halqe-ye B Fr.: anneau B One of → Saturn’s rings, lying beyond the → C ring and before the → A ring, extending from 92,000 to 117,300 km (width 25,300 km) from the center of Saturn. The B ring is bounded by the → Huygens Division. See also: → ring. |
setâre-ye B (#) Fr.: étoile B A star of → spectral type B, whose spectrum is marked by absorption
lines of hydrogen; also known as B-type star.
B-type optical spectra are characterized by the presence of neutral He See also: → star. |
qotbeš-e tarz-e B Fr.: polarisation en mode B A → polarization component in the
→ cosmic microwave background radiation that
depends only on → curl,
is independent of → gradient,
and has → handedness that distinguishes left from right.
The B-mode is due to only → vector perturbations or
→ tensor perturbations. It
has two types, the first type, which
constitutes the majority of the B-mode polarization, See also: B, indicating magnetic-field like; → mode; → polarization. |
sayyârak-e gune-ye B Fr.: astéroïde de type B A division of → C-type asteroids whose members have relatively low albedos (0.04 to 0.08) and the → ultraviolet absorption below 0.5 μm is small or absent. Examples include → 2 Pallas, 379 Huenna (diameter 62 km), and → 101955 Bennu. |
setâre-ye gune-ye B Fr.: étoile de type B Same as → B star. See also: B, letter of alphabet used in the → Harvard classification; → type; → star. |
setâre-ye B[e] Fr.: étoile B[e] A → Be star with → forbidden lines in emission in its spectrum. B[e] stars show large → infrared excess due to → circumstellar dust emission. See also → supergiant B[e] star, → pre-main sequence B[e] star, → compact planetary nebula B[e] star, → symbiotic B[e] star, and → unclassified B[e] star. See also: B, referring to the spectral type; e for emission lines, brackets for distinction from Be; → star. |
raveš-e Bâdé-Veselink (#) Fr.: méthode de Baade-Wesselink A method used to determine the size of certain types of pulsating stars, including Cepheids, from their magnitude variations (photometry) and the corresponding radial velocities (spectroscopy). Etymology (EN): Baade, from Walter (Wilhelm Heinrich) Baade (1893-1960),
German/American astronomer, who made
important contributions to the research on variable stars; Wesselink,
from Adriaan J. Wesselink (1909-1995), Dutch/American astronomer, |
rowzane-ye Baade Fr.: fenêtre de Baade An area of the sky with relatively low amounts of → interstellar dust along the → line of sight, occurring toward the → constellation of → Sagittarius, near the → globular cluster NGC 6522. The window, through which stars in the → Galactic bulge are visible, lies 3.9 degrees south of the → Galactic center, corresponding to a line of sight that passes within 1,800 → light-years of the → Milky Way’s core. It is named after Walter Baade, who used it to observe → RR Lyrae stars in the → Galactic bulge region. See also: → Baade-Wesselink method; → window. |
pâhangandeh-ye Babinet Fr.: compensateur de Babinet A crystal device made of two → quartz
→ prisms See also: Jacques Babinet (1794-1872), French physicist; → compensator. |
noqte-ye Babinet Fr.: point de Babinet One of several points on the sky where the degree of → linear polarization is zero in skylight. See also → neutral point; → Arago point, → Brewster point. See also: → Babinet compensator; → point. |
parvaz-e Babinet Fr.: principe de Babinet The → diffraction pattern for an → aperture is the same as the diffraction pattern for its → complementary aperture. See also: → Babinet compensator; → principle. |
pas (#), pošt (#) Fr.: dos, arrière
Etymology (EN): Back, from M.E., from O.E. bæc; akin to O.H.G. bah “back.” Etymology (PE): Pas-, from pas “behind” (e.g.: pas-e pardé
“behind the curtain”); Mid.Pers. pas “behind, before, after;”
O.Pers. pasā “after;” Av. pasca “behind (of space);
then, afterwards (of time);” cf. |
pas-tah Fr.: back-end In a radiotelescope, the unit forming the end part of the reception chain. It generally consists of a spectrometer and performs frequency analysis of the signals. → front-end. Etymology (EN): Back-end, from → back + end, from Etymology (PE): Pas-tah, from pas, → back, + tah “end,” Mid.Pers. tah “bottom.” The origin of this term is not clear. It may be related to Gk. tenagos “bottom, swamp,” Latvian tigas«i>*tingas < *tenegos “depth,” PIE *tenegos “water bottom.” |
paszaminé, zaminé (#) Fr.: fond General: That part of a view or scene that serves as a setting
for the main objects, persons, etc. Etymology (EN): Background, from → back + ground, from M.E., from O.E. grund; akin to O.H.G. grunt “ground.” Etymology (PE): Paszaminé, from pas-, → back, + zaminé “ground,” from zamin “ground,” → earth. See also: → foreground. |
nufe-ye paszaminé, ~ zaminé Fr.: bruit du fond An unwanted signal in a system which is producing or recording a signal. See also: → background; → noise. |
tâbeš-e paszaminé, ~ zaminé Fr.: rayonnement du fond The isotropic residual microwave radiation in space left from the primordial
→ Big Bang. Same as See also: → background; → radiation. |
1) pas-parâkandan; 2), 3) pas-parâkaneš Fr.: rétrodiffusion
See also: From → back + → scattering. |
nur-e pas-parâkandé Fr.: lumière rétrodiffusée The light that has undergone → backscattering. See also: → backscatter; → backscattering. |
pas-parâkaneš Fr.: rétrodiffusion Scattering of radiation or particles through angles greater than 90° with respect to the original direction of motion. See also: → scattering. |
poštvân (#) Fr.: sauvegarde |
barnâme-ye yadaki (#) Fr.: programme de remplacement |
pas-su Fr.: en arrière |
oskar-e forugarmi Fr.: effet de rétro-réchauffement A sort of → greenhouse effect in → stellar atmospheres where the deeper layers heat up due to overlying → opacity. The presence of numerous → bound-bound opacities of → metals amplifies the → scattering of → photons, in particular their → backscattering, forcing the → temperature to increase in order to conserve the radiation flux and the transport of energy from the interior to the outer parts of the atmosphere. |
sotun-e bad Fr.: mauvaise colonne Column of a → CCD detector that does not correctly read out charge. Etymology (EN): Bad, from M.E. badde, but the origin of the word is not clear; → column. Etymology (PE): Sotun, → column; bad, from Mid.Pers. wad, maybe from Old Iranian *vata- “small;” cf. Scythian bata- “small, bad,” Sogdian wtγy “suffer, sorrow.” |
mohrehâ-ye Beyli (#) Fr.: perles de Baily A phenomenon that occurs during a total eclipse of the Sun. Just prior to and after totality, sunlight shines through the lunar valleys on the Moon’s limb, causing the dark face of the Moon to appear to be surrounded by a shining “necklace of pearls”. Etymology (EN): Baily, from Francis Baily (1774-1844), English amateur astronomer, who discovered the phenomenon during the solar eclipse of 1836. Beads “a necklace of beads or pearls; a rosary,” from bead “a small, often round piece of material, such as glass, plastic, or wood, that is pierced for stringing or threading,” from M.E. bede “rosary bead,” from O.E. bed, bedu, gebed “prayer;” PIE *gwhedh- “to ask, pray”. Etymology (PE): Mohrehâ “beads,” from mohré “a kind of small shell resembling pearls; glass or coral beads,” cf. Khotanese mrâhe, may be related to morvârid, → pearl,
|
cašté (#) Fr.: appât Something edible placed on a hook or in a trap Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Norse beita “food,” O.E. bat “food,” literally “to cause to bite.” Etymology (PE): Cašté “bait,” related to câšni “taste,” cašidan, caš- “to taste,” câšt “breakfast;” Mid.Pers. câšt “meal,” câšnig “taste;” cf. Skt. cas- “to eat;” Proto-Ir. caš- “to eat, to drink; to drip.” |
1) tarâzu; 2) tarâz, tarâzmandi Fr.: balance 1a) A weighing device. 1b) The constellation → Libra.
Etymology (EN): M.E balaunce, from O.Fr. balance “balance, scales for weighing,” from M.L. bilancia, from L.L. bilanx, from L. (libra) bilanx “(scale) having two pans,” possibly from L. bis “twice” + lanx “dish, plate, scale of a balance.” Etymology (PE): Tarâzu, → Libra. |
kal, gar, kacal, tâs Fr.: chauve Having little or no hair on the scalp. → bald patch. Etymology (EN): Bald from M.E. ball(e)d; Celtic bal “white patch, blaze;” Gk. phalios “having a white spot;” L. fulica “coot;” → patch. Etymology (PE): Kal “bald,” Mid.Pers. gar “bald;” |
pac-e tâs, tekke-ye ~ Fr.: zone chauve The location on the surface of the → Sun where → coronal → magnetic field lines become tangent to the → photosphere. Bald patches play an important role in solar → magnetohydrodynamics. See also: → bald, such called because of visual reference to a haircut (Titov et al. 1993, A&A 276, 564); → patch. |
nemudâr-e Baldwin-Phillips-Terlevich Fr.: diagram de Baldwin-Phillips-Terlevich A set of nebular → emission line diagrams used to distinguish the ionization mechanism of → nebular gas. The most famous version consists of [N II]λ6584/Hα versus [OIII] λ5007/Hβ. The next two more commonly used BPT diagnostics are [S II] λλ6717,6731/Hα versus [O III] λ5007/Hβ and [O I] λ6300/Hα versus [O III]λ5007/Hβ. These diagrams use strong, optical lines of close proximity in the ratios to limit → reddening and → spectrophotometric effects. They are able to clearly distinguish different classes of → ionization, for example → LINERs from normal → H II regions and → active galactic nuclei. See also: Baldwin, J. A., Phillips, M. M., Terlevich, R., 1981 PASP 93, 5; → diagram. |
tup (#), guy (#) Fr.: boule, balle, ballon A spherical or approximately spherical body, either solid or hollow. Etymology (EN): From M.E. bal, balle, from O.Fr.; cf. O.H.G. ballo, Ger. Ball; PIE root *bhel- “to blow, swell.” Etymology (PE): Tup “ball,” initially “clmup, aggregation, parcel, group” (tup tup “many”);
Tabari tupa “compressed, assembled,” tuppi “round;”
Kurd. top “ball,” topâl “round;” |
gu-ye âzaraxš (#) Fr.: foudre en bulle A rare form of lightning occurring as a bright red globe observed floating or moving through the atmosphere close to the ground. It usually is seen shortly before or after, or during, a → thunderstorm. Its duration varies from a few seconds to a few minutes. See also → Saint Elmo’s fire. |
partâbik (#) Fr.: balistique Of or relating to → ballistics. |
mušak-e partâbik (#) Fr.: missile balistique |
pân-dâne-vari-ye partâbik Fr.: panspermie balistique Transfer of microbes and biochemical compounds from a planet to another due to meteoric impacts. Debris being knocked off a planet like Mars can reach escape velocity and enter the atmosphere of another planet with passenger micro-organisms intact. See also: → ballistic; → panspermia. |
tarâyeš-e partâbik Fr.: trajectoire balistique A curved path followed by an unpowered object that is being acted upon only by gravitational forces and the friction of the medium through which it moves. See also: → ballistic; → trajectory. |
mowj-e partâbik Fr.: onde balistique |
partâbik (#), partâbšenâsi (#) Fr.: balistique The science of the motion and behavior of → projectiles. The study of the functioning of firearms. Etymology (EN): From L. ballista “ancient military machine for hurling stones,” from Gk. ballistes, from ballein “to throw,” from PIE *gwelH1- “to throw;” cf. Pers. garzin “arrow;” Av. niγr- “to throw down;” Khotanese (+ *abi-, *ui-) bīr- “to throw, sow;” Proto-Iranian *garH- “to throw.” Etymology (PE): Partâbik, from partâb “a throw, an arrow that flies far,”
partâbidan “to throw,” + -ik, → -ics; |
axtaršenâsi bâ bâlon, bâlon-axtaršenâsi Fr.: astronomie en ballon A branch of modern astronomy in which balloons are used to carry telescopes and instruments to high altitudes (up to 50 km) for observation. Etymology (EN): Balloon, from Fr. ballon, from It. dialectal ballone, augmentative of balla, ball, from P.Gmc. *ball-, from PIE *bhel- “to blow, swell”. → astronomy. Etymology (PE): Axtaršenâsi, → astronomy; bâlon, from Fr. ballon. |
durbin-e bâlon-bord, teleskop-e ~ Fr.: télescope porté par ballon A remotely guided or automatic telescope carried to high altitudes by a balloon. Etymology (EN): → balloon astronomy; borne “a past participle of bear," from O.E. beran “bear, bring, wear,” from P.Gmc. *beranan (O.H.G. beran, Goth. bairan “to carry”), from PIE root *bher-; “to carry;” compare with Av./O.Pers. bar- “to bear, carry,” bareθre “to bear (infinitive),” bareθri “a female that bears (children), a mother,” Mod.Pers. bordan “to carry,” Skt. bharati “he carries,” Gk. pherein, L. fero “to carry.” → telescope. Etymology (PE): → balloon astronomy. Bord in bâlon-bord “borne, carried,” from Mod.Pers. bordan “to bear, carry,” as explained above. Durbin, → telescope. |
Bâlmer Fr.: Balmer From Johann Jakob Balmer (1825-1898), |
peyvastâr-e Bâlmer Fr.: continuum de Balmer |
kâhe-ye Bâlmer Fr.: décrément de Balmer The intensity ratio among the couple of relatively adjacent → Balmer lines, for example Hα/Hβ and Hβ/Hγ, which have well-known theoretical values. They are used to determine the → interstellar extinction. |
nâpeyvastegi-ye Bâlmer Fr.: discontinuité de Balmer An abrupt decrease in the intensity of the continuum at the limit of the → Balmer series of hydrogen (at about 3650 Å), caused by the energy absorbed when electrons originally in the second → energy level are ionized. Same as → Balmer jump. See also: → Balmer; → discontinuity. |
disul-e Bâlmer Fr.: formule de Balmer |
jaheš-e Bâlmer Fr.: saut de Balmer Same as → Balmer discontinuity. |
hadd-e Bâlmer Fr.: limite de Balmer The wavelength in the blue end of the → Balmer series, at 3646 Å, near which the separation between successive lines decreases and approaches a → continuum. |
xatt-e Bâlmer Fr.: raies de Balmer The → spectral lines making up the → Balmer series. |
seri-ye Bâlmer (#) Fr.: série de Balmer A series of hydrogen → spectral lines
(Hα, Hβ, Hγ, and others) that lies in the visible
portion of the spectrum and results when electrons from upper
→ energy levels (n > 2) undergo
→ transition to n = |
bând (#) Fr.: bande General:1) A strip serving to encircle
and bind one object or to hold a number of objects together.
