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causality principle parvaz-e bonârmandi Fr.: principe de causalité The principle that cause must always precede effect. |
causation bonâreš Fr.: relation de cause à effet 1) The act or process of causing; the act or agency which produces an effect. Verbal noun from → cause. |
causative bonârandé Fr.: causatif, causal, responsable 1) Effective or operating as a cause or agent. |
cause 1) bonâr; 2) bonârdan Fr.: 1) cause; 2) causer 1) A → reason for an → action
or → condition; something that brings about an
→ effect or a → result. From L. causa "reason, purpose," of unknown origin. Bonâr, from bon "basis, root, origin, ground", from Mid.Pers. bun "base, root, origin;" Av. buna- "ground" (cf. Skt. budhna- "ground, bottom, depth", L. fundus "bottom", PIE base *bhud-/*bhund-) + âr short form of âvar present stem of âvardan "to cause or produce; to bring," → production; compare with Ger. die Ursache "cause," from ur- "primal" + die Sache "thing, matter." |
caustic sucân Fr.: caustique 1) Capable of burning, corroding, or destroying living tissue. A caustic substance. M.E., from O.Fr. caustique, from L. causticus "burning," from Gk. kaustikos "capable of burning," from kaust(os) "combustible," from kaiein "to burn" + -ikos, → -ic. Sucân, from suc- "to burn," variant of suz-, suzidan, suxtan "to burn;" cf. Baluci suc-, soc-; Mid.Pers. sôxtan, sôzidan "to burn;" Av. base saoc- "to burn, inflame" sūcā "brilliance," upa.suxta- "inflamed;" cf. Skt. śoc- "to light, glow, burn," śocati "burns," (caus.) socayati, śuc- "flame, glow," śoka- "light, flame;" PIE base *(s)keuk- "to shine." |
caustic curve xam-e sucân Fr.: courbe caustique The intersection of a → caustic surface with a plane passing through the beam of rays. |
caustic surface ruye-ye sucân Fr.: surface cuastique In an → optical system, the → envelope of all the → reflected or → refracted rays (by a → mirror or a → lens respectively) which do not come to a common focal point because of geometrical → aberration. This occurs when parallel rays of light fall on a → concave mirror or when a → convex lens receives parallel light. In the case of → spherical aberration, the caustic surface has an axis of symmetry. |
causticity sucâni Fr.: causticité The quality of being physically caustic. |
cavity kâvâk (#) Fr.: cavité 1) An apparently hollow formation in the structure of an astronomical
object, for example a sizable hole on the surface of a
→ molecular cloud created by
→ ultraviolet photons of a
→ massive star. From M.Fr. cavité, from L.L. cavitas "hollowness," from L. cavus "hollow." Kâvâk, related to verb kâvidan (kâftan) "to dig; to examine, investigate," cf. L. cavus "hollow" (E. derivatives: cavity, concave, cave, excavate), Gk. koilos "hollow," Armenian sor, PIE *kowos "hollow." |
CCD si-si-di (#) Fr.: CCD |
CCD array ârast-e sisidi Fr.: détecteur CCD bidimensionnel A CCD detector having two dimensions. |
CCD detector âškârgar-e sisidi (#) Fr.: détecteur CCD |
CCD frame tak-tasvir-e sisidi Fr.: image CCD One of a series of astronomical images obtained using a CCD detector in particular for calibration purposes. |
CCD gain bahre-ye CCD Fr.: gain de CCD In a → CCD detector, the ratio of the initial number of electrons in a → pixel to the final number of → analog-to-digital units (or counts) reported by camera software. For example, a gain of 1.8 e-/count means that the camera produces 1 count for every 1.8 recorded electrons. |
CCD shutter bastâr-e si-si-di, bastâvar-e ~ Fr.: obturateur CCD A mechanical device of a CCD camera that controls the duration of a an exposure, as by opening and closing to allow the stellar light to expose the CCD detector. Shutter, from to shut, from O.E. scyttan from W.Gmc. *skutjanan + → -er. |
CDM model negare-ye mâdde-ye sard-e târik Fr.: théorie de la matière noire froide A → cosmological model that attributes the formation of structures in the → early Universe to an exotic particle (→ cold dark matter) which was → non-relativistic at the time of → decoupling. According to this model, CDM began clumping together soon after the → Big Bang, while the → baryonic matter was still coupled with the → photons, and prevented to condense. Smaller → clumps of dark matter merged to form larger and larger clumps, and when the normal visible matter had decoupled from the photons, at the → recombination era (380,000 years after the Big Bang), it collapsed onto these dark matter clumps. In this way, the dark matter clumps acted as seeds for galaxy formation. |
ceasefire âtašbas (#) Fr.: cessez-le-feu An often temporary cessation of hostilities during wartime for a specific purpose. It may be unilateral or bilateral. From cease from O.Fr. cesser "to come to an end, stop," from L. cessare "to cease, go slow, be idle," + → fire. Âtašbas, from âtaš, → fire, + bas, from bas kardan "to stop, end; leave." |
celestial âsmâni (#) Fr.: céleste Of or relating to the sky or visible heavens. M.E., from O.Fr., from M.L. celestialis, from L. cælestis "heavenly," from cælum "heaven, sky." Âsmâni related to âsmân, → sky. |
celestial axis âse-ye âsmân (#) Fr.: axe du monde The Earth's axis extended to the → celestial pole. |
celestial body axtar (#), jesm-e âsmâni (#) Fr.: corps céleste |
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