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erupt osdaridan Fr.: entrer en éruption To burst forth; to eject matter (of a star, volcano, geyser, etc.). → eruptive variable. From L eruptus "burst forth, broken out," p.p. of erumpere "to break out, burst forth," from → ex- "out" + rumpere "to break, rupture." Osdaridan, from os-, → ex- + daridan "to tear, rend, lacerate;" Mid.Pers. darridan "to tear, split;" Av. dar- "to tear," dərəta- "cut," auua.dərənant- "shattering;" cf. Skt. dar- "to crack, split, break, burst," darati "he splits;" Gk. derein "to flay," derma "skin;" P.Gmc. *teran; O.E. teran; E. tear; Ger. zerren "to pull, to tear," zehren "to undermine, to wear out;" PIE base *der- " to split, peel, flay." |
eruption osdareš Fr.: éruption 1) An act, process, or instance of erupting; something that is erupted or ejected. Verbal noun of → erupt. |
eruptive osdareši Fr.: éruptif Relating to, formed by, characterized by, or producing → eruption. |
eruptive object barÂxt-e osdareši Fr.: objet éruptif An astronomical object such as a → variable star, a → nova, a → young stellar object, etc. characterized by abrupt changes of luminosity. |
eruptive prominence zabâne-ye osdareši Fr.: protubérance éruptive A huge solar prominence which has previously been quiescent but suddenly starts to lift up from the → photosphere with velocities of several hundred km/s and escapes into the → interplanetary space. Eruptive prominences with the highest velocities have been observed at 1300 km/s, reaching heights of 1 million km above the photosphere. Such prominences are often observed at the solar limb, in association with → coronal mass ejections. On the Sun's disk, the equivalent phenomenon is an eruptive filament. → eruptive; → prominence |
eruptive variable vartande-ye osdareši Fr.: variable éruptive same as → cataclysmic variable. |
escape 1) gorixtan, 2) goriz (#) Fr.: 1) échapper, s'échapper; 2) échappement 1) To get away; to get free of. From M.E. escapen; O.Fr. eschaper, from V.L. *excappare, literally "to get out of one's cape, leave a pursuer with just one's cape," from L. → ex- "out" + L.L. cappa "mantle." Gorixtan, goriz- "to escape; to flee, run away;" Mid.Pers. virextan; Proto-Iranian *vi-raik, from vi- "apart, asunder" + *raik; Av. raek- "to leave, set free, let off;" Mid./Mod.Pers. reg/rig (in mordé-rig "inheritance"); Skt. ric- "to leave," rinakti "gives up, evacuates;" Gk. leipein "to leave;" L. linquere "to leave;" from PIE *linkw-, from *leikw- "to leave behind" (cf. Goth. leihvan; O.E. lænan "to lend;" O.H.G. lihan "to borrow;" O.N. lan "loan"). |
escape velocity tondâ-ye goriz Fr.: vitesse d'échapement The speed an object must attain in order to free itself from the gravitational influence of an astronomical body. It is the minimum velocity for the object to enter a parabolic trajectory. The escape velocity is given by: Ve = (2GM/r)1/2, where G is the → gravitational constant, M is the mass of the astronomical body, and r is its radius. The escape velocity of the Earth is about 11.2 km s-1 that of the Moon is 2.4 km s-1. The escape velocity from the Sun is about 618 km s-1, and the solar escape velocity from Earth's orbit is about 42.1 km s-1. |
ESPaDOnS ESPaDOnS Fr.: ESPaDOnS An advanced stellar → spectropolarimeter designed and built at the Observatoire Midi-Pyréenées and installed at the → Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT). It can obtain a a complete optical spectrum, from 370 nm to 1050 nm, in a single exposure. Among its characteristics: resolving power 65 000 to 80 000; 12% peak throughput (telescope and detector included); continuum subtracted linear and circular polarization spectra of the stellar light (in polarimetric mode). ESPaDOnS is used to study a broad range of important problems in stellar physics: from → stellar magnetic fields to → accretion disks and → extrasolar planets; from inhomogeneities and differential rotation on stellar surfaces to activity cycles and magnetic braking; from microscopic diffusion to turbulence, convection, and circulation in stellar interiors; from abundances and pulsations in stellar atmospheres to stellar winds; from the early phases of stellar formation to the late stages of stellar evolution; from extended circumstellar environments to distant interstellar medium (Donati et al., 2006, Solar Polarization, ASP Conf. Series, 358, 362, eds. R. Casini, B. W. Lites). Short for Echelle Spectro-Polarimetric Device for the O bservation of Stars; → echelle; → spectro-; → polarimetric; → device; → observation; → star. |
establish nešâxtan, nešâzidan Fr.: établir 1) To found, institute, build, or bring into being on a firm or stable basis. From O.Fr. establiss-, stem of establir, from L. stabilire "make stable," from stabilis "firm, stable," literally "able to stand," from stare "to stand;" PIE base *sta- "to stand" (cf. Mod.Pers. istâdan "to stand;" O.Pers./Av. sta- "to stand, stand still; set;" Skt. sthâ- "to stand;" Gk. histemi "put, place, weigh;" stasis "a standing still;" Lith. statau "place;" Goth. standan; O.E. standan "to stand," stede "place"). Nešâxtan, nešâzidan "to establish; to fix in the ground, strengthen," from ne- "down, below," → ni-, + šâxtan, šâz-, variants of Mod./Mid.Pers. sâxtan, sâz- "to form, prepare, build, make," ultimately from Proto-Iranian *sac- "to fit, be suitable; to prepare." |