2) A strip or stripe that contrasts with something else in color,
texture, or material. Etymology (EN): From M.E. bende, O.E. bend, from O.Fr. bande, bende, P.Gmc. *bindan, from PIE *bendh- “to bind” (cf. Goth bandi “that which binds;” Av./O.Pers. band- “to bind, fetter,” banda- “band, tie,” Skt. bandh- “to bind, tie, fasten,” bandhah “a tying, bandage.” Etymology (PE): Bând, adoption from E. band, which is cognate and synonymous with Pers. band, present tense stem of bastan “to bind, shut,” Mid.Pers. bastan, band, Av./O.Pers. band-, as explained above. See also → strip. |
bândsar, sar-e bând Fr.: tête de bande A location on the spectrogram of a molecule at which the lines of a band stack. Etymology (EN): Band head, from → band + head, from O.E. heafod “top of the body,” also “upper end of a slope,” also “chief person, leader,” from P.Gmc. *khaubuthan, from PIE *kauput- “head” (cf. Skt. kaput-, L. caput “head,” Lori kapu “head,” kapulek “skull, middle of the head”). Etymology (PE): Bândsar, from → bând + sar “head,”
soru, sorun “horn,” karnâ “a trumpet-like wind instrument”
(originally made from animal horns), variant sornâ “a wind instrument;”
Mid.Pers. sar “head,” sru “horn;” Av. sarah- “head,” srū-
“horn, nail;” cf. Skt. śiras- “head, chief;”
Gk. kara “head,” karena “head, top,” keras “horn;” |
binâb-e bândi Fr.: spectre de bande A spectrum which consists of a number of bands each having one sharp edge. Each band is composed of a large number of closely spaced emission or absorption lines. Band spectra are typical of molecules. Bands produced by titanium oxide, zirconium oxide, and carbon compounds are characteristic of low temperature stars. Etymology (EN): Band spectrum, from → band + → spectrum. Etymology (PE): Binâb-e bândi, from binâb, → spectrum + bândi, relating to bând, → band. |
gozar-bând Fr.: bande passante A range of frequencies that can pass through a filter such as one in an electrical circuit. Etymology (EN): From → band + pass, from O.Fr. passer, from V.L. *passare “to step, walk, pass,” from L. passus “step, pace;” cf. Pers. pâ “foot,” pey “step.” Etymology (PE): Gozar-bând, from gozar “passage, transit, passing,” gozaštan “to pass, cross, transit,” from Mid.Pers. vitârtan + bând, → band. |
pâlâye-ye gozar-bând Fr.: filtre de bande |
bândpahnâ Fr.: largeur de bande The portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is permitted to pass through an electronic device, such as a radio telescope detector. The term refers to either a wavelength interval or a frequency interval. Etymology (EN): Bandwidth, from → band + → width. Etymology (PE): Bândpahnâ, from bând, → band, +
pahnâ, → width, from pahn “wide,” |
1) bâr (#); 2) mile (#) Fr.: 1) bar; 2) barre
Etymology (EN): 1) From Gk. baros “weight,” cf. Skt guru, L. gravis;
PIE *gwere- “heavy;” cf.
Pers. bâr “weight,” gerân “heavy,”
L. brutus “heavy, dull, stupid, brutish,”
Skt. bhara- “burden, load,” bharati “he carries;”
PIE *bher- “carry, give birth.”
Etymology (PE): 1) Loan from Fr., as above.
|
bâriyom (#) Fr.: barium A whitish, malleable, metallic → chemical element; symbol Ba. → Atomic number 56; → atomic weight 137.33; → melting point 725°C; → boiling point 1,640°C; → specific gravity 3.5 at 20°C. Barium was discovered by the Swedish pharmacist and chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele in 1774. It was first isolated by the British chemist Humphry Davy in 1808. See also: From Mod.L., from Gk. barys “heavy,” from
the mineral barytes “heavy spar” (BaSO4), |
setâre-ye bâriyomi Fr.: étoile à barium |
kâlun Fr.: écorce The external covering on the trunks, boughs, and branches of trees. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Norse börkr “bark.” Etymology (PE): Kâlun, from Mâzandarâni kâlun “bark,” variants (Dâmqân) kul “bark,” (Tâti) lo “bark,” (Yazd, Mâzandarân) kol “bark,” (Nâin) kuluz “egg shell,” (Aftar) cokola “egg shell, pistaschio shell,” pukel, → shell, keler, → scalp, probably related to (Khotan Sacca) karastra- “fur garment,” (Waxi) kurust “bark of tree,” from PIE root *(s)ker- “to cut off,” from which are derived L. cortex “bark,” corium “thick skin,” scortum “hide,” and Persian carm “leather.” |
adasi-ye Barlow (#) Fr.: lentille de Barlow A → negative lens placed in a telescope between the → objective and the → ocular. Its diverging action reduces the convergence of the light cone, forming a larger image at a slightly greater distance. See also: Peter Barlow (1776-1862), English physicist; → lens. |
bârn (#) Fr.: barn In nuclear physics, unit of area for measuring the cross-sections of nuclei. 1 barn equals 10-24 sq. cm. Etymology (EN): Barn, from O.E. bereærn “barn,” lit. “barley house,” from bere “barley” + aern “house.” The use of barn in nuclear physics comes from the fact that the term denotes also “an unexpectedly large quantity of something.” It seems that when physicists were first studying nuclear interactions, they found out that the interaction probabilities, or cross-sections, were far more larger than expected; the nuclei were `as big as a barn'. |
Bârnârd Fr.: Barnard From Edward Emerson Barnard (1857-1923) American astronomer who made several obserational discoveries. |
gerdâl-e Bârnârd Fr.: boucle de Barnard |
setâre-ye Bârnârd Fr.: étoile de Barnard A → red dwarf in the constellation → Ophiuchus discovered in 1916 by E.E. Barnard, that until 1968 had the largest → proper motion of any star. It moves on the sky 10.3 arcseconds per year, which means that it travels the equivalent of a lunar diameter every 180 years. It is the second nearest star system to the Sun. |
fešâr- (#) Fr.: baro- A prefix meaning → pressure used in the formation of compound words, such as → baroclinic, → barometer, → barotropic. Etymology (EN): Baro- combining form of Gk. baros “weight;” cognate with Pers.
bâr “weight,” gerân “heavy;” cf. Skt. guru,
L. gravis; PIE *gwere- “heavy;” Etymology (PE): Fešâr-, → pressure. |
fešâršibi Fr.: barocline Of, pertaining to, or characterized by → baroclinicity. Sometimes called → barocline. |
nâpâydâri-ye fešâršibi Fr.: instabilité barocline
See also: → baroclinic; → instability. |
fešâršibi Fr.: baroclinie The state of stratification in a fluid in which surfaces of constant pressure do not coincide with those of constant density, but intersect. Where baroclinicity is zero, the fluid is → barotropic. Same as baroclinity. See also: → baroclinic; → -ity. |
fešârsanj (#) Fr.: baromètre |
qânun-e fešârsanji, ~ fešârsanjik Fr.: loi barométrique |
fešârgard Fr.: barotrope In a fluid, conditions where surfaces of constant pressure |
gâz-e fešârgard Fr.: gaz barotrope A gas whose density is a function solely of pressure. See also: → barotropic; → gas. |
nâpâydâri-ye fešârgard Fr.: instabilité barotrope A hydrodynamical instability that arises when the horizontal → shear gradient becomes very large. Barotropic instabilities grow by extracting kinetic energy from the mean flow field. See also: → barotropic; → instability. |
fešârgardi Fr.: barotropie A state of a fluid in which the surfaces of constant density coincide with surfaces of constant pressure (isobaric). See also: → barotropic gas. |
miledâr, milei Fr.: barré Having a bar like structure. See also: → bar. |
mârpic-e mile-dâr-e Mâželâni Fr.: spirtale barée magellanique A transitional class of object between the classic spiral galaxies and true irregular systems. The → Large Magellanic Cloud, the nearest and best studied example of the class, is, contrary to popular opinion, not an irregular galaxy. The LMC and other members of the SBm class have definite structural signatures. They are generally dominated by a pronounced asymmetric bar – one that is offset from the optical center of the galaxy – with a nascent spiral arm emanating from one end. As is the case with irregular galaxies, the optical centers of SBm type systems are not particularly special places. Disk systems later than Sc characteristically lack a central stellar concentration in addition to having weak spiral structure; this is true of SBm-type galaxies. SBm galaxies are typically very active in their star formation activity, often containing a large star-forming complex situated at one end of the bar. Beyond these general trends there is a tremendous amount of dispersion in physical properties within the SBm class, particularly in the strength of the spiral structure. At one extreme are the “one-armed” spirals such as NGC 3664 and NGC 4027 which are dominated by single, looping spiral arm. On the other hand NGC 4861 shows little evidence of spiral structure and it is dominated by a large star-forming complex at one end of its bar. The class smoothly leads to the Barred Magellanic irregulars (IBm) which show no indication of spiral structure (Wilcots et al. 1996, AJ 111, 1575). See also: → Magellanic; → spiral; → galaxy. |
kahkašân-e mârpic-e miledâr Fr.: galaxie spirale barrée A → spiral galaxy that exhibits a bar-shaped structure in its nucleus. → galactic bar. |
cowlegi-ye celiki (#) Fr.: distortion en barillet A defect in an optical system in which magnification
decreases with distance from the optical axis, Etymology (EN): Barrel, M.E. barel, from O.Fr. baril; → distortion. Etymology (PE): Cowlegi, → distortion; celiki, relating to celik “barrel”. |
varqé (#) Fr.: barrière General: Anything that prevents passage or blocks. Etymology (EN): O.F. barrière “obstacle,” from V.L. *barraria, from *barra “bar, barrier.” Etymology (PE): Varqé, from varq “a mound, a dam” + -é
nuance suffix. Varq is |
lâvak-e Barringer Fr.: cratère Barringer Same as → Meteor Crater. See also: Names after Daniel Barringer (1860-1929), American geologist, who bought the Crater in 1903, convinced that it was made by a huge → meteorite; → crater. |
gerânigâh (#) Fr.: barycentre |
zamân-e hamârâ-ye gerânigâhi Fr.: temps-coordonnée barycentrique (TCB) A → coordinate time having its spatial origin at the solar system barycenter. It is intended to be used as the independent variable of time for all calculations pertaining to orbits of planets, asteroids, comets, and interplanetary spacecraft in the solar system. → Barycentric Dynamical Time (IDB). Etymology (EN): → barycenter; → coordinate; → time. |
zamân-e tavânik-e gerânigâhi Fr.: temps dynamique barycentrique (TDB) A time scale previously used in calculations of the orbits of solar system objects (planets, asteroids, comets, and interplanetary spacecrafts). It was based on the Terrestrial Dynamical Time, but took the relativistic effect of time dilation into account to move the origin to the solar system barycenter. It is now superseded by → Barycentric Coordinate Time (TCB). See also: → barycenter; → dynamical; → time. |
gâhdâd-e žulian-e gerânigâhi Fr.: date julienne barycentrique The → Julian Date referenced to the → barycenter of the → solar system. The BJD is more precise than the → Heliocentric Julian Day because the Sun is not stationary. It moves due to the → gravitational attraction of Jupiter and the other planets. See also: → barycentric; → Julian Date. |
bâriyonzâyi Fr.: baryogénèse The hypothetical mechanism of creating the → baryon asymmetry in the → Universe. Universe. Explaining the observed matter asymmetry is an important open question in physical cosmology. → Sakharov conditions. |
bâriyon (#) Fr.: baryon Any of the class of the heaviest → subatomic particles that
includes → protons, → neutrons,
as well as a number of short-lived particles
whose decay products include protons. Baryons obey the
→ Fermi-Dirac statistics. They form a subclass
of the → hadrons and See also: Gk. barys “heavy” + → -on, from “fermion.” |
naveš-e sedâyik-e bâryoni Fr.: oscillation acoustique baryonique In cosmology, one of a series of peaks and troughs that are present in the power spectrum of matter fluctuations after the → recombination era, and on large scales. At the time of the Big Bang, and for about 380,000 years afterwards, Universe was ionized and photons and baryons were tightly coupled. Acoustic oscillations arose from perturbations in the primordial plasma due to the competition between gravitational attraction and gas+photons pressure. After the epoch of recombination, these oscillations froze and imprinted their signatures in both the → CMB and matter distribution. In the case of the photons, the acoustic mode history is manifested as the high-contrast Doppler peaks in the temperature anisotropies. As for baryons, they were in a similar state, and when mixed with the non-oscillating → cold dark matter perturbations, they left a small residual imprint in the clustering of matter on very large scales, ~100 h-1Mpc (h being the → Hubble constant in units of 100 km s-1 Mpc-1). The phenomenon of BAOs, recently discovered using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey data, is a confirmation of the current model of cosmology. Like → Type Ia supernovae, BAOs provide a → standard candle for determining cosmic distances. The measurement of BAOs is therefore a powerful new technique for probing how → dark energy has affected the expansion of the Universe (see, e.g., Eisenstein 2005, New Astronomy Reviews 49, 360; Percival et al. 2010, MNRAS 401, 2148). See also: → baryon; → acoustic; → oscillation. |
