<< < -ci cal Cal can Cap car cas cat cau cel cen cen cha cha cha che Chi chr cir cir civ Cla clo clu CNO coa coe coh col col col com com com com com com com com Com con con con con con con con con con con con con Coo cor cor cor cos cos cos cou cov cra cri cro cry cum cur cyc > >>
collection gerdâvareš, gerdâvard, gerdâmad, gerdâyand (#) Fr.: collection 1) The act or process of collecting. Verbal noun from → collect. |
collective gerdâmadi Fr.: collectif Forming a whole; of or characteristic of a group taken together. |
collective behavior raftâr-e gerdâmadi Fr.: comportement collectif 1) The whole behavior of a system of many interacting components,
which differs from that of the individual components. Some classical
examples are the → many-body problem,
→ phase transition, most of thermodynamic phenomena,
collective oscillations occurring in solids, etc. Physics dealt with collective
behavior much earlier than the term collective behavior was even coined. → collective; → behavior. |
collective star formation diseš-e gerdâmdi-ye setâregân Fr.: formation collective d'étolies Formation of stars, especially → massive stars, in group as opposed to individual formation. → collective; → star; → formation. |
collectivism gerdâmadgerâyi Fr.: collectivisme 1) The principle of ownership of the means of production, by the state or the people. → collective; → -ism. |
collectivity gerdâmadigi Fr.: collectivité 1) Collective character. → collective; → -ity. |
collectivization gerâmadideš, gerâdmad-kard Fr.: collectivisation The process of forming collectives or collective communities where property and resources are owned by the community and not individuals (TheFreeDictionary.com). Verbal noun of → collectivize. |
collectivize gerâmadidan, gerâdmad kardan Fr.: collectiviser To organize (a people, industry, economy, etc.) according to the principles of → collectivism (Dictionary.com). → collective; → -ize. |
collector gerdâvar (#) Fr.: collecteur A device that collects: a solar energy collector; a dust collector. From → collect + -or. |
collide hamkubidan Fr.: se heurter, heurter, entrer en collision 1) To strike together with forceful impact, such as two astronomical objects. From L. collidere "to strike together," from col- variant of → com- "together" + laedere "to strike," of unknown origin. Ham- "together, with," → com- + kubidan, kuftan "to beat, strike, pound," kus "drum," Mid.Pers. kôftan and kôstan "to beat, strike." |
collider hamkubgar, hamkubandé Fr.: collisionneur A particle accelerator in which two beams of particles are forced to collide head on. |
colliding-beam accelerator šetâbgar bâ tâbe-ye hamkubandé Fr.: accélérateur à faisceau de collision Same as → collider. → collide; → beam; → accelerator. |
collimate hamrâstâyidan, hamrâstâ kardan Fr.: collimater To pack and align photons or atomic particles parallel to a particular direction. L. collimatus, p.p. of collimare, alteration of collineare "to make straight," from → com- + linea, → line. From ham- "together, with," → com- + râstâ, → direction, + -idan infinitive suffix, kardan "to do," → work. |
collimated hamrâstâ Fr.: collimaté Made accurately parallel or brought into line. Past participle of → collimate. |
collimated beam tâbe-ye hamrâstâ Fr.: faisceau collimaté A → beam of → photons or → subatomic particles with a narrow → cross section that has little or no spatial spread. → collimated; → beam. |
collimated jet šân-e hamrâstâ Fr.: jet collimaté A beam of particles in which every particle would have exactly the same direction of travel, thereby the jet moves without → dispersion. Collimated jets of → plasma are associated with → protostars. → collimated; → jet. |
collimation hamrâstâyeš Fr.: collimation 1) The process of restricting a beam of photons or
particles to a given area. Verbal noun of → collimate. |
collimator hamrâstâgar Fr.: collimateur An instrument that creates a tight parallel beam of light or particles. Agent noun from → collimate. |
Collinder catalog kâtâlog-e Collinder Fr.: catalogue de Collinder A catalog of → open clusters published in 1931. Named after Per Collinder (1890-1975) the Swedish astronomer who created the catalog; → catalog. |
collinear ham-xatt Fr.: colinéaire Lying on the same straight line. Collinear points are a set of points on the same line. |
<< < -ci cal Cal can Cap car cas cat cau cel cen cen cha cha cha che Chi chr cir cir civ Cla clo clu CNO coa coe coh col col col com com com com com com com com Com con con con con con con con con con con con con Coo cor cor cor cos cos cos cou cov cra cri cro cry cum cur cyc > >>