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pseudo-Euclidean space fazâ-ye doruž-Oqlidosi Fr.: espace pseudo-euclidien A real vector space of dimension n having a symmetric bilinear form (x, y) such that in some basis e1, ..., en, the quadratic form (x2) takes the form x12 + ... + xn - 12 - xn2. Such bases are called orthonormal. |
pseudo-nucleus doruž-hasté Fr.: pseudo-noyau Same → false nucleus. |
pseudo-Riemannian space fazâ-ye doruž-Riemanni Fr.: espace pseudo-riemannien A space with an affine connection (without torsion), at each point of which the tangent space is a → pseudo-Euclidean space (Encyclopedia of Mathematics, Kluwer Academic Publications, Editor in chief I. M. Vinogradov, 1991). → pseudo-; → Riemannian; → space. |
pseudonym doružnâm Fr.: pseudonyme A fictitious name used by an author to conceal his or her identity; pen name (Dictionary.com). |
pseudoscience doruž-dâneš Fr.: pseudoscience Any set of ideas, methods, or assertions that claims to be objective and scientific but that in fact does not seriously value or attempt to apply objectivity and → scientific method to its endeavors. Pseudoscientific statements are usually not → falsifiable by means of → objective experimental or observational evidence, in contrast to scientific statements that can be refuted. Pseudoscience uses scientific-sounding terminology but totally lacks scientific support. Among pseudoscience examples are → astrology, scientology, clairvoyance, and parapsychology. |
Ptolemaic astronomy axtaršenâsi-ye Batlamyus (#) Fr.: astronomie ptoléméenne → Ptolemaic system; → astronomy. |
Ptolemaic system râžmân-e Batlamyus Fr.: système de Ptolémée An empirical model developed by Ptolemy about 150 A.D., in which a motionless Earth was the center of the Universe. The Sun, Moon, and planets revolved around the Earth in → eccentric circles and → epicycles. The fixed stars were attached to an outer sphere concentric with Earth. The Ptolemaic system gave the positions of the planets accurately enough for naked-eye observations, although it also had serious defects. As an extreme example, according to Ptolemy's model for the Moon, our satellite should appear to be almost twice as large when it is full than it is at quadrature, which is an absurdity since it is not seen as such. Claudius Ptolemaeus was a mathematician, geographer, astronomer, and astrologer. The most influential of Greek astronomers, he lived in Roman Egypt, and was probably born there; he died in Alexandria in 165 A.D.; → system. |
public 1) hamegân (#); 2) hamegâni (#) Fr.: 1) public; 2) publique 1a) The community or people in general. M.E., from L. publicus "of the people; of the state," also "common, general, public; ordinary," and as a noun, "a commonwealth; public property," from Old L. poplicus "pertaining to the people." from populus "people." Hamegân, from hamé, → all, + -gân suffix forming plural entities, from Mid.Pers. -gânag, -gâna. |
public opinion pažân-e hamegâni Fr.: opinion publique The collective opinion of many people on some issue, problem, etc., especially as a guide to action, decision, or the like (Dictionary.com). |
publication vâgâneš Fr.: publication 1) The act of publishing a book, periodical, map, piece of music, engraving, or the like. Verbal noun of → publish. |
publicity hamegânigi Fr.: publicité 1) Extensive mention in the news media or by word of mouth or other means of communication. |
publicize hameganidan Fr.: rendre public; farie de la publicité pour To give publicity to; bring to public notice, advertise. |
publish vâgândan Fr.: publier To issue (printed or otherwise reproduced textual or graphic material, computer software, etc.) for sale or distribution to the public (Dictionary.com). M.E. publisshen, O.Fr. publier "make public, spread out, communicate," from L. publicare "make public," from publicus, → public. Vâgândan "to diffuse, scatter, disperse," on the model of parâgandan, parâkandan "scatter, disperse," from vâ- "asunder, apart, off, away," → dis-, + gân variant of gan, kan (cf. Av. vikān- "to destroy," Kurd. nikândin "to bury"), from Proto-Ir. *kan- "to throw, place, put," → scatter. |
publisher vâgângar Fr.: éditeur A person or company whose business is the publishing of books, periodicals, engravings, computer software, etc. (Dictionary.com). |
pulp gup Fr.: pulpe 1) The soft fleshy part of a fruit. M.E., from L. pulpa "animal or plant pulp; pith of wood." Gup, from Jâski gup "fleshy, fat;" cf. Gilaki quppe "watermelon core." |
pulsar pulsâr (#), tapâr (#) Fr.: pulsar A rotating → neutron star that emits a radio
→ beam that is centered on the
→ magnetic axis
of the neutron star. As the magnetic axis and hence the beam are inclined to the
→ rotation axis, a
→ pulse is seen every time the → rotation
brings the → magnetic pole
region of the neutron star into view. In this way the pulsar
acts much as a light house does, sweeping a beam of radiation through space.
The pulse or spin periods range from 1.4
milliseconds to 8.5 seconds. As neutron stars concentrate an average of 1.4
→ solar masses on a diameter of only 20 km, pulsars are
exceedingly → dense and → compact,
representing the densest matter in the observable Universe. The pulsar radiation,
chiefly emitted in → radio
frequencies (0.1-1 GHz), is highly
→ polarized. The exact mechanism by which a
pulsar radiates is still a matter of vigorous investigation.
Simply put, an enormous electric field is induced by the rotation of a
magnetized neutron star. The force of this field
exceeds gravity by ten to twelve orders of magnitudes.
Charged particles are whereby pulled out from the stellar surface
resulting in a dense, magnetized plasma that surrounds the pulsar
(→ magnetosphere). The charged particles flow out
of the magnetic → polar caps of the neutron star, following
the open
magnetic field lines. The acceleration of the charged particles
along the curved magnetic field lines will cause them to radiate
(see, e.g., M. Kramer, 2010, astro-ph/1008.5032). Pulsar, from puls(e) or puls(ing) + (st)ar. Tapâr, from tap, → pulse, + (set)âr(é), from setâré, → star. |
pulsar glitch geles-e pulsâr, ~ tapâr Fr.: A sudden change in the pulsar period due to a sudden shift in the crust of the → neutron star (a → starquake). |
pulsar magnetosphere meqnâtsepehr-e pulsâr Fr.: magnétosphère de pulsar A dense zone of magnetized → plasma surrounding a → pulsar. The magnetosphere, lying between the surface of the → neutron star and the → light cylinder, corotates with the pulsar like a rigid body under the effect of strong magnetic field. The magnetosphere's thickness is determined by the constraint that the corotation velocity of its upper surface should not exceed the → speed of light. → pilsar; → magnetosphere. |
pulsar nulling nuleš-e pulsâr Fr.: phase d'arrêt de pulsar A phenomenon in which the → pulsar → emission abruptly drops to zero or near zero for a certain number of → pulse → periods, then suddenly returns to normal. Nulling is relatively common in pulsars. The → nulling fraction can be more than 80%. Investigating the emission behaviors of → nulling pulsars is important to understand the pulsar emission mechanism. |
pulsar planet sayyâre-ye pulsâri, tapaar-e ~ Fr.: planète de pulsar A planet orbiting a → pulsar. The first such planet to be discovered was around a → millisecond pulsar known as PSR 1257+12. |
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