nâhamâmuni-ye bariyon Fr.: asymmétrie baryonique The observation that in the present → Universe there is → matter but not much → antimatter. Observations do not show the presence of galaxies made of antimatter, nor gamma rays are observed that would be produced if large entities of antimatter would undergo → annihilation with matter. However, the → early Universe could have been baryon symmetric, and for some reason the matter excess has been generated, through some process called → baryogenesis. → Sakharov conditions. |
adad-e bâriyoni (#) Fr.: nombre baryonique
|
vâbar-e bâriyon-foton Fr.: rapport baryon-photon The → baryon number compared with the number of photons in the
→ Universe. The baryon-photon ratio can be estimated in a
simple way. The
→ energy density associated with
→ blackbody radiation of → temperature
T is aT4, and the mean energy per photon is
~kT. Therefore, the number density of blackbody photons for T = 2.7 K is:
nγ = aT4/kT = 3.7 x 102
photons cm-3, where a = 7.6 x 10-15
erg cm-3 K-4 (→ radiation density constant) |
mâde-ye siyâh-e bâriyoni Fr.: matière noire baryonique → Dark matter made up of → baryons
that are not luminous enough to produce any detectable radiation. It is
generally believed that most dark matter is → non-baryonic. |
mâde-ye bâriyoni (#) Fr.: matière baryonique |
bâzâlt (#) Fr.: basalte A dark fine-grained → igneous rock typically composed of → plagioclase with → pyroxene and → olivine and often displaying a columnar structure. See also: From L.L. basaltes, misspelling of L. basanites “very hard stone,” from Gk. basanites, from basanos “touchstone,” from Egyptian baban “a stone used by the Egyptians as a touchstone of gold.” |
1, 2, 3, 4) pâyé (#), 5) pâygâh (#), 6) bâz (#) Fr.: base
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. bas, from L. basis “foundation,” from Gk. basis “step, pedestal,” from bainein “to step.” Etymology (PE): Pâyé “base,” from pâ, pây “foot,” from Mid.Pers. pâd, pây; |
pâye-xatt Fr.: ligne de base
|
bâzi (#) Fr.: basique |
howzé (#) Fr.: bassin A large impact crater on a planet or moon, typically several hundred kilometers across, flooded with basaltic lava and surrounded by concentric rings of faulted cliffs. Etymology (EN): From O.Fr. bacin, from V.L. *baccinum, from L. bacca “water vessel,” perhaps originally Gaulish. Etymology (PE): Howzé, from howz “pond, a large reservoir of water” (from Ar. hauz) + -é noun suffix. |
bâtri (#) Fr.: batterie A combination of → cells connected together so as to produce useful electrical energy. Etymology (EN): M.Fr. batterie “a grouping of artillery pieces for tactical purposes,” from O.Fr. baterie “beatng, thrashing, assault,” from battre “to beat,” from L. battuere “to beat.” Etymology (PE): Bâtri, loanword from Fr., as above. |
bâhé Fr.: baie A body of water forming an indentation of the shoreline, larger than a cove but smaller than a → gulf (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. baye, from M.Fr. baie, from L.L. bâia, perhaps ultimately from Iberian bahia. Etymology (PE): Bâhé, loan from Sp. bahia. |
nâmgozini-ye bayer Fr.: designation de Bayer A stellar designation system in which a specific star is identified by a
Greek letter, followed by the genitive form of its hosting Compare with the → Flamsteed designation. See also: First introduced by Johann Bayer (1572-1625) in his atlas |
farbin-e Bayes Fr.: théorème de Bayes A theorem in probability theory concerned with determining the
→ conditional probability of an event when
another event has occurred. See also: Named after its proponent, the British mathematician Reverend Thomas Bayes (1702-1761). However, Bayes did not publish the theorem during his lifetime; instead, it was presented two years after his death to the Royal Society of London. |
Bayesi Fr.: bayésien Being, relating to, or denoting statistical methods based on → Bayes’ theorem. See also: Referring to → Bayes’ theorem. |
darbord-e Bayesi Fr.: inférence bayésienne An approach to → statistical analysis in which → unknowns to be estimated have a prior → probability distribution which combined with the information from data produces a posterior probability distribution for the target quantities. |
model-e Bayesi Fr.: modèle bayésien A mathematical framework described by the prior distribution of
a random parameter and by the likelihood of the
observations. In this framework, all information on the random parameter based on the
observations is included in the posterior distribution |
miyângin-giri-ye Bayesi-e model Fr.: |
padide-ye Be Fr.: phénomène Be The episodic occurrence of abrupt → mass loss in → Be stars resulting in → Balmer lines in emission and → infrared excess. The Be phenomenon results from a combination of a long-term secular effect and short-term instabilities, such as pulsation. The secular evolution brings the star close enough to the critical → break-up velocity, so that the additional velocity field due to the instability may allow some mass ejection (Maeder 2011). See also: → Be star; → phenomenon. |
setâre-ye Be Fr.: étoile Be A hot star of → spectral type B showing → Balmer lines in emission. Be stars are fast rotators (spinning at about 200 km/sec) and have strong → stellar winds with important → mass loss. See also: B, referring to the spectral type; e for emission lines; |
tâbé (#) Fr.: 1) faisceau, 2) lobe, 3) tache de diffraction
Etymology (EN): M.E. beem, from O.E. beam “tree;” akin to O.H.G boum “tree,” Ger. Baum. Etymology (PE): Tâbé, from tâb; tâbidan “light; to shine”
|
kârâi-ye tâbé Fr.: efficacité de lobe A parameter indicating the quality of an antenna as a direction
measuring device. It is given by the ratio of the total See also: → beam; → efficiency. |
tâbe-ye nur (#) Fr.: faisceau lumineux A relatively large bundle of → rays of light. See also → pencil of light. |
tâbe-ye zarré Fr.: faisceau de particules |
fâqgar-e tâbé Fr.: lame séparatrice A partially reflecting mirror which permits a part of the light beam to pass through and reflects the rest. Etymology (EN): → beam; splitter, from to split, from M.Du. splitten, from P.Gmc. spl(e)it-, PIE (s)plei- “to split, splice.” Etymology (PE): Fâqgar, from fâq “split, breach, division” + tâbé→ beam. |
degarbâni-ye tâbé Fr.: permutation de lobe In single dish radio astronomy, any technique which forms the difference of signals received from two (or more) pointings on the sky without physically moving the main reflector of the antenna. By rapidly forming differences between sky positions that do and do not contain astronomical sources, beam switching can minimize the corruption of spectral baselines by non-idealities in the instrumental frequency response, or of continuum observations by atmospheric fluctuations. |
tâbe-pahnâ Fr.: largeur de lobe |
zaneš (#) Fr.: battement The periodic and alternatively strengthening and weakening of two waves
of similar frequencies when they interfere with one another. In
particular, the soft and loud sounds created by the Etymology (EN): M.E. beten, from O.E. beaten, from P.Gmc. *bautan; IER *bhau- “to strike.” Etymology (PE): Zaneš, noun from zan- present tense
stem of zadan “to beat, strike” + -š verbal noun suffix.
Zadan from Mid.Pers. zatan, žatan; O.Pers./Av.
jan-, gan- “to strike, hit, smite, kill” (jantar- “smiter”); cf. |
kefeusi-ye zaneši Fr.: céphéide à battement |
basâmad-e zaneš Fr.: fréquence de battement One of the frequencies that results from the combination of two waves of slightly different frquencies. A beat frequency is equal to the absolute value of the difference between the two frequencies. An unknown frequency can be determined by beating it with a reference frequency. More specifically, when the two frequencies are superimposed, the phase difference will change with time and wave interference alternate between constructive and destructive. The alterations of intensity brings about a beat frequency. |
marpel-e Beaufort Fr.: échelle de Beaufort A system for estimating and reporting wind speeds which has 13 standardized categories and associated descriptions. The Beaufort scale ranges from 0 for complete calm to 12 for a cyclone. In this scale, the wind speed (in km/h) equals 3B1.5, where B is the Beaufort number of the wind. The scale was originally devised for use at sea but has subsequently been modified for use over land. See also: Named after Admiral Sir Francis Beaufort (1774-1857), who introduced the first version of the system in 1805; → scale. |
zibâyi (#) Fr.: beauté A combination of qualities that pleases the mind. Etymology (EN): M.E. be(a)ute, from O.Fr. beautez, beltet “beauty, seductiveness, beautiful person” from V.L. bellitatem (nominative bellitas) “state of being handsome,” from L. bellus “pretty, charming.” Etymology (PE): Zibâyi, from zibâ “beautiful,” related to zib “beauty, elegance, ornament,” zibidan “to suit, to adorn.” |
bidastar (#) Fr.: castor A large, amphibious rodent of the genus Castor, having sharp incisors, webbed hind feet, and a flattened tail, noted for its ability to dam streams with trees, branches, etc. (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. bever, O.E. beofor, befor; cognate with
Ger. Biber;
Av. bawra-, bawri- “beaver” (Mid.Pers. bawrak “beaver”); Etymology (PE): Bidastar “beaver,” of unknown origin. |
zirâ (#) Fr.: parce que For the reason that; on account of. Etymology (EN): M.E. bi cause “by cause,” from O.E. bi “by” (akin to Du. bij, O.H.G. bi, Ger. bei, Goth. bi) + → cause. Etymology (PE): Zirâ, variants azirâ, zirâk, azirâk, from Mid.Pers.
êt rây cê or ê(t) râd cê “because,”
literally “this reason why;” from êd “this” |
barâxt-e Becklin-Neugebauer Fr.: objet de Becklin-Neugebauer A compact infrared source in the Orion molecular cloud (OMC-1). It is thought to be a very dusty compact H II region surrounding a young B0 or B1 star. See also: After Eric Becklin (1940-), and Gerry Neugebauer (1932-) who discovered the object in 1967; → object. |
šodan (#) Fr.: devenir To come, change, or grow to be. Etymology (EN): M.E. becumen; O.E. becuman “happen, come about,” also “meet with, arrive;” akin to Du. bekomen, O.H.G. biqueman “obtain,” Ger. bekommen, Goth. biquiman; from be- a prefix denoting several meanings, and → come. Etymology (PE): Šodan “to become, to go, to pass, to change,” from Mid.Pers. šudan, šaw- “to go;” Av. š(ii)auu-, šiyav- “to move, go,” šiyavati “goes,” šyaoθna- “activity; action; doing, working;” O.Pers. šiyav- “to go forth, set,” ašiyavam “I set forth;” cf. Skt. cyu- “to move to and fro, shake about; to stir,” cyávate “stirs himself, goes;” Gk. kinein “to move;” Goth. haitan “call, be called;” O.E. hatan “command, call;” PIE base *kei- “to move to and fro.” |
becquerel (#) Fr.: becquerel The → SI unit of → radioactivity. One becquerel corresponds to the → disintegration of one atom per second. Abbreviation: Bq. → curie. See also: Named for the French physicist Henri Becquerel (1852-1908), who discovered radioactivity in 1896. |
Bedin I Fr.: Bedin I A → dwarf spheroidal galaxy belonging to the → Local Group that was discovered serendipitously in 2019. Bedin I was detected using extremely deep → HST images (V ~ 30 mag) obtained for the purpose of investigating the → white dwarf cooling track of the Galactic → globular cluster NGC 6752. Bedin I is too faint and too close to the core of NGC 6752 for detection in earlier surveys. The discovery paper derives a → distance modulus of (m - M)0 = 29.70 ± 0.13 mag from the observed → red giant branch, i.e. ~ 8.7 → megaparsecs (~ 30 million → light-years), and a size of ~ 840 × 340 pc, about one-fifth the size of the → Large Magellanic Cloud. This object is most likely a relatively isolated → satellite galaxy of the nearby great → spiral galaxy NGC 6744. The study suggests the presence of an old (~ 13 Gyr) and → metal-poor ([Fe/H] ~ -1.3) population in Bedin I. See also: Named after the first author of the discovery paper, L. R. Bedin et al., 2019, MNRAS 484, L54. |
sangbastar (#) Fr.: socle Solid → rock present beneath any → soil, → sediment, or other surface cover. In some locations it may be exposed at earth’s surface. Etymology (EN): Bedrock, from bed (O.E. bed, from P.Gmc. *badjam “sleeping place dug in the ground;” PIE *bhedh- “to dig, pierce”) + → rock. Etymology (PE): Sangbastar, from sang “stone, rock,” |
râš (#) Fr.: hêtre Any tree of the genus Fagus, especially Fagus sylvatica of Europe, having smooth grayish bark. In Iran Fagus orientalis populates Caspian highland forests from Âstârâ to Gorgân. Etymology (EN): M.E. beche, from O.E. becew;
cf. Dutch beuk, Ger. Buche, from PIE root *bhagos “beech tree;” also cf. Etymology (PE): Râš, as named in Gilân, Râmsar, Šahsavâr, Kalârdašt. Its other names: (Mâzandarân) mers, (Ammaârlu, Manjil) râj, (Tevâleš, Mt. Dorfak) aluš, alâš, âlâš, (Nur) celer, celar (Iranica). |
xuše-ye kandu Fr.: amas de la ruche → Praesepe. |
raftâr (#) Fr.: comportement Manner of behaving or acting. Etymology (EN): M.E. behavour, from behaven “to behave,” altered by model havour, from O.Fr. avoir “to have.” Etymology (PE): Raftâr “behavior, walking, going,” from raft past tense stem of raftan “to go, walk, proceed” (present tense stem row-, Mid.Pers. raftan, raw-, Proto-Iranian *rab/f- “to go; to attack”)
|
disul-e Bekenstein Fr.: formule de Bekenstein The mathematical expression giving the → entropy, S, of a
→ black hole as a function of the area
of its → event horizon, A:
S = (kc3A)/(4Għ), where k is
→ Boltzmann’s constant, ħ is the
→ reduced Planck’s constant, and G the
→ gravitational constant.
