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Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) jost-o-ju-ye huš-e ostar-zamini Fr.: recherche d'intelligence extra-terrestre The scientific attempt to detect → intelligent extraterrestrial → life by surveying the sky to find the existence of → transmissions, especially → radio waves or → light, from a → civilization on a distant → planet. The SETI Institute, that carries out the project, is a private non-profit center founded in 1984. There are many methods that SETI scientific teams use to search for extraterrestrial intelligence. Many of these search billions of radio frequencies that reach Earth from all over the → Universe, looking for an intelligent → radio signal. Other SETI teams search by looking for signals in pulses of light emanating from the stars. → search; → extraterrestrial; → intelligence. |
seashell sadaf (#), kelâcak (#) Fr.: coquille The hard shell of a marine mollusk. Sadaf, loan from Ar. Kelâcak from Tabari, variant kelâcin, cf. Gilaki guš kuli. The component kel-, kul might be related to PIE *qarq- "to be hard," → crab. |
season fasl (#) Fr.: saison One of the four periods of the year astronomically defined by the position of the Sun with respect to the equator. As a result of the obliquity of the ecliptic, the angular distance between the Sun and the equator varies in the course of the year. This circumstance gives rise to seasons. The current lengths of the astronomical seasons, around the year 2000, are about: spring 92.76 days, summer 93.65 days, autumn 89.84 days, and winter 88.99 days. The seasons are unequal because the Earth's orbit is slightly elliptical and the Sun is not exactly at the center of the orbit. Moreover, the Earth moves faster when it is close to the Sun than when it is farther away, so the seasons that occur when the Earth is close to the Sun pass more quickly. M.E. sesoun, seson, from O.Fr. seison "a sowing, planting," from L. sationem (nominative satio) "a sowing," from p.p. stem of serere "to scatter seed over land." Fasl, from Ar. faSl "cutting, dividing; section." |
secant 1) sekanjân; 2) sekânt (#) Fr.: sécante 1) Geometry: A straight line that intersects a curve in two or more points. From L. secant-, stem of secans, pr.p. of secare "to cut," → section. 1) Sekanjân, agent noun from sekanjidan "to shave, cut, scape," cognate with
šekastan "to break," → section. |
Secchi classification radebandi-ye Secchi Fr.: classification de Secchi A pioneering work in → spectral classification conducted in the 1860s. Secchi divided stars into four main groups based on the visual observation of spectra. Class I: The white and bluish stars with a continuous spectrum crossed by hydrogen bands, the metallic bands being absent or weak. Examples, → Sirius, → Vega. Class II: Yellow stars, with spectra in which the hydrogen bands were less prominent and the metallic lines more strong. Examples, Sun, → Capella. Class III: Red or orange stars, showing bands or flutings. Examples, → Antares, → Betelgeuse. Class IV: Red stars, showing bands similar to Class III, but with the sharp edge of the flutings toward the other end of the spectrum. Secchi's scheme was superseded by the photographic → Harvard classification system. Pietro Angelo Secchi (1818-1878), Italian astronomer and Jesuit priest; → classification. |
second 1) dovom (#), dovomin (#); 2) sâniyé (#) Fr.: seconde 1) Next after the first in place, time, or value. M.E., from O.Fr. second, from L. secundus "following, next in order," from root of sequi "to follow;" PIE base *sekw- "to follow;" cf. Pers. az from; Mid.Pers. hac "from;" Av. hac-, hax- "to follow," hacaiti "follows" (O.Pers. hacā "from;" Av. hacā "from, out of;" Skt. sácā "with"); Skt. sácate "accompanies, follows;" Gk. hepesthai "to follow;" Lith. seku "to follow." 1) Dovom, dovomin "ordinal number of do,
two" (Mid.Pers. do; Av. dva-; cf.