establishment nešâzeš Fr.: 1, 2, 3, 4) établissement; 4) les pouvoirs établis 1) The act or an instance of establishing. |
esteem 1) arj (#); 2) arj nehâdan Fr.: 1) estime; 2) estimer 1) Favorable opinion or judgment; respect or regard. M.E. estemen, from M.Fr. estimer, from L. aestimare "to value, determine the value of, appraise," → estimate. Arj "esteem, honor, dignity; price, worth, value," → credit. Arj nehâdan with nehâdan "to place, put," → position. |
estimable arjmand (#) Fr.: estimable, digne d'estime Worthy of esteem; deserving respect or admiration. Capable of being estimated (Dictionary.com). |
estimate 1) barâvard (#); 2) barâvardan (#), barâvard kardan (#) Fr.: 1) estimation; 2) estimer 1) Statistics: An indication of the value of an unknown quantity based
on observed data. From M.Fr. estimer, from L. æstimatus, p.p. of æstimare "to value, estimate." Barâvard from prefix bar- "on, upon, up," → on-, + âvard past stem of âvardan "to bring, to cause, to produce," → production; verb with infinitive suffix -dan and kardan "to do, make," → verb. |
estimation barâvari (#) Fr.: estimation Statistics: The process by which sample data are used to indicate the value of an unknown quantity in a population. Verbal noun of → estimate. |
estimator barâvar Fr.: estimateur Statistics: Any quantity calculated from the sample data which is used to give information about an unknown quantity in a population. For example, the sample mean is an estimator of the population mean. Agent noun of → estimate. |
estuary kešandân (#) Fr.: estuaire 1) That part of the mouth or lower course of a river in which the river's current
meets the sea's tide. From L. aestuarium "a tidal marsh, mud-beds covered by water at high tides; channel inland from the sea," from aestus "boiling (of the sea), tide, heat," from PIE *aidh- "to burn;" cognates: Gk aithein "to burn," Skt. inddhe "burst into flames," O.Irish aed "fire," O.H.G. eit "funeral pile." Kešandân, literally "site of tides," from kešand, → tide, + -ân a suffix of place and time. |
Eta Carinae Eta Afzal Fr.: Eta de la Carène The most luminous and the most extensively studied of → Luminous Blue Variables. Known also as HD 93308, it lies in the → Trumpler 16→ star cluster of the → Carina Nebula and is about 7,500 to 8,000 → light-years away. η Carina probably began its life as a → very massive star with an initial mass of about 150 → solar masses, and has a current estimated mass of about 90-100 solar masses. The difference has been lost in sudden giant eruptions in the past few thousand years. The so-called → Homunculus Nebula results from the mass ejection by η Carinae during its giant outburst around 1843 when it reached a magnitude of -1 and became the second brightest star in the southern sky. About 1880 it reached magnitude 7 and has remained at this level, although with fluctuations. The 1843 event ejected at least 12 solar masses of gas moving at speeds of up to 650 km s-1 with a kinetic energy of almost 1050 erg. The double-lobed remnant has a mass of about 2.5 solar masses. It is divided by a → torus of cold dust (110 K), about 5 → light-years in radius and 15 solar masses, which was ejected in an earlier event some 1000 years ago. There is strong evidence that η Carinae is a → binary system with a period of about 5.5 years and a projected separation less than 30 → astronomical units (about 0.013 arcsec). A colliding-wind binary is suggested by the → hard X-ray spectrum. The main component has an estimated → mass loss rate of 10-3 solar masses per year. Eta (η), Gk. letter of alphabet; the → Carina constellation. |
etch bâ tizâb kandan, ecidan Fr.: graver à eau forte 1) To cut, bite, or corrode with an acid or the like; engrave with an
acid or the like, as to form a design in furrows that when charged
with ink will give an impression on paper. From Du. etsen, from Ger. ätzen "to etch," from O.H.G. azzon "to cause to bite, feed," ultimately from PIE root *ed- "to eat;" cf. Av. ad- "to eat;" Mod.Pers. âš "thick brew, soup" (from O.Pers. *āšyā-, Proto-Ir. *HasH- "to eat"); Skt. ad- "to eat;" Gk. edo "I eat;" Lith. edu "I eat;" O.Irish ithim "I eat;" O.E. etan, O.H.G. essan, Ger. essen "to eat." Bâ tizâb kandan, literally "to dig with acid," from bâ "with," tizâb "acid," kandan "to dig;" ecidan, from E. etch, cognate with Pers. âš, as above. |
etching tizâb-kand, eceš Fr.: gravure à eau forte 1) The act or process of making designs or pictures on a metal plate,
glass, etc., by the corrosive action of an acid instead of by a
burin. Verbal noun of → etch. |
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