It can also be expressed by S = (kA)/(4lP2),
where lP is the → Planck length.
The existence of this entropy led to the
prediction of the → Hawking radiation, because
an entropy is associated with a temperature See also: For Jacob D. Bekenstein (1947-), an Israeli theoretical physicist, who contributed to the foundation of black hole thermodynamics; → formula. |
bel (#) Fr.: bel A dimensionless unit to measure sound. One bel designates a ratio 10:1 between two quantities, P1 and P0, which have the dimension of a power: n [B] = log (P1/P0), in Bel units, with → natural logarithm. If one sound is 2 bels louder than another, this means the louder sound is 100 times more intense than the fainter one. It is also common to use this definition for quantities that are proportional to a power, such as energy, work, intensity, or voltage. The bel was too large for everyday use, so the → decibel (dB), equal to 0.1 bel, is more commonly used. See also: This unit was put forward by engineers of the Bell telephone network in 1923 and named in honor of the inventor of the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell (1847-1922), who also invented techniques for teaching speech to the deaf. |
Belindâ Fr.: Belinda One of the small satellites of → Uranus discovered from the Voyager 2 photographs taken during its encounter with the planet in 1986. Etymology (EN): Named after the heroine in Alexander Pope’s The Rape of the Lock. |
nâhamugi-ye Bell Fr.: inégalité de Bell Any of a large number of inequality relations developed to
study the → hidden variable hypothesis suggested in
the → EPR paradox. Using Bell’s inequalities,
the → Aspect experiment showed that
no local hidden variable theory can make predictions in agreement with those of
quantum mechanics. If, in a measurement, the inequality is violated, the measurement
is in agreement with the predictions of the quantum theory. If the equality is
satisfied, it suggests that a classical, causal, and local model is adequate
to explain the outcome of the measurements. See also: John Stewart Bell (1928-1990); → inequality. |
Bellatriks, Merzam Fr.: Bellatrix A bright, blue → giant star (
→ spectral type B2 III), one of the main stars Etymology (EN): From L. bellatrix “a female warrior,” fem. of bellator, from bellum “war.” Etymology (PE): Merzam, Ar. name of the star; its other name is Nâjed. |
pargetidan, parget dâštan Fr.: appartenir
Etymology (EN): M.E. belongen, from be- intensive prefix, + longen “to go,” from O.E. langian “pertain to, to go along with;” akin to Du. belangen, Ger. belangen; of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Pargetidan, literally “to surround, to relate with” (on the model of
L. pertinere “pertain,” Skt. parigraha- “surrounding; relation to”), |
mipargetad, parget dârad Fr.: appartient |
kamarband (#) Fr.: ceinture A strip of leather or cloth worn around the waist. Etymology (EN): O.E. belt, from P.Gmc. *baltjaz, from L. balteus “girdle;” → Orion. Etymology (PE): Kamarband “belt,” from kamar “waist” (Mid.Pers. kamar “waist; belt, girdle,” Av. kamarâ- “belt”) + band “a band, tie, belt.” |
kamarband-e Šekârgar, ~ Oryon Fr.: Baudrier d'Orion → Orion’s Belt. |
kamarband-e Nâhid Fr.: Ceinture de Vénus A pink to brownish border above the horizon separating the Earth’s dark shadow on the sky from the sky above it. The Belt of Venus appears during a cloudless twilight just before sunrise or after sunset. It is due to scattered red sunlight in the atmosphere. Also called anti-twilight arc. |
BepiColombo Fr.: BepiColombo A → European Space Agency (ESA) mission aimed at studying → Mercury, the least explored planet in the inner → Solar System. It was launched on 20 October 2018. Among several goals, BepiColombo will make a complete map of Mercury at different wavelengths. It will chart the planet’s → mineralogy and elemental → composition, determine whether the interior of the planet is molten or not, and investigate the extent and origin of Mercury’s → magnetic field, the properties of its → magnetosphere, and history of the planet. The trajectory will also be modified by eight planetary flybys: of Earth in April 2020, Venus in 2020 and 2021, and then six times of Mercury itself between 2021 and 2025. BepiColombo will enter Mercury orbit in December 2025. BepiColombo is a joint mission between ESA and the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), executed under ESA leadership. See also: Named after Giuseppe (Bepi) Colombo (1920-1984), a scientist who studied Mercury’s orbital motion in detail as well as orbits and interplanetary travel in general. |
Gisu Fr.: Chevelure de Bérénice |
hamugeš-e Bernoulli Fr.: équation de Bernoulli The equation expressing → Bernoulli’s theorem:
P + (1/2)ρV2 + ρgz = constant, where P is
the fluid → pressure, V is
→ velocity, ρ is → density, See also: → Bernoulli’s theorem; → equation. |
farbin-e Bernoulli Fr.: théorème de Bernoulli A statement of the → conservation of energy in the → steady flow of an → incompressible, → inviscid fluid. Accordingly, the quantity (P/ρ) + gz + (V2/2) is → constant along any → streamline, where P is the fluid → pressure, V is the fluid → velocity, ρ is the mass → density of the fluid, g is the acceleration due to → gravity, and z is the vertical → height. This equation affirms that if the internal velocity of the flow goes up, the internal pressure must drop. Therefore, the flow becomes more constricted if the velocity field within it increases. Same as the → Bernoulli equation. See also: After Daniel Bernoulli (1700-1782), the Swiss physicist and mathematician who put forward the theorem in his book Hydrodynamica in 1738; → theorem. |
pelâr Fr.: baie
Etymology (EN): M.E. berye, from O.E. berie “berry, grape,” cf. M.Du. bere, Ger. Beere, O.Sax. winberi, Gothic weinabasi “grape,” Norwegian and Danish bær, of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Pelâr, from Hamadâni, Malâyeri pellâr, pellâra “berry, grape berry;” cf. Laki, Xonsâri palâra “raisin grape,” Aligudarzi pellâr “part of a raison grape,” of unknown origin (related to berry, as above?). |
beriliom (#) Fr.: béryllium A grey, very hard metallic chemical element; symbol Be.
→ Atomic number 4;
→ atomic weight 9.01218; See also: From L. beryll(us), from beryl, a mineral, beryllium aluminum silicate, Be3Al2Si6O18, M.E. beril, from O.Fr., from L. berillus, from Gk. beryllos, + → -ium. |
Besel Fr.: Bessel From Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel (1784-1846), German astronomer and mathematicians, who made fundamental contributions to positional and spherical astronomy. |
hamugeš-e Besel Fr.: équation de Bessel |
setâre-ye Bessel Fr.: étoile de Bessel |
Besseli Fr.: besselien, de Bessel Of or pertaining to Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel (1784-1846) or to his discoveries. → Besselian day number → → Bessel equation → Besselian star constant → → Besselian year. See also: → Bessel. |
šomâre-ye ruz-e Besseli Fr.: Any of the five quantities denoted by A, B, C, D, and E used in conjunction with → Besselian star constants for the reduction of a star’s → mean catalog place to its → apparent place. |
pâyâ-ye axtari-ye Besseli Fr.: constante stellaire besselienne Any of the eight quantities denoted by a, b, c, d (for → right ascension) and a’, b’, c’, d’ (for → declination) used in conjunction with → Besselian day numbers for the reduction of star’s → mean catalog place. |
sâl-e Beseli Fr.: année besselienne |
behtarin saz Fr.: meilleur ajustement In a scatter plot, a mathematical line or curve that passes as near to as many of the data points as possible. Etymology (EN): Best, M.E., from O.E. betst, akin toi O.E. bot “remedy.” Fit, from M.E. fitten “to marchal troops,” from or akin to M.Dutch vitten “to be suitable.” Etymology (PE): Behtarin supperlative of beh “good, fine” (Mid.Pers. veh “better, good,” O.Pers. vahav-, vahu-, Av. vah-, vohu- “good,” cf. Skt. vasu- “good,” Hittite wasu-, Gaulish vesus “good”) + saz, from sazidan “to be fit, proper,” from Mid.Pers. saz, sazistan “to be fitting, proper.” |
Betâ-Andromedâ Fr.: Beta Andromedae The brightest star in the constellation → Andromeda with an average → apparent visual magnitude of 2.05. It is a red (B - V = +1.57), → giant star of → spectral type M0 III. Beta And lies at a distance of 197 ± 7 → light-years (61 ± 2 → parsecs). It has a mass of 3-4 Msun (→ solar mass), a → luminosity of ~ 2,000 Lsun (→ solar luminosity), and a radius of 100 Rsun (→ solar radius). Its other designations include: Mirach, Merach, Mirac, Mizar, 43 Andromedae, BD+34°198, HD 6860, HIP 5447, HR 337, LTT 10420, and SAO 54471. Beta And happens to lie nearly along the → line of sight to the galaxy → NGC 404. This galaxy, known as → Mirach’s Ghost, is visible seven arc-minutes away. See also: Beta, a Greek letter of alphabet used in the → Bayer designation; → Andromeda |
betâ-Kefeus Fr.: bêta Céphée The second brightest star in the constellation → Cepheus and the prototype of → Beta Cephei variables. It is a variable B2 type → giant star with a visual magnitude of 3.23 varying with a period of 4.57 hours. Its mass is a dozen times that of the Sun. Beta Cephei is a → triple system lying at a distance of about 600 → light-years. The inner → spectroscopic companion, → spectral type A, is only about 45 AU away, and takes around 90 years to orbit. The third visual companion is at least 2400 AU away, with an orbital period of at least 30,000 years. See also: Beta (β), the second letter of the Gk. alphabet; → Cepheus. |
vartande-ye betâ Kefeusi Fr.: variables bêta Céphée A variable star, of early B or late O types, undergoing radial pulsations with short periods (< 1 day). Beta Cephei stars are confined within a narrow band of the → H-R diagram above the upper → main sequence. They are believed to be near the end of core hydrogen-burning stars of approximately 10 to 20 solar masses. The famous bright stars → Spica and → Mirzam belong to this family. See also: → Beta Cephei; → variable. |
tabâhi-ye betâ (#) Fr.: désintegration bêta The transformation of a → radioactive nuclide in which a → beta particle is emitted. In beta minus decay, a → neutron changes into a → proton, → antineutrino, and → electron: n → p + e + ν-. Beta plus decay involves the conversion of a proton to a neutron, → positron, and → neutrino: p → n + e+ + ν. See also: Beta (β), from → beta particle; → decay. |
tabâhi-ye betâ kaman Fr.: désintegration bêta moins See also: → beta particle; → minus; → decay. |
zarre-ye betâ (#) Fr.: particule bêta An → electron or a → positron emitted from an unstable nucleus during a → radioactive process known as → beta decay. See also: The term “beta particle” relates to the early history of the → radioactivity studies when the nature of the emergent particles was not elucidated; → particle. |
betâ Negârgar Fr.: bêta Pictoris The second brightest star, with an apparent magnitude of 3.86, in the southern constellation → Pictor. Beta Pic is a young star of spectral type A lying 63 → light-years away. It has a luminosity 8.6 times that of the Sun and its surface temperature is 8250 K. Beta Pic is surrounded by a dust and gas disk stretching 400 A.U. away from the star in each direction, 10 times the average distance of Pluto from the Sun. The disk is not symmetric, one side is brighter than the other. Moreover, it has an inner clear zone about the size of our solar system (some 30 A.U.). Recently a probable giant → exoplanet lying in the disk has been imaged. See also: Beta (β), the second letter of the Gk. alphabet; → Pictor. |
tabâhi-ye betâ bišan Fr.: désintegration bêta plus See also: → beta particle; → plus; → decay. |
β-šaxânevâr Fr.: β-météoroïde A solid object with a mass about 10-18-10-15 kg in → interplanetary space that moves in hyperbolic orbit as a result of the solar → radiation pressure. See also: → meteoroid. |
Ebtoljowzâ (#) Fr.: Bételgeuse The → red supergiant that is the second brightest star in the
constellation → Orion.
