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apogalacticon apâkahkašân Fr.: apogalacticon The point at which a celestial body is farthest from the center of a galaxy; opposite of → perigalacticon. |
apogee apâzam Fr.: apogée The point in the orbit of the moon or an artificial satellite that is farthest from the terrestrial center and at which the body's velocity is at a minimum. From Fr. apogée, from L. apogæum, from Gk. apogaion "away from the earth," from → apo- "off, away" + gaia/ge "earth." According to Dehxodâ, the term owj used in Persian is neither Ar. nor Skt. (contrary to the opinions of Khwarazi and Biruni respectively), but the corrupt form of the above Gk. term. Apâzam, from apâ-, → apo-, + Av. zam- "the earth," Mid.Pers. zamig, Mod.Pers. zami, zamin "the earth;" cf. Skt. ksam, Gk. khthôn, khamai "on the ground," L. homo "earthly being" and humus "the earth" (as in homo sapiens or homicide, humble, humus, exhume); PIE root *dh(e)ghom "earth". |
apogee eclipse gereft-e apâzami Fr.: éclipse apogée An eclipse (of the Sun or Moon) which takes place when the Moon is at the → apogee of its orbit. The solar apogee eclipses, when they are not partial, are always → annular. The maximum duration of an apogee solar eclipse is 6h 15m (between the → first contact and the → fourth contact). The maximum duration of a lunar apogee eclipse, between the two exterior contacts of the Moon with the → penumbra, is 6h 18m (the maximum totality being 1h 44m) (M.S.: SDE). |
apogee full Moon pormâng-e apâzam, pormâh-e ~ Fr.: pleine lune d'apogée The → full Moon when our natural satellite is at its farthest position from the Earth. The difference in apparent size with respect to the → perigee full Moon represents a difference in distance of just under 50,000 km between → apogee and → perigee, given the Moon's average distance of about 385,000 km. Also called → full micro Moon. |
apojove apâhormoz Fr.: apojove The → point in the → orbit of a → satellite of → Jupiter that is farthest from Jupiter's center. → perijove. |
Apollo asteroid sayyârak-e Apollon Fr.: astéroïde Apollon A member of a class of → near-Earth asteroids (NEAs) that have orbital → semi-major axes greater than that of the Earth (> 1 → astronomical unit) but → perihelion distances less than the Earth's → aphelion distance (less than 1.017 AU); thus, they cross the Earth's orbit when near the perihelia of their orbits. They are named for the prototype Apollo. |
apolune apâmah, apâmâh Fr.: apolune The point in a lunar orbit that is farthest from the center of the Lune. Also → apocynthion. From → apo- "away from, off" + lune "moon," from L. luna; PIE *louksnâ- "moon," literally "luminous, bright;" compare with O.Pers. raucah-, Av. raocah- "light, luminous; daylight," Skt. roka "brightness, light," cognate with Gk. leukos "white, clear," L. lux "light" (also lumen, luna), PIE *leuk- "light, brightness". The Mod.Pers. words rowšan, raxšân "bright, clear," ruz "day," foruq "light," and afruxtan "to light, kindle" also belong to this family, as well as the E. light, Ger. Licht, and Fr. lumière. Apâmah, apâmâh, → apocynthion. |
apparatus dastgâh (#) Fr.: appareil, dispositif An appliance or device for a particular purpose: an X-ray apparatus. An integrated group of materials or devices used for a particular purpose. From L. apparatus "equipment, preparation," from p.p. of apparare "to prepare," from ad- "to" + parare "make ready". Dastgâh "any manufacturing instrument, a loom; ustensils". |
apparent padidâr (#) Fr.: apparent General: Open to view, visible; appearing as actual to
the eye or mind.
O.Fr. aparant, from L. apparentem, pr.p. of apparere "to appear," from ad- "to" + perere "to come forth, be visible". Padidâr "appearing, manifest," from padid "in sight, evident, clear," from Mid.Pers. patdit, from O.Pers./Av. patiy-/paiti "toward, against, back" (cp. Skt. prati- "near, toward, against, in return," Gk. proti, pros "face to face with, toward, in addition to") + O.Pers./Av. di-/dâ(y)- "to see" (Skt. dhi- "to think"), Mod.Pers. didan "to see". |
apparent diameter tarâmun-e padidâr, qotr-e ~ Fr.: diamètre apparent The angular diameter of a celestial body expressed in degrees, minutes, and seconds of arc, or in radians. |
apparent distance durâ-ye padidâr Fr.: distance apparente The angular distance between two celestial bodies (e.g. the components of a binary star system), expressed in degrees, minutes and seconds of arc. |
apparent field meydân-e padidâr Fr.: champ apparent The angular diameter of the circle of light that the eye sees through an eyepiece. |
apparent horizon ofoq-e padidâr Fr.: horizon apparent The circle determined by the intersection of the heavens with a → cone whose → vertex is the → eye, and whose elements are tangent to lines of the Earth's surface. Same as → visible horizon. Assuming that there is no → atmospheric refraction, apparent horizon coincides with → geometric horizon. See also → sea horizon. |
apparent magnitude borz-e padidâr Fr.: magnitude apparente A measure of a star's observed brightness (opposed to → absolute magnitude); symbol m. It depends on the star's → intrinsic brightness, its distance from the observer, and the amount of → interstellar absorption. The brightest star → Sirius has an apparent magnitude of -1.46, while the weakest stars visible with the naked eye in the most favorable observation conditions have magnitudes of about +6.5. The stars of magnitudes less than +23 are measured by professional observatories, whereas those of magnitudes less than +30 by a telescope such as the → Hubble Space Telescope (M.S.: SDE). |
apparent noon nimruz-e padidâr Fr.: midi vrai The moment when the center of the Sun crosses the meridian. Same as true noon. |
apparent place jâ-ye padidâr Fr.: position apparente Same as → apparent position. |
apparent position naheš-e padidâr, jâ-ye ~ Fr.: position apparente 1) The position on the celestial sphere at which a heavenly body
would be seen from the Earth at a particular time. |
apparent rising barâyeš-e padidâr Fr.: lever apparent The instant of time when the object is in the East and the geometric → zenith distance is equal to 90° plus the → horizontal refraction plus the semidiameter minus the → parallax. |
apparent setting forušod-e padidâr Fr.: coucher apparent The instant of time when the object is in the West and the geometric → zenith distance is equal to 90° plus the → horizontal refraction plus the semidiameter minus the → parallax. |
apparent sidereal day ruz-e axtari-ye padidâr Fr.: jour sidéral apparent The time interval between two successive → upper transits of the → true equinox of date. |
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