequency of alternating current is 50 Hz (Europe) or 60 Hz (USA). → alternating; → current. |
alternation peyvâreš Fr.: alternance General: Successive change from one thing or state to
another and back again.
Alternation, noun from → alternate. |
alternative degarine Fr.: alternatif 1) (n) A proposition or situation offering a choice between two or more
things only one of which may be chosen.
Alternative, from → alternate. Degarine, from degar "other," variant digar, from Mid.Pers. dit, ditikar "the other, the second," O.Pers. duvitiya- "second," Av. daibitya-, bitya- "second," Skt. dvitiya- "second," PIE *duitiio- "second" + suffix -ine. |
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