Betelgeuse is one of the biggest stars known with a size of almost 1,000 times larger
than the Sun, corresponding to an angular diameter of 43.76 ± 0.12 milli-arcseconds
(Perrin et al. 2004, A&A 418, 675).
It is a → semiregular variable whose
→ apparent visual magnitude varies between 0.2 and
1.2 shining very rarely more brightly than its neighbor → Rigel.
The energy released by Betelgeuse is estimated to be only 13% in the form of
visible light, with most of its radiation being at → infrared
wavelengths.
The distance of Betelgeuse is
643±146 → light-years (Harper et al. 2008, AJ 135, 1430),
while its luminosity Etymology (EN): Betelgeuse, from Ar. Ibt al-Jauza’ ( Etymology (PE): Ebtoljowzâ, from Ar. Ibt al-Jauza’. |
bethe Fr.: bethe A unit of energy equal to 1044 → joules or 1051 → ergs, corresponding to the amount of energy liberated in a typical → supernova explosion. It is used by some theoreticians. See also: In honor of Hans Bethe (1906-2005), Nobel Prize
in Physics (1967), for his work on the theory of stellar nucleosynthesis. |
ânzâts-e Bathe Fr.: ansatz de Bethe An → ansatz initially used to deal with
→ antiferromagnetism See also: First introduced by Hans Bethe (1906-2005), → bethe; → ansatz. |
setâre-ye BHB Fr.: étoile BHB Same as → blue horizontal branch star. See also: → blue; → horizontal; → branch; → star. |
do- (#) Fr.: bi- Prefix denoting “two, both, twice.” Etymology (EN): From L. bi-, cognate of Gk. di-, O.E. twi-; cf. Av. bi- “two,” biš “twice,” Mod.Pers. do “two,” PIE *dwo- “two.” Etymology (PE): Do, Mid.Pers. do, Av. dva-, Skt. dvi-, Gk. duo, L. duo, E. two, Ger. zwei, Fr. deux. |
model-e keyhânšenâxti-ye Bianchi Fr.: modèle cosmologique de Bianchi A cosmological model based on the theory of → general relativity, which is homogeneous but → anisotropic. There are actually ten dinstinct Bianchi types, classified according to the particular kinds of symmetry they posses. See also: Luigi Bianchi (1856-1928), Italian mathematician; → cosmological; → model. |
1) varak; 2) pištaneš; 3) varak dâdan Fr.: 1, 2) biais; 3) biaiser
3a) General: To give a settled and often prejudiced outlook to. 3b) Electronics: To apply a small voltage to a device to control its operation. See also: → bias error, → bias frame, → bias offset, → bias voltage, → biased, → biased estimate, → biased galaxy formation, → biased sample, → biased statistics, → debias, → kinematic bias, → Lutz-Kelker bias, → Malmquist bias, → observational bias, → sampling bias, → unbiased, → unbiased estimator. Etymology (EN): From M.Fr. biais “slant,” perhaps ultimately from Gk. epikarsios “slanting, oblique,” from epi- “upon” + karsios “oblique.” Etymology (PE): Varak, from var “side, direction” |
irang-e varak, xatâ-ye ~ Fr.: erreur de biais |
nurdâd barây-e varak Fr.: pose pour biais |
apneh-e varak Fr.: biais In → CCD detectors, same as → bias and → offset. |
voltâž-e varak Fr.: voltage de biais |
varakdâr Fr.: biaisé |
barâvard-e varakdâr Fr.: estimation biasiée |
diseš-e varakdâr-e kahkašânhâ Fr.: formation biaisée de galaxies The theory that bright galaxies form preferentially from anomalously overdense perturbations in the → early Universe. |
nemunân-e varakdâr Fr.: échantillon biaisé A sample that is not a true representative of a → statistical population to which generalizations are to be made. A sample which is not → randomly constituted. |
âmâr-e varakdâr Fr.: statistique biasée A statistics based on a → biased sample. See also: → biased; → statistics. |
bolur-e doâsé Fr.: cristal biaxe |
BICEP2 Fr.: BICEP2 A → microwave → polarimeter designed specifically to target the → B-mode signature of → inflation in the → cosmic microwave background polarization. BICEP2 observed from the South Pole for three seasons from 2010 to 2012. This 26 cm aperture → telescope comprised an all-cold refracting optical system equipped with a → bolometer array of 512 → detectors (256 pixels) operating at 150 GHz. See also: BICEP2, the upgraded version of the first BICEP, short for Background Imaging of Cosmic Extragalactic Polarization. |
adasi-ye dokâv Fr.: lentille biconcave |
adasi-ye dokuž Fr.: lentille biconvexe A → spherical lens with two convex faces. The radii of curvature for the two surfaces may or may not be the same. |
donbâledâr-e Biyelâ Fr.: comète de Biela A comet having a short period of 6.62 years discovered by Biela. Etymology (EN): In honor of Wilhelm von Biela (1782-1856), Austrian military officer and amateur astronomer, who re-discovered the comet Biela in 1826, although it had been seen first in 1772. → comet. |
Bielâyiân Fr.: Bielides A → meteor shower, originating from → Biela’s comet, whose → radiant lies in the constellation → Andromeda; also called → Andromidids. Etymology (EN): Bielids, From Biel(a) + → -ids suffix denoting “descendant of, belonging to the family of.” |
1) dogalidan; 2) dogal Fr.: 1) bifurquer; 2) à deux branches
Etymology (EN): M.L. bifurcatus, from L. → bi- “two,”
Etymology (PE): Dogalidan, from Gilaki dogal “fork, two-branched,” cf. Tabari
dekal, dokkal, doqâla,
from do, → two, + gal, kal “branch, part,”
cf. Kurd. (Kurmanji) kar “part, piece,” cognate with Pers. kârd
“knife,” (+ *niš-) nišgarda “cobbler’s knife;” Mid.Pers.
kârt “knife,” karēnītan, karītan “to cut,” |
dogaleš Fr.: bifurcation
See also: Verbal noun of → bifurcate. |
noqte-ye dogaleš Fr.: point de bifurcation The point or moment in the evolution of a → dynamical system that occurs if a parameter passes through a critical point. At this point the system branches into any number of qualitatively new types of behavior. See also: → bifurcation; → point. |
negare-ye dogaleš Fr.: théorie de bifurcation
See also: → bifurcation; → theory. |
bozorg (#), meh (#) Fr.: grand, gros Of considerable size, number, quantity, large. Etymology (EN): M.E., northern England dialect, of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Bozorg, → large. Meh “great, large;” Mid.Pers. meh, mas; Av. maz-, masan-, mazant- “great, important,” mazan- “greatness, majesty,” mazišta- “greatest;” cf. Skt. mah-, mahant-; Gk. megas; L. magnus; PIE *meg- “great.” |
Meh Bâng (#), Big Bang (#) Fr.: Big Bang A theory which states that the → Universe
came into existence in an
“instantaneous” event some 14 billion years ago. Matter Etymology (EN): → big; Etymology (PE): Meh Bâng, from meh “great, large,”
→ big, + bâng
“voice, sound, clamour,” (Mid.Pers. vâng, Av. vaocanghê
“to declare (by means of speech”), vacah- “word,” from
vac- “to speak, say,” cf. Mod.Pers. vâžé “word,” âvâz “voice,
sound, song,” Skt. vakti “speaks, says,” vacas- “word;” |
model-e Meh Bâng, ~ Big Bang Fr.: modèle du big bang |
haste-handâyeš-e Meh Bâng, ~ Big Bang Fr.: nucléosynthèse de Big Bang The production of → light elements,
roughly three minutes after the → Big Bang when
the temperature of the → Universe dropped from
1032 K to approximately 109 K. In a short time
interval → protons and → neutrons
collided to produce → deuterium. Most of the deuterium then
fused with other protons and neutrons to produce → helium
and a small amount of → tritium. The element See also: → Big Bang; → nucleosynthesis. |
takini-ye Big Bang Fr.: singularité du Big Bang A hypothetical state of → infinite energy density representing an infinite → gravitational field and infinite → space-time curvature. The singularity arises from using Einstein’s theory of → general relativity concerning gravity. We know, however, that when the density and heat become extremely large, quantum physics of gravity becomes important. Yet Einstein’s equations ignore quantum effects. In other words, in certain extreme conditions, Einstein’s equations do not apply. See also: → Big Bang; → singularity. |
negare-ye Meh Bâng, ~ Big Bang Fr.: théorie du big bang |
quz-e âbi-ye bozorg Fr.: grande bosse bleue The broad continuum feature dominating the optical-ultraviolet spectra of AGNs. Most current models attribute the big blue bump to thermal emission from an optically thick accretion disk. See also: → big; → blue; bump, → bump Cepheid. |
Meh Romb, rombeš-e farjâmin Fr.: big crunch The state of extremely high density and temperature into which a closed → Universe would → collapse in the distant future. If the Universe has a mass density exceeding the critical threshold, then gravity will eventually halt the expansion and cause the Big Crunch. Etymology (EN): → big; crunch “to crush, grind, or tread noisily; the act or sound of crunching,” alteration of craunch, possibly of imitative origin. Etymology (PE): Meh “large, big,” → big; romb, → collapse, from rombidan “to collapse;” rombeš-e farjâmin “final collapase,” from rombeš verbal noun of rombidan; farjâmin, → late. |
haft barâdarân (#), haftowrang (#), camce-ye bozorg (#) Fr.: Grand Chariot A group of seven stars, an → asterism, lying inside the Northern
constellation → Ursa Major. They are: Etymology (EN): → big; dipper a popular U.S. name for the asterism known in Britain as The Plough or Charles’ Wain, from dip O.E. dyppan “immerse,” from P.Gmc. *dupjanan. Etymology (PE): Haft barâdarân “the seven brothers,” from haft “seven” (Mid.Pers. haft, Av. hapta, cf. Skt. sapta, Gk. hepta, L. septem, P.Gmc. *sebun, Du. zeven, O.H.G. sibun, Ger. sieben, E. seven; PIE *septm)
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dâne-ye bozorg Fr.: gros grain A type of → interstellar dust grains with a size ranging from
150 to 1000 Å. Big grains consist of graphite and silicates. They |
meh gosast Fr.: big rip A cosmological hypothesis regarding the ultimate fate of the → Universe whereby in a far future galaxies and stellar systems would be torn apart due to the → accelerating expansion of the Universe depending on the kind of the → dark energy content of the Universe. According to this hypothesis, after the disruption of galaxies, stars, and planets even atoms might not be able to withstand the internal force of the expansion imposed by the dark energy. Etymology (EN): → big; M.E. rippen, origin obscure, cf. Frisian rippe “to tear, rip,” M.Du. reppen, rippen “to pull, jerk,” Swed. reppa, Dan. rippe “to tear, rip.” Etymology (PE): Meh “large, big,” see under → big; gosast stem of gosastan “to tear, cut, break,” from Mid.Pers. wisistan “to break, split,” Av. saed-, sid- “to split, break,” asista- “unsplit, unharmed,” Skt. chid- “to split, break, cut off,” PIE base *skei- “to cut, split,” cf. Gk. skhizein “to split,” L. scindere “to split,” Goth. skaidan, O.E. sceadan “to divide, separate.” |
došâneš Fr.: bijection A → mapping f from a → set A onto a set B which is both an → injection and a → surjection. More explicitly, for every element b of B there is a unique element a of A for which f(a) = b. Also known as → bijective mapping. See also: From bi- + → injection. |
došâni Fr.: bijectif |
hamtâyeš-e došâni Fr.: application bijective |
rixtšenâsi-ye došâni Fr.: morphisme bijectif Same as → isomorphism. |
domod Fr.: bimodal |
diseš-e domod-e setâregân Fr.: formation bimodale d'étoile A concept of → star formation in which → high-mass stars and → low-mass stars form in different physical conditions involving different → molecular clouds. Following the pioneering suggestion of Herbig (1962), successive investigations have generally supported the idea that star formation proceeds bimodally with respect to stellar mass. The star formation rate appears to differ both spatially and temporally for low mass and → massive stars. This is of considerable importance for galactic evolution, since the low-mass stars lock up mass and are long-lived, low luminosity survivors to the present epoch, whereas massive stars are short-lived, recycle and enrich interstellar gas, and leave dark remnants while producing a high luminosity per unit of mass (Silk, J., 1988, in Galactic and Extragalactic Star Formation, p. 503, eds. R. E. Pudritz and M. Fich). |
domodi Fr.: bimodalité |
1) bâvin; 2) bâvinidan Fr.: 1) bin; 2) binner 1a) General:A box or enclosed space for storing grain, coal, or
the like. 1b) Electronics: In a → CCD detector,
a square or rectangular group of adjacent → pixels 1c) In a statistical → histogram, the range of
→ distribution → intervals.
