<< < -ne nan nat nav nec Nep neu New New NGC nob nom non non nor nor nuc nuc nul nut > >>
New General Catalogue (NGC) kâtâlog-e harvin-e now Fr.: New General Catalogue A catalogue of 7,840 non-stellar objects compiled by J. L. E. Dreyer and published in 1888. A further 1,529 objects were listed in a supplement that appeared seven years later, called the → Index Catalogue (IC). The Second Index Catalogue of 1908 extended the supplementary list to 5,386 objects. |
New Horizons New Horizons Fr.: New Horizons A space mission by → NASA whose main goal is to study the → dwarf planet Pluto and it satellites. New Horizons was launched on January 19, 2006; it swung past → Jupiter for a → gravity assist and scientific studies in February 2007, and conducted a six-month-long reconnaissance → flyby study of → Pluto and its moons in summer 2015, culminating with Pluto closest approach on July 14, 2015. It flew 12,500 km above the surface of Pluto, making it the first spacecraft to explore the dwarf planet. Its science payload includes seven instruments: Ralph (visible and infrared imager/spectrometer), Alice (ultraviolet imaging spectrometer), REX (Radio Science EXperiment), LORRI (Long Range Reconnaissance Imager), SWAP (Solar Wind Around Pluto), PEPSSI: (Pluto Energetic Particle Spectrometer Science Investigation), and SDC: (Student Dust Counter). As part of an extended mission, New Horizons has maneuvered for a flyby of → Kuiper belt object 2014 MU69, expected to take place on January 1, 2019, when it is 43.4 → astronomical units (AU) from the Sun. |
new moon nowmâng (#), mâng-e now (#) Fr.: nouvelle lune The Moon's phase when it is at the same celestial longitude as the Sun and thus totally un-illuminated as seen from Earth. |
newton newton (#) Fr.: newton The unit of force in the SI system of units. 1 newton (N) is defined as the force required to give a mass of 1 kilogram an acceleration of 1 m s-2. 1 N = 105 → dynes. Named after Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727), the English highly prominent physicist and mathematician. |
Newton constant pâyâ-ye Newton Fr.: constante de Newton Same as the → gravitational constant. |
Newton's color wheel carx-e rang-e Newton Fr.: disque de Newton The arrangement of the seven colors of the rainbow on a disk. When the disk rotates very fast, the eye cannot distinguish between individual colors and the disk is perceived as white. This apparatus demonstrates the discovery made by Newton (Opticks, 1704) that light is composed of seven colors. |
Newton's constant pâyâ-ye Newton Fr.: constante de Newton Same as the → gravitational constant. |
Newton's cradle gahvâre-ye Newton Fr.: pendule de Newton A device consisting of a series of equal → pendulums in a row used to demonstrate the laws of → conservation of momentum and → conservation of energy. |
Newton's disk gerde-ye Newton Fr.: disque de Newton |
Newton's equation hamugeš-e Newton Fr.: équation de Newton In → geometric optics, an expression relating the → focal lengths of an → optical system (f and f') and the object x and image x' distances measured from the respective focal points. Thus, ff' = xx'. Same as Newton's formula. |
Newton's first law of motion naxostin qânun-e Newtoni-ye jonbeš (#) Fr.: première loi newtonienne de mouvement A body continues in its state of constant velocity (which may be zero) unless it is acted upon by an external force. |
Newton's law of cooling qânun-e sardeš-e Newton Fr.: loi de refroidissement de Newton An approximate empirical relation between the rate of → heat transfer to or from an object and the temperature difference between the object and its surrounding environment. When the temperature difference is not too large: dT/dt = -k(T - Ts), where T is the temperature of the object, Ts is that of its surroundings, t is time, and k is a constant, different for different bodies. |
Newton's law of gravitation qânun-e gerâneš-e Newton Fr.: loi newtonienne de la gravitation The universal law which states that the force of attraction between any two bodies is proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them: F = G (m1.m2)/r2, where G is the → gravitational constant. → Newton; → law; → gravitation. |
Newton's laws of motion qânunhâ-ye jonbeš-e Newton Fr.: lois de mouvement de Newton The three fundamental laws which are the basis of → Newtonian mechanics. They were stated in Newton's Principia (1687). → Newton's first law, → Newton's second law , → Newton's third law. |
Newton's method raveš-e Newton Fr.: méthode de Newton Same as the → Newton-Raphson method. |
Newton's rings halqehâ-ye Newton (#) Fr.: anneaux de Newton Colored circular → fringes formed when light beams reflected from two polished, adjacent surfaces, placed together with a thin film of air between them, interfere. → interference. |
Newton's second law of motion dovomin qânun-e Newtoni-ye jonbeš (#) Fr.: seconde loi newtonienne de mouvement For an unbalanced force acting on a body, the acceleration produced is proportional to the force impressed; the constant of proportionality is the inertial mass of the body. |
Newton's shell theorem farbin-e puste-ye Newton Fr.: théorème de Newton In classical mechanics, an analytical method applied to a material sphere to determine the gravitational field at a point outside or inside the sphere. Newton's shell theorem states that: 1) The gravitational field outside a uniform spherical shell (i.e. a hollow ball) is the same as if the entire mass of the shell is concentrated at the center of the sphere. 2) The gravitational field inside the spherical shell is zero, regardless of the location within the shell. 3) Inside a solid sphere of constant density, the gravitational force varies linearly with distance from the center, being zero at the center of mass. For the relativistic generalization of this theorem, see → Birkhoff's theorem. |
Newton's third law of motion sevomin qânun-e Newtoni-ye jonbeš (#) Fr.: troisième loi newtonienne de mouvement In a system where no external forces are present, every action force is always opposed by an equal and opposite reaction. |
Newton-Leibniz formula disul-e Newton-Leibniz Fr.: formule de Newton-Leibniz The formula expressing the value of a → definite integral of a given function over an interval as the difference of the values at the end points of the interval of any → antiderivative of the function: ∫f(x)dx = F(b) - F(a), summed from x = a to x = b. Named after Isaac → Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716), who both knew the rule, although it was published later; → formula. |
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