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compressed tanjidé (#) Fr.: comprimé Pressed into less space; condensed. Past participle of → compress. |
compressed air havâ-ye tanjidé Fr.: air comprimé Air whose density is increased by being subjected to a pressure greater than atmospheric pressure. → compressed; → air. |
compressibility tanješpaziri Fr.: compressibilité The ability or quality to be reduced in volume. The coefficient of compressibility of a substance is given by c = (1/V).(δV/δp), where δV is the change in the volume resulting from a change of pressure δp, the temperature remaining constant. Noun from → compressible. |
compressible tanjidani, tanješpazir Fr.: compressible Able to be reduced in volume. → compressible flow. Adjective from → compress + -ible, variant of -able. Tanjidani, tanješpazir from tanjidan, → compress, + adjective suffix -i; tanješpazir from tanješ, → compression, + pazir "receiving, admitting; having, endowed with;" → -able. |
compressible flow tacân-e tanjidani, ~ tanješpazir Fr.: flot compressible A flow in which changes of the density, induced by velocities and their fluctuations, are not negligible. → compressible; → flow. |
compression tanješ (#) Fr.: compression The act or process of compressing; the state of being compressed. Verbal noun from → compress. |
compression factor karvand-e tanješ Fr.: facteur de compression In thermodynamics, the quantity Z = pVm/RT, in which P is the gas pressure, Vm the molar volume, R the gas constant, and T the temperature. The compression factor is a measure of the deviation of a real gas from an ideal gas. For an ideal gas the compression factor is equal to 1. → compression; → facteur. |
compression wave mowj-e tanješ Fr.: onde de compression A → longitudinal wave that compresses the → medium along the direction of → propagation, such as a → sound wave. Same as → compressional wave. → compression; → wave. |
compressional tanješi (#) Fr.: de compression Of or relating to → compression. → compression; → -al. |
compressional wave mowj-e tanješi Fr.: onde de compression An → elastic wave that travels through a → medium with the particles of the medium moving in the same direction as the wave propagation. The compressional wave is the wave that is primarily used in → seismic exploration. Also called P-wave, primary wave, pressure wave. → compressional; → wave. |
Compton Compton Fr.: Compton The American physicist Arthur Holly Compton (1892-1962),
the Nobel Prize in Physics 1927, who made important contributions
to the study of X- and cosmic rays. |
Compton catastrophe negunzâr-e Compton Fr.: catastrophe de Compton In a compact, steady radio-source where the density of relativistic electrons and the density of synchrotron radiation due to these electrons are very large, the radio photons should be transformed into X-ray and gamma-ray photons through inelastic Compton scatterings onto the relativistic electrons. Thus the radio photons should rapidly disappear and only gamma-ray photons should be observed. This phenomenon does not take place if the radio source is in relativistic expansion. → Compton; → catastrophe. |
Compton effect oskar-e Compton Fr.: effet Compton Increase in the wavelength of an → X-ray or → gamma ray → photon when it collides a → free → electron. The photon transfers part of its energy to the electron, the electron recoils, and the photon itself is scattered at a reduced energy. |
Compton equation hamugeš-e Compton Fr.: équation de Compton Theoretical equation which gives the change in the photon wavelength due to the → Compton effect. |
Compton era dowrân-e Compton Fr.: ère de Compton A period in the early evolution of the Universe, before t = 10-23 sec when the radius of curvature of the Universe was less than the → Compton wavelength of typical particles. |
Compton recoil paszani-ye Compton Fr.: recul de Compton The change of direction undergone by the electron in the → Compton effect. The scattered photon and the collided electron move in different directions from that of the incident photon. |
Compton scattering parâkaneš-e Compton (#) Fr.: diffusion Compton Scattering of a → photon due to the → Compton effect. → Compton; → scattering. |
Compton shift kib-e Compton Fr.: décalage de Compton Of the → Compton effect, the amount of increase in the wavelength of an energetic photon upon its collision with an electron. |
Compton suppression nehâveš-e Compton Fr.: suppression de Compton In → gamma ray → spectroscopy, a technique to reduce the contribution of gamma rays generated by → Compton scattering. → Compton; → suppression. |
Compton wavelength mowjtul-e Compton, tul-e mowj-e ~ Fr.: longueur d'onde de Compton, longueur d'onde Compton The quantum wavelength of a particle with a highly relativistic velocity. The Compton wavelength is given by h/mc, where h is Planck's constant, m is the mass of the particle, and c the light speed. For an electron, the Compton wavelength is about 2.4 × 10-10 cm, intermediate between the size of an atomic nucleus and an atom. → Compton; → wavelength. |
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