The bin widths (or the number of bins) affect a histogram. Etymology (EN): M.E. binne, O.E. binn(e) “manger, crib,” perhaps from O.Celt. *benna, akin to Welsh benn “a cart, especially one with a woven wicker body.” The same Celtic word seems to be preserved in It. benna “dung cart,” Fr. benne “a sort of box for transporting materials, especially in mines,” Du. benne “large basket,” from L.L. benna. Etymology (PE): Bâvin “a basket, more precisely a small basket which contains the cotton to be spun;” bâvinidan infinitive from bâvin. |
dorini Fr.: binarité |
dorin, dodoyi (#) Fr.: binaire General: Characterized by or consisting of two parts or
components. Etymology (EN): Binary, from L.L. binarius, from bini “two-by-two,” from bis “twice, two times;” cf. Av. biš- “twice,” bi- “two,” Mod.Pers. do “two,” PIE *dwo- “two.” Etymology (PE): Dorin, from Mid.Pers. dorin “double, pair,”
from do (Av. dva-, Skt. dvi-, Gk. duo,
L. duo, E. two, Der. zwei, Fr. deux)
“two” + rin “time, turn.” |
hesâb-e dorin, ~ dodoi (#) Fr.: arithmétique binaire A system of calculation in which the only numerals used are 0 and 1. All the real numbers are represented in terms of powers of 2. See also: → binary; → arithmetic. |
sayyârak-e dorin Fr.: astéroïde binaire A member of a population of double objects in the main → Asteroid Belt
or the → Kuiper Belt which are
gravitationally bound together. So far about 200 such binary systems have been identified,
while their number is increasing. |
siyah câl-e dorin Fr.: trou noir binaire A → binary system consisting of two → black holes in close orbit around each other. Same as → black hole binary. |
raqam-e dorin, ~ dodoi, bit Fr.: chiffre binaire Either of the digits 0 or 1, used in the → binary number system. |
basâmad-e dorinhâ Fr.: fréquence des binaires The fraction of stars that have at least one → companion. It is at least 50%. The binary fraction appears to increase with increasing → primary star mass, at least among the more massive stars: the → O stars and → B stars have a companion frequency of at least 70%, while for the → G stars the binary frequency is around 50% and the → M stars may have an even lower binary frequency of around 30-40%. Brown dwarfs are rare as companions to lower-main-sequence stars, although brown-dwarf binaries appear not to be rare. An increase in binary frequency with mass would be expected if most stars form in → multiple systems that disintegrate, since the more massive stars would then preferentially remain in binaries while the less massive ones would preferentially be ejected as single stars (see Richard B. Larson, 2001, in IAU Symposium 200, p. 93 and references therein). |
kahkašân-e dorin Fr.: galaxie binaire |
râžmân-e adadhâ-ye dirini Fr.: système des nombres binaires A → numeral system that has 2 as its base and uses only two digits, 0 and 1. The positional value of each digit in a binary number is twice the place value of the digit of its right side. Each binary digit is known as a bit. The decimal numbers from 0 to 10 are thus in binary 0, 1, 10, 11, 100, 101, 110, 111, 1000, 1001, and 1010. And, for example, the binary number 111012 represents the decimal number (1 × 24) + (1 × 23)
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âpâreš-e dorin Fr.: opération binaire A mathematical operation that combines two numbers, quantities, sets, etc.,
to give a third. For example, multiplication of two numbers is a binary operation. A binary operation * on a set S is → commutative
if a * b = b * a for all a, b∈ S. A binary operation * on a set S is → associative if (a * b) * c = a * (b * c) for all a, b, c∈ S. |
pulsâr-e dorin, tapâr-e ~ Fr.: pulsar binaire A pulsar in a → binary system, the companion of which often
being a → neutron star or a
→ white dwarf. The only known binary system with two pulsars |
setâre-ye dorin Fr.: étoile binaire Two stars gravitationally bound to each other, so that they revolve around their common center of gravity. → double star; → spectroscopic binary. Etymology (EN): → binary; → star. |
siyah-câl-e abar-porjerm-e dorin Fr.: trou noir supermassif double A → dual supermassive black hole whose components are separated by a few parsecs. See also: → binary; → supermassive; → black; → hole. |
râžmân-e dorin Fr.: système binaire |
deraxt-e dorin Fr.: arbre binaire In → graph theory, an → ordered tree with all → nodes having at most two → children. |
bandidan (#) Fr.: lier To tie, to fasten, to cause ti stick together. Etymology (EN): O.E. bindan “to tie up with bonds,” Etymology (PE): Bandidan “to bind, confine” [Mo’in, Dehxodâ], from band “band, tie” + -idan infinitive suffix; cognate with E. bind, as explained above. |
kâruž-e bandeš, ~ hamgiri Fr.: énergie de liaison
Etymology (EN): Binding, noun from → bind; → energy. Etymology (PE): Kâruž, → energy; bandeš noun from bandidan, → bind. |
bâvineš Fr.: binage Combining a few adjacent CCD pixels in bins, during readout; the method used to assemble the bins and transfer the charge by means of an electronic clock. Binning improves signal-to-noise ratio at the expense of spatial resolution. Etymology (EN): Binning, from → bin. Etymology (PE): Bâvineš, from bâvin, → bin. |
docašmi (#), durbin-e ~ (#) Fr.: binoculaire A small optical instrument with two tubes that is used to magnify the view of distant or astronomical objects. → prism binoculars. Etymology (EN): From Fr. binoculaire, from binocle, from L. bini “double” (L. bis, bi- “twice,” Av. biš “twice”) + ocularis “of the eye,” from oculus “eye” (compare with Av. axš-, aš- “eye,” Skt. akshi- “eye,” Gk. ops “eye,” opsis “sight, appearance,” from PIE okw- “to see;” also O.E. ege, eage, from P.Gmc. *augon, Goth. augo, Lith. akis, Armenian aku). Etymology (PE): Docašmi “binocular,” from do, → two |
donâmin Fr.: 1) binôme; 2) binomial 1a) An algebraic expression containing 2 terms, as x + y and
2x2 - 3x. In other words, a → polynomial
with 2 terms. 1b) Biology: A pair of Latin (or latinized) words
forming a scientific name for organisms. The first word represents the genus, and the second
the species.
See also: From L.L. binomi(us) “having two names,” + → -al, → nominal. |
hamgar-e donâmin Fr.: coefficient binomial The factor multiplying the variable in a term of a
→ binomial expansion. For example, in
(x + y)4 = x4 + 4x3y +
6x2y2 + 4xy3 + y4
the binomial coefficients are 1, 4, 6, 4, and 1.
In general, the r-th binomial coefficient in the expression See also: → binomial; → coefficient. |
degarsâne-ye donâmin Fr.: binôme différentiel An expression of the form xm(a + bxn)pdx, where m, n, p, a, and b are constants. See also: → binomial; → differential. |
vâbâžeš-e donâmin Fr.: distribution binomiale A probability distribution for independent events for which there are only two possible outcomes i.e., success and failure. The probability of x successes in n trials is: P(x) = [n!/x!(n - x)!] px.qn - x, where p is the probability of success and q = 1 - p the probability of failure on each trial. These probabilities are given in terms of the → binomial theorem expansion of (p + q)n. See also: → binomial; → distribution. |
sopâneš-e donâmin Fr.: expansion binomiale A rule for the expansion of an expression of the form (x + y)n. The variables x and y can be any → real numbers and n is an → integer. The general formula is known as the → binomial theorem. |
nâmgozâri-ye donâmin Fr.: nomenclature binomiale A system introduced by Carl von Linné (1707-1778), the Swedish botanist, in which
each organism is identified by two names. The first is the name of
the genus (generic name), written with a capital letter. The
second is the name of the species (specific name). The generic and specific names are
in Latin and are printed in italic type. For example, human beings belong to species See also: → binomial; → nomenclature. |
farbin-e donâmin Fr.: théorème du binôme A rule for writing an equivalent expansion of an expression such as (a + b)n without having to perform all multiplications involved. → binomial expansion. The general expression is (a + b)n = &Sigma (n,k)akbn - k, where the summation is from k = 0 to n, and (n,k) = n!/[r!(n - k)!]. For n = 2, (a + b)2 = a2 + 2ab + b2. Historically, the binomial theorem as applied to (a + b)2
was known to Euclid (320 B.C.) and other early Greek mathematicians. In the tenth century
the Iranian mathematician Karaji (953-1029) knew the binomial theorem and its accompanying
table of → binomial coefficients,
now known as → Pascal’s triangle. Subsequently
Omar Khayyam (1048-1131) asserted that he could find the
4th, 5th, 6th, and higher roots of numbers by a special law which did
not depend on geometric figures. Khayyam’s treatise concerned with his findings is
lost. In China there appeared in 1303 a work containing the binomial coefficients
arranged in triangular form. |
zist- (#) Fr.: bio- Etymology (EN): Bio-, Gk., from bios “life,” from PIE base *gweie- “to live;” cf. O.Pers./Av. gay- “to live,” Av. gaya- “life,” gaeθâ- “being, world, mankind,” jivya-, jva- “aliving, alive,” Skt. jivah “alive, living;” Mid.Pers. zivastan “to live,” zivik, zivandag “alive, living,” L. vivus “living, alive,” vita “life,” O.E. cwic “alive,” E. quick, Lith. gyvas “living, alive.” Etymology (PE): Zist “life, existence,” from zistan “to live,” Mid.Pers. zivastan “to live,” zivižn “life,” O.Pers./Av. gay-, as explained above. |
zistaxtaršenâsi (#) Fr.: bioastronomie A common branch of astronomy and biology dealing with the study of life throughout the Universe; synonymous with → astrobiology and → exobiology. Etymology (EN): Bioastronomy, from → bio- + → astronomy. Etymology (PE): Zistaxtaršenâsi, from zist-, → bio-,
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zistgunâguni Fr.: biodiversité |
zist-azdâyik Fr.: bioinformatique The retrieval and analysis of biochemical and biological data using mathematics and computer science, as in the study of genomes (Dictionary.com). See also: → bio-; → informatics. |
zistšenâs (#) Fr.: biologiste |
zistženâsi (#) Fr.: biologie |
zist-foruzesti Fr.: bioluminescence The production and emission of light by a living organism as the result of a chemical reaction (→ chemiluminescence). In other words, bioluminescence is chemiluminescence from living organisms. It is widespread in the marine environment, but rare in terrestrial and especially freshwater environments. See also: → chemi-; → luminescence. |
zist-dâjgar Fr.: biomarqueur |
zistfizikdân (#) Fr.: biophysicien A specialist in → biophysics. |
zistfizik (#) Fr.: biophysique |
zist-nešânzad Fr.: biosignature |
zistsepehr (#) Fr.: biosphère |
qânun-e Biot-Savart (#) Fr.: loi de Biot-Savart The → magnetic field due to → electric current flowing in a long straight conductor is directly proportional to the current and inversely proportional to the distance of the point of observation from the conductor. The law is derivable from → Ampere’s law, but was obtained experimentally by the authors. Etymology (EN): Named after the French physicists Jean-Baptiste Biot (1774-1862) and Félix Savart (1791-1841); → law. |
pargir-e zistik Fr.: environnement biotique Ecology: The environment consisting of living organisms, which interact with each other and with their non-living surroundings. See also: Biotic adj. of → biotics; of → environment. |
zistik Fr.: biotique |
doqotbi (#) Fr.: bipolaire |
tacân-e doqotbi Fr.: flot bipolaire Same as → bipolar outflow. |
šân-e doqotbi Fr.: jet bipolaire One of two beams of high-temperature, ionized gas ejected in two opposite directions
associated with a → protostar. The collimated jets,
a consequence of the → accretion
process, can extend over distances of several |
miq-e doqotbi Fr.: nébuleuse bipolaire |
ostacân-e doqotbi Fr.: flot bipolaire A flow of gaseous material in two opposite directions
emanating from protostellar regions or from → evolved stars |
došekast (#) Fr.: biréfringence A property of some crystalline materials (e.g. calcite, quartz) which have different indices of refraction associated with different crystallographic directions. Therefore, the crystal splits incident transmitted light into two beams, each polarized perpendicularly to the other. Also called double refraction. Etymology (EN): Birefringence, from → bi- + refringence, from L. refringere “to break up,” from → re- “back” + combination form of frangere “to break.” Etymology (PE): Došekast, from do- “two,” → bi- + šekast “breaking,” from šekastan “to break up,” Mid.Pers. škastan, Av. skand- “to break.” |
došekastgar, došekasti (#) Fr.: biréfringent Of or relating to → birefringence. |
pâlâye-ye došekastgar, ~ došekasti Fr.: filtre biréfringent A type of narrow-band filter that uses the birefringence to produce selective absorption of polarized light. See also: → birefringent; → filter. |
xala'-e došekastgar Fr.: vide biréfringent Empty space undergoing → vacuum birefringence. See also: → birefringent; → vacuum. |
farbin-e Birkhoff Fr.: théorème de Birkhoff For a four dimensional → space-time, the → Schwarzschild metric is the only solution of → Einstein’s field equations which describes the gravitational field created by a spherically symmetrical distribution of mass. The theorem implies that the gravitational field outside a sphere is necessarily static, and that the metric inside a spherical shell of matter is necessarily flat. See also: The theorem was first demonstrated in 1923 by George David Birkhoff (1884-1944), an American mathematician; → theorem |
1) zâymân; 2) zâdmân, zâd; 3) zâyeš Fr.: 1) acouchement; 2;3 ) naissance
Etymology (EN): M.E. byrthe; O.E. gebyrd; cf. O.H.G. giburt, Etymology (PE): 1) Zâymân, from zây present stem of zâyidan, zâdan “to give birth”
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porineš-e dorinhâ hengâm-e zâdmân Fr.: population binaire à la naissance In star formation models, the population of binary components formed via random pairing of stars distributed according to the → canonical IMF. See also: → birth; → binary; → population. |
zâd-xatt Fr.: ligne de naissance The path in the → H-R diagram that continuously
→ accreting stars follow. Stars on the birthline are difficult
to observe, because they are hidden by the → accretion disk
and a dense → cocoon of
→ interstellar matter. The star becomes visible once
a sufficient amount of the surrounding matter has been dispersed. It follows that the
young starsare observed generally between the birthline and the
→ zero-age main sequence (ZAMS).
Before hydrogen ignition, gravitational contraction and deuterium burning are the
main energy sources for the star. The localization of the birthline depends on the
deuterium → accretion rate. |
raveš-e Biruni Fr.: méthode de Biruni A method devised by the Iranian astronomer Biruni (973-1048) to measure the Earth radius, using trigonometric calculations. In contrast to foregoing → Eratosthenes’ method and → Mamun’s method, which required expeditions to travel long distances, Biruni’s method was on-site. He carried out the measurement when he was at Nandana Fort (at the southern end of the pass through the Salt Range, near Baghanwala in the Punjab). He first calculated the height of a hill (321.5 m). To do this he used the usual method
of observing the summit from two places in a straight line from the hill top.
He measured the distance, d, between the two places and the angles
θ1 and θ2 to the hill top from the two points,
respectively. He made both measurements using an astrolabe.
The formula that relates these angles to the hill height is:
h = (d. tan θ1 . tan θ2) / (tan
θ2 - tan θ1). R = h cosθ / (1 - cos θ). The result for the Earth radius was 12,851,369.845 cubits (or 6335.725 km, using favorable conversion units). Despite the fact that the method is very ingenious, such a precise value is only by chance, because of several drawbacks: The plane was not perfectly flat to serve as the smooth surface of the sea. A measuring instrument more accurate than the alleged 5 arc minutes was needed. And the method suffered from the → atmospheric refraction (See, e.g., Gomez, A. G., 2010, Journal of Scientific and Mathematical Research). See also: Abu Rayhân Mohammad Biruni (973-1048 A.D.), one of the greatest scholars of the medieval era, was an Iranian of the Khwarezm region; → method. |
bismut (#) Fr.: bismuth A white, crystalline, brittle metallic chemical element with a pinkish tinge; symbol Bi. → Atomic number 83; → atomic weight 208.9804; → melting point 271.3°C; → boiling point about 1,560°C; → specific gravity 9.75 at 20°C; → valence +3 or +5. Bismuth is the most → diamagnetic of all metals. Its See also: From Ger. Bismuth, Wismut, Wissmuth, probably from weisse Masse |
andarheli Fr.: bissextile Of or relating to a → leap year or to the extra day falling in a leap year. Etymology (EN): L.L. bissextlis (annus) “year containing an intercalary day,” from bisextus,
from bis “twice, two, doubled” + sextus “sixth,” because in the
→ Julian calendar the sixth day before the
Calends of March was doubled every
four years. Same as → leap and Etymology (PE): Andarheli, of or relating to andarhel→ intercalation. |
do-pâydâri Fr.: bistabilité |
jaheš-e do-pâydâri Fr.: bistabilité par saut An abrupt discontinuity in the → stellar wind properties of → hot stars near → effective temperatures about 21,000 K and 10,000 K, corresponding to O9.5-B3 supergiants (Castor et al. 1975, ApJ 195, 157; Lamers et al., 1995, ApJ 455, 269). At these temperatures the → terminal velocity of the wind drops steeply by about a factor two and the → mass loss rate increases steeply by about a factor three to five, when going from high to low temperatures. Bistability jump is related to the degree of ionization in the wind. With a little drop in the temperature, the dominant driving element (Fe) will recombine to lower ionization stages which produces a lower terminal velocity and a relatively high density in the wind. → wind momentum. Additional bistability jumps may occur at higher temperatures where CNO may provide the dominant line driving, especially for low metallicity stars (Vink et al. 2001, A&A 369, 574). However, a recent study using a larger sample finds that there is a gradual decline in the wind terminal velocities of early B supergiants and not a “jump” (Crowther et al. 2006, A&A 446, 279). See also: → bistability; → jump. |
sâzokâr-e do-pâydâri Fr.: mécanisme de bistabilité The mechanism that accounts for the → bistability jump. See also: → bistability; → mechanism. |
bit, raqam-e dorin Fr.: bit A contraction of → binary digit, either 0 or 1. See also: Bit, from binary + digit |
do-arz Fr.: bivalent
|
guyik-e do-arz Fr.: logique bivalente A logical system, such as → classical logic, |
barâxt-e BL Calpâsé Fr.: objet BL Lac A member of a family of → quasars, or extragalactic
→ Active Galactic Nuclei, which displays See also: BL Lac, from object BL in the constellation → Lacerta (BL Lacertae). The reason for this terminology is that it was originally thought to be an irregular variable star in our Galaxy; hence its variable star designation. In the 1970s the “star” was identified with a bright, variable → radio source and a very faint galaxy; → object. |
sâzokâr-e Blaauw Fr.: mécanisme de Blaauw A mechanism aimed at explaining the → disruption of a → binary system. As one component loses mass dramatically, the resulting loss of → gravitational attraction changes the orbit of, or ejects completely, the → companion star. Etymology (EN): Adriaan Blaauw (1914-2010), 1961, Bull. Astron. Inst. Netherlands 15, 265; → mechanism. |
siyâh (#), siyah (#) Fr.: noir Very dark in color; Etymology (EN): Black, from O.E. blæc “black,” from P.Gmc. *blak-, from PIE *bhelg- “to shine, flash, burn” (cf. Gk. phlegein “to burn, scorch,” L. flagrare “to blaze, glow, burn,” fulgur “lightning”). Etymology (PE): Siyâh or siyah, from Mid.Pers.
siyâ, siyâk, siyâvah “black,”
Av. sâma-, sayâva- “black, dark,” cf.
Skt. syama-, syava- “black, brown,” Gk. skia |
cekke-ye siyâh Fr.: goutte noire The appearance of a band linking the solar limb to the disk of a transiting planet (Venus or Mercury) near the point of internal tangency. This effect increases the uncertainty in measuring the period from when the planet fully enters the solar disk to when it begins to depart. Historically, the black drop phenomenon limited the accuracy of the determination of the Astronomical Unit and the scale of the Solar System in the 18th and 19th centuries. While there have been many proposed theories over the years, the true cause of the effect was revealed during a transit of Mercury in 1999, which was observed by the NASA’s TRACE satellite. Two effects could fully explain the black drop: the inherent blurriness of the image caused by the finite size of the telescope (→ point spread function), and an extreme dimming of the Sun’s surface just inside the apparent outer edge (→ limb darkening). See Schneider et al. 2004, Icarus 168, 249. |
siyah câl (#), ~ surâx (#) Fr.: trou noir A fantastically → compact object, predicted by the theory of → general relativity, whose → gravity is so powerful that not even light can escape from it. A black hole forms when matter → collapses to → infinite → density, producing a → singularity of infinite → curvature in the fabric of → space-time. Each black hole is surrounded by an → event horizon, at which the → escape velocity is the → speed of light. The → Schwarzschild radius for the Sun is about 3 km and for the Earth about 1 cm. There is observational evidence for black holes on a remarkable range of scales in the Universe: → stellar black hole, → intermediate-mass black hole, → primordial black hole, → mini black hole, → supermassive black hole, → Schwarzschild black hole, → Kerr black hole. See also: Historically, the Newtonian concept of such a celestial body appeared at the end of the 18th century when light was shown to have particle characteristics. In fact the English geologist John Mitchell (1724-1793) and French mathematician and astronomer Pierre Simon Laplace (1749-1827), independently, suggested that regions of space, where gravitational attraction was so strong that not even light could escape, may exist in the Universe. However, the term black hole was coined in 1967 by the Princeton physicist John A. Wheeler (1911-2008); → black; → hole. |
siyah câl-e dorin Fr.: trou noir binaire A → binary system in which each component is a
→ black hole. The binary’s evolution |
nâmzad-e siyah câl (#) Fr.: candidat trou noir An object that seems likely to be a → black hole, but waits for more observational confirmations. |
tâj-e siyah câl Fr.: couronne du trou noir A spherical volume of hot plasma over a broader → accretion disk around a → black hole. The observation of energetic X-ray emission from black holes, which is inconsistent with → thermal emission from an accretion disk, is attributed to the presence of a putative hot corona. It has been widely postulated that the → hard X-rays are the product of → inverse Compton scattering of seed photons from accretion disks by hot ccoronae (See, e.g., F.L. Vieyro et al., 2010, arXiv:1005.5398 and R. C. Reis & J. M. Miller, 2013, arXiv:1304.4947). |
tašk-e siyah-câlhâ Fr.: fusion de trous noirs The collision of two → black holes in a → binary black hole system once they come so close that they cannot escape each other’s gravity. They will merge in an extremely violent event to become one more massive black hole. The merger would produce tremendous energy and send massive ripples, called → gravitational waves, through the → space-time fabric of the Universe. Such an event (called GW150914) was first detected by the → Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) on September 14, 2015. The initial black hole masses were 36 and 29 Msun which gave a final black hole mass of 62 Msun, with 3 Msun radiated in gravitational waves. The event happened at a distance of 1.3 billion → light-years from Earth (Abbott et al., 2016, Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 061102). Black hole merger is preceded by → inspiral and followed by → ringdown. |
gerâni-ye ruye-ye siyah câl Fr.: gravité de surface de trou noir The acceleration of gravity at the → event horizon of a → black hole. For a → Schwarzschild back hole it is given by κ = GM/RSch2 = c4/(4GM). |
sâye-ye siyah-câl Fr.: ombre de trou noir A gravitationally lensed image of a → black hole as seen by a distant observer if the black hole is in front of a bright background. According to → general relativity, photons circling the black hole slightly inside the boundary of the → photon sphere will fall down into the → event horizon, while photons circling just outside will escape to infinity. The shadow appears therefore as a rather sharp boundary between bright and dark regions and arises from a deficit of those photons that are captured by the event horizon. Because of this, the diameter of the shadow does not depend on the photons energy, but uniquely on the → angular momentum of the black hole. In a pioneering study, Bardeen (1973) calculated the shape of a dark area of a → Kerr black hole, that is, its “shadow” over a bright background appearing, for instance, in the image of a bright star behind the black hole. |
rismân-e siyâh Fr.: corde noire The extension of the → black hole concept in a → space-time with → dimensions higher than 4. Theoretically, it is possible to extend the 4D black hole with S2 horizon into the fifth dimension producing a hypercylindrical black hole S2× R. Black strings are unstable; it is not yet well understood whether they end up as black holes or different objects. |
tapârhâ-ye siyâh-bivé, pulsârhâ-ye ~ Fr.: A class of binary millisecond pulsars in which the pulsar is eclipsed by its stellar companion, and the companion is being gradually ablated by the relativistic wind of the pulsar. The first system discovered in 1988 was PSR 1957+20, a 1.6074 millisecond in a near circular 9 hr orbit around a low-mass companion star. Etymology (EN): Black widow, a venomous spider (Latrodectus mactans), shiny, coal black in color, that lives in North and South America. The female averages 8-10 mm in length and has long slender legs and a round abdomen. → black; widow, from O..E. widewe, widuwe, from P.Gmc. *widewo (cf. Du. weduwe, weeuw, Ger. Witwe), from PIE *widhewo (cf. Av. viδavâ-, Mid.Pers. wêwag, Mod.Pers. bivé, Skt. vidhava-, L. vidua, Rus. vdova,); → pulsar. Etymology (PE): Tapâr , → pulsar; siyâh-bivé “black widow,” from siyâh, → black + bivé, akin to E. widow, as explained above. |
siyah-jesm (#) Fr.: corps noir A theoretical object that is simultaneously a perfect → absorber (it does not reflect any radiation) and a perfect → emitter of → radiation in all → wavelengths and whose radiation is governed solely by its → temperature. Blackbody radiation cannot be explained by → classical physics. The study of its characteristics has, therefore, played an important role in the development of → quantum mechanics. A blackbody can be realized in the form of a cavity with highly absorbing internal walls and a small aperture. Any ray entering through the aperture can leave the cavity only after repeated reflection from the walls. When the aperture is sufficiently small, therefore, the cavity will absorb practically all the radiation incident on the aperture, and so the surface of the aperture will be a black body. The light within the cavity will always interact and exchange energy with the material
particles of the walls and any other material particles present. This interaction will
eventually → thermalize
the radiation within the cavity, producing a → blackbody spectrum,
represented by a → blackbody curve. See also → blackbody photosphere; → blackbody radiation; → Planck’s blackbody formula; → Planck’s radiation law; → Rayleigh-Jeans law; → Stefan-Boltzmann law; → thermalization; → Wien’s displacement law. |
xam-e siyah-jesm Fr.: courbe de corps noir The characteristic way in which the → intensity of → radiation emitted by a → blackbody varies with its → frequency (or → wavelength), as described by → Planck’s radiation law. Also referred to as the → Planck curve. The exact form of the curve depends only on the object’s → temperature. The wavelength at which the emitted intensity is highest is an indication of the temperature of the radiating object. As the temperature of the blackbody increases, the peak wavelength decreases (→ Wien’s displacement law) and the total energy being radiated (the area under the curve) increases rapidly (→ Stefan-Boltzmann law). |
šidsepehr-e siyah-jesm Fr.: photosphère de corps noir The → blackbody surface of the → Universe
defined at a → redshift of about
z ≥ 2 × 106.