Skt. dvi-; Gk. duo; L. duo; (Fr. deux; E. two;
Ger. zwei). |
second approximation nazdineš-e dovom Fr.: deuxième approximation Math: In calculus, limiting an equation to its → second derivative, for example: ex≅ 1 + x + x2/2. Also called linear approximation. → first approximation. → second; → approximation. |
second collapse rombeš-e dovom Fr.: deuxième effondrement An early evolutionary period in the process of star formation which succeeds the → first collapse. When the mass of the → first core has increased by about a factor 2 and the radius has decreased by a similar factor, the central temperature of the core reaches about 2000 K. At this point the → molecular hydrogen begins to dissociate into atoms. This reduces the → adiabatic index (γ) below the critical value 4/3, with the result that the material at the center of the core becomes unstable and begins to collapse. Most of the gravitational energy generated by this collapse goes into the → dissociation of H2 molecules, so that the temperature rises only slowly with increasing density. In this second collapse phase, as in the first, the density distribution in the collapsing region becomes more and more sharply peaked at center, and the time scale becomes shorter and shorter with increasing central density. The central collapse of the core continues until the hydrogen molecules are nearly all dissociated and γ again rises above 4/3. The central pressure then rises rapidly and once again becomes sufficient to decelerate and stop the collapse at the center. A small core in the → hydrostatic equilibrium then arises, bounded by a shock front in which the surrounding infalling material is suddenly stopped. The initial mass and radius of the second core are about 3 x 1030 g (1.5 x 10-3Msun) and 9 x 1010 cm (1.3 Rsun) respectively, and the central density and temperature are about 2 x 10-2 g cm-3 and 2 x 104 K, respectively. The second core will evolve into a → young stellar object (R. B. Larson, 1969, MNRAS 145, 271). |
second contact parmâs-e dovom Fr.: deuxième contact The beginning of the total phase of a solar eclipse when the leading edge of the Moon touches the eastern edge of the Sun completely obscuring the Sun. |
second core maqze-ye dovom Fr.: deuxième cœur A hydrostatic object predicted to result from the → second collapse of a → molecular cloud in an early stage of star formation. |
second derivative vâxane-ye dovom Fr.: dérivée seconde In → calculus, the → derivative of a → first derivative. It is usually written as f''(x), d2y/d2x, or y''. → second; → derivative. |
second derivative test âzmun-e vâxane-ye dovom Fr.: test de la dérivée seconde A method, used in → calculus, for determining whether a given → stationary point of a → function is a → local minimum or → local maximum. → second; → derivative; → test. |
second dredge-up borunkašid-e dovom Fr.: deuxième dragage A → dredge-up process that occurs after core helium burning, in which the convective envelope penetrates much more deeply, pushing hydrogen burning shell into close proximity with the helium burning shell (→ first dredge-up). This arrangement is unstable and leads to burning pulses. The reason is that the hydrogen shell burns out until there is enough helium for the helium combustion to occur and all the helium is rapidly burnt. Afterward the hydrogen shell again burns outward and the process repeats. |
second generation star setâre-ye âzâneš-e dovom Fr.: étoile de deuxième génération A star whose formation is induced by an older star itself formed previously in the same region. See also → stimulated star formation, → sequential star formation, → triggered star formation. → second; → generation; → star. |
second law of black-hole mechanics qânun-e dovom-e mekânik-e siyah-câl Fr.: deuxième loi de la mécanique des trous noirs The surface area of a black hole's horizon can never decrease. → second; → law; → black hole; → mechanics. |
second law of thermodynamics qânun-e dovom-e garmâtavânik Fr.: deuxième loi de la thermodynamique 1) Heat cannot be transferred from a colder to a hotter body without some other effect, i.e.
without → work being done. Expressed in terms of
→ entropy: the entropy of an
→ isolated system tends toward a maximum and its
available energy tends toward a minimum. → second; → law; → thermodynamics. |
second quantization kuântomeš-e dovom Fr.: deuxième quantification In quantum mechanics, the quantization of the field that replaces potential in Newtonian mechanics, whereby the field variables become operators from which the creation (of particle) operators and destruction operators can be constructed. → second; → quantization. |
second-order logic guyik-e râye-ye dovom Fr.: logique du seconde ordre An n extension of → first-order logic that quantifies not only → variables that range over → individuals, but also quantifies over → relations. |
secondary dovomân Fr.: secondaire 1) Derived or derivative; not primary or original. From → second + -ary a suffix occurring on adjectives (elementary; honorary; stationary) and nouns denoting objects, especially receptacles or places (library; rosary; glossary). Dovomân, from dovom, → second. |
secondary atmosphere javv-e dovomân, havâsepehr-e ~ Fr.: atmosphère secondaire An atmosphere of a planet that forms after primordial gases had been lost or had failed to accumulate. A secondary atmosphere develops from internal volcanic outgassing, or by accumulation of material from comet impacts. It is characteristic of terrestrial planets, such as Earth, Mercury, Venus, and Mars. → primordial atmosphere. → secondary; → atmosphere. |
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