This is distinct from the → last scattering surface,
in other words the → cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR),
which refers to z = 1100. Prior to the epoch of the blackbody photosphere See also: → blackbody; → atmosphere. |
tâbeš-e siyah-jesm (#) Fr.: rayonnement de corps noir The radiation emitted by a blackbody at a given → temperature. The → distribution of radiation with → wavelength is given by → Planck’s blackbody formula or → Planck’s radiation law. |
binâb-e siyah-jesm (#) Fr.: spectre de corps noir A curve displaying → blackbody radiation intensity versus the wavelength for a given temperature, according to → Planck’s blackbody formula. It is an asymmetrical curve with a sharp rise on the short wavelength side and a much more gradually sloping long-wavelength tale. Same as → Planck spectrum. |
damâ-ye siyah-jesm (#) Fr.: température de corps noir The temperature at which a blackbody would emit the same radiation per unit area as that emitted by a given body at a given temperature. See also: → blackbody; → temperature. |
xâmušzâr Fr.: panne d'électricité, black-out
Etymology (EN): → black; → out. Etymology (PE): Xâmušzâr, târikzâr from xâmuš “extinguished,” → extinction, târik, → dark,
|
farâravand-e Blandford-Zanjek Fr.: processus de Blandford-Zanjek A mechanism for the extraction of energy from a rotating → Kerr black hole. It relies on the assumption that the material → accreted by a → black hole would probably be → magnetized and increasingly so as the material gets closer to the → event horizon. Since all black holes of current astrophysical interest are probably accreting from magnetized disks, this has led to suggestions that the Blandford-Znajek process plays a vital role in → active galactic nuclei (AGN) and other accreting black hole systems. The power, P, generated is given by: P = (4π/μ0) B2RS2c, where B is the → magnetic field of the → accretion disk, and RS is the → Schwarzschild radius of the black hole. As an example, for a 108 solar mass black hole with a 1 T magnetic field, the power generated is approximately 2.7 × 1038 W. In perspective, the annual energy consumption of the world is estimated around 5 × 1020 J. The example case presented produces more energy in a single second than the entire globe consumes in a year. While this is a bold claim to make, it is only an example case where not all the energy produced is extractable as useable energy. However, at that point, even a system which is less that < 10-15 % efficient would be sufficient to supply enough energy to power the world for a full year. Of course, the system itself is limited in its lifetime due to the extraction of energy by slowing down the rotation of the black hole. Hence, the system can only exist as long as the black hole has angular momentum, continuing to rotate. At some point, the rotation will cease and the energy source will be unusable (D. Nagasawa, PH240, Stanford University, Fall 2011). See also: Blandford, R. D., & Znajek, R. L., 1977, MNRAS 179, 433; → process. |
patu (#) Fr.: couverture
Etymology (EN): From M.E., from O.Fr. blanchet, diminutive of blanc “white; white cloth.” Etymology (PE): Patu “blanket; a kind of woolen cloth,” Kermâni dialect poto “wollen; woolly;” cf. Skt. patta- “cloth, colored or fine cloth.” |
model-e patumand Fr.: modèle à effet de couverture |
patumandi Fr.: effet de couverture |
oskar-e patumandi Fr.: effet de couverture |
blâzâr Fr.: blazar A term specifying → BL Lac objects or → quasars when the → continuum radiation emitted from the active nucleus is highly polarized and very variable. Etymology (EN): Blazar, a combination of BL Lac and quasar. |
beliz Fr.: flambée; blaze
Etymology (EN): O.E. blæse “a torch, flame,” from P.Gmc. *blason, from PIE *bhel- “to shine.” Etymology (PE): Beliz, from Lori beleyz “flame, blaze,” Kordi
belise “flame, blaze,”
Mid.Pers. brâh, Av. braz-
“to shine, gleam, flash, radiate,” |
zâviye-ye beliz Fr.: angle de blaze |
mowjtul-e beliz Fr.: longueur d'onde de blaze The wavelength in a given diffraction order for which the efficiency curve reaches its maximum. Etymology (EN): → blaze; → wavelength. Etymology (PE): Mowjtul→ wavelength; beliz→ blaze. |
turi-ye belizi Fr.: réseau échelette A → diffraction grating ruled appropriately so that a large proportion of the diffracted light is concentrated into a few, or even a single → order of interference. Etymology (EN): Blazed, adj. of → blaze; → grating. Etymology (PE): Turi, noun from tur “a net, a fishing net;” belizi adj. from beliz, → blaze. |
oskar-e Blazhko Fr.: effet Blazhko A long term, generally irregular modulation of → light curves
of a large subclass of → RR Lyrae stars.
Most of the modulations occur on the time scale of some 60 periods, although the
range extends from some tens to some hundreds of periods. Since its discovery See also: Named after Sergei N. Blazhko (1870-1956), a Russian astronomer who discovered the effect for the star EW Dra (1907, Astron. Nachr. 175, 325); → effect. |
setâre-ye Blazhko Fr.: étoile à effet Blazhko A star showing the → Blazhko effect. See also: → Blazhko effect; → star. |
belizeš Fr.: The capcity of a diffraction grating, in certain configurations,
to concentrate a large percentage of the incident light Etymology (EN): Blazing, noun from → blaze. Etymology (PE): Belizeš, noun from beliz “blaze.” |
âk Fr.: défaut General: A flaw or defect. Etymology (EN): From O.Fr. blemiss “to turn pale,” extended stem of blemir, blesmir “to injure, make pale.” Etymology (PE): Âk “defect, blemish,” Mid.Pers. ak, âk “evil, harm,” Av. aka- “bad, wicked;” cf. Skt. aka- “pain , trouble.” |
1) tuham; 2) tuham šodan Fr.: 1a) blend; 1b) mot-valise; 2) mélanger 1a) Description of two or more adjacent → spectral lines
which are mixed due to insufficient → resolving power
of the → spectrograph. 1b) Linguistics: A word which is coined by extracting and combining arbitrary
pieces of two or more existing words. Examples include → smog,
motel (motor + hotel), brunch (breakfast +
lunch), → pulsar, and
→ shellular. Same as portmanteau.
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.N. blanda; akin to O.E. blandan “to mix,” Lith. blandus “impure, cloudy.” Etymology (PE): Tuham, from tu “inside” + ham “together,” → com-. |
xatthâ-ye tuham, tânhâ-ye ~ Fr.: raies mélangées → Spectral lines intermingled. |
kur (#) Fr.: aveugle Unable to see; sightless. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. blind “blind,” akin to Du., Ger. blind, O.N. blindr, Goth. blinds “blind.” Etymology (PE): Kur “blind,” variants kul “squint-eyed,” kolok, kalek, kelek,
kalâž, kâž, kâj, kâc “squint-eyed,” Lori, Laki, Kurd. xêl
“cross-eyed, squinting;” Mid.Pers. kôr “blind;”
akin to O.Irish coll “one-eyed;” M.Irish goll “blind;” |
kuri (#) Fr.: cécité |
možidan Fr.: clignoter
Etymology (EN): M.E. blinken, variant of blenken “to blench;” cf. Du. and Ger. blinken. Etymology (PE): Možidan, from možé “eyelash,” Mid.Pers. mec “eyelash,” mecitan “to blink,” cf. Skt. mes “to open the eyes,” O.C.S. po-mežiti “to close the eyes.” → twinkling. |
hamsanjgar-e možeši Fr.: comparateur à clignotement An instrument for comparing two photographs of the same stellar field,
taken at different times, by quickly alternating from one to the other. Etymology (EN): → blink; → comparator. Etymology (PE): Hamsanjgar, → comparator; možeš noun from možidan, → blink. |
možeš Fr.: clignotement An intermittent appearance of a group of characters on the display terminal, usually used to convey a message to the user. Etymology (EN): Blinking, noun from to blink. Etymology (PE): Možeš, noun from možidan, → blink (v). |
tâval (#) Fr.: ampoule A small cyst on the skin, containing watery liquid, as from a burn or other injury. Etymology (EN): M.E. blister, blester, from O.Fr. blestre, of Germanic origin. Etymology (PE): Tâval “blister” (variants Torbet-Heydariye-yi toval, Guqari tavol), from suffixed (-al) tâv- tav, taf- “to heat, burn, shine,” variant of tâb-, tâbidan “to shine,” → luminous. |
model-e tâval Fr.: modèle d'ampoule A model according to which an → H II region is a hot mass of ionized gas located on the surface of a → molecular cloud, like a blister on the body skin. |
deraxšâr, blitzâr Fr.: blitzar A new type of astronomical object, appearing as an intense → burst of → radio emission, proposed to explain → fast radio bursts. In some models, blitzars result from the sudden → collapse of a hypothetical → supermassive neutron star. See also: From Ger. Blitz, “→ flash, lightening,”
|
damé (#) Fr.: blizzard A severe weather condition characterized by high winds (at least 55 km/h) and reduced visibility due to violent snowstorm. Etymology (EN): Blizzard, of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Damé “wind and snow storm.” |
žig Fr.: tache, concentration, condensation
Etymology (EN): From M.E. bubelen “to bubble.” Etymology (PE): Žig “drop,” probably from žohidan “to drop,” variant of cakidan “to drop.” |
xun (#) Fr.: sang The red liquid that circulates in the arteries and veins of humans and other vertebrate animals, carrying oxygen to and carbon dioxide from the tissues of the body (OxfordDictionaries.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. blo(o)d, O.E. blôd; akin to O.Frisian, O.Saxon blôd, O.H.G. bluot (Ger. Blut), Gothic bloth. Etymology (PE): Xun, from Mid.Pers. xûn; cf. Sogd. xurn, Khotanese hûna, Yaghnobi waxin, Av. vohunī, |
sar-riz Fr.: blooming, bavure In a → CCD detector, the spill of charge to adjacent → pixels due to over-illumination by a too bright source. Same as charge bleeding. Etymology (EN): Blooming “glare,” from to bloom “to glare, glow.” Etymology (PE): Sar-riz “spill-out, overflowing,” from sar “top,” → head, + riz “pouring,” from rixtan “to pour,” → overflow. |
damidan (#) Fr.: souffler
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. blawan “blow, breathe, make an air current; kindle; inflate; sound a wind instrument;” cf. O.H.G. blaen, Ger. blähen; from PIE *bhle- “to swell, blow up.” Etymology (PE): Damidan, from Mid.Pers. damidan “to blow,
breathe;” dam “breath, breath of an owen; bellows; smoke; air,” also
“moment, time;” Av. dāδmainya- “blowing up;” cf. |
âbi (#) Fr.: bleu The hue of that portion of the visible spectrum lying between green and indigo, evoked in the human observer by radiant energy with wavelengths of approximately 420 to 490 nanometers. Etymology (EN): From O.Fr. bleu, P.Gmc. *blæwaz, from PIE base *bhle-was “light-colored, blue, blond, yellow.” Etymology (PE): Âbi “color of water,” from âb “water,” Mid.Pers. âb, O.Pers./Av. âp-, Skt. âp-, PIE *âp-; → Aquarius. |
kahkešân-e kutule-ye âbi-ye hampak Fr.: galaxie naine bleue compacte An small → irregular galaxy
undergoing → violent star formation activity.
These objects appear blue by reason of containing clusters of hot,
→ massive stars |
peyvastâr-e âbi Fr.: continuum bleu The → continuum emission of an astronomical source with wavelengths between about 492 and 455 nm. |
qul-e âbi Fr.: géante bleue |
setâregân-e âbi-ye hâlé Fr.: étoiles bleues du halo A star belonging to a variety of stars located above the → horizontal branch and blueward of the → red giant branch in the → Hertzsprung-Russell diagram of the → halo population. Etymology (EN): → blue; → halo; → star. Etymology (PE): Setâregân plural of setâré, → star, âbi, → blue, hâlé, → halo. |
setâre-ye BHB Fr.: étoile BHB Same as → blue horizontal branch star. See also: → blue; → horizontal; → branch; → star. |
setare-ye qollab-e abi Fr.: étoile du crochet bleu A rare class of → horizontal branch (HB) These stars are such called because they
form a blue hook at the hot end of the HB in
→ far ultraviolet
(FUV) → color-magnitude diagrams.
The physical mechanism that produces blue hook populations
is still uncertain. At least two scenarios have been proposed. In the first scenario these stars are explained as a consequence of extreme
→ mass loss during the
→ red giant branch phase
and late helium flashing while descending the
→ white dwarf cooling track.
Due to the thin residual hydrogen envelope, helium is mixed into
the envelope and hydrogen is
mixed into the core during the late → helium flash.
As a result, the
stars are hotter and UV-fainter than canonical
→ extreme horizontal branch stars (EHB). By contrast, in the He self-enrichment scenario the EHB and blue hook stars are produced via the normal evolution of He-enriched sub-populations in globular clusters. These sub-populations might have formed from the ejecta
of intermediate-mass → asymptotic giant branch (AGB)
stars of the first generation of stars. For the same age and
→ metallicity, He-enriched HB stars have
smaller masses than
normal HB stars, resulting in bluer
→ zero age horizontal branch star (ZAHB)
locations. They are also brighter in the FUV, but this
effect is reversed for very hot He-enriched HB stars with
→ effective temperatures
larger than 19000 K. |
setâre-ye âbi-ye šâxe-ye ofoqi Fr.: étoile bleue de la branche horizontale A member of a population of
blue stars appearing on the → horizontal branch
in the → Hertzsprung-Russell diagram of the Galactic
→ halo populations and → globular clusters.
Belonging to → spectral types B3 to A0, See also: → blue; → horizontal; → branch, → star. |
šân-e âbi Fr.: jet bleu A transient optical phenomenon in the → stratosphere that emerges from the tops of → thunderstorm clouds at tremendous speeds. As their name implies, blue jets are optical ejections from the top of the electrically active core regions of thunderstorms. Following their emergence, they typically propagate upward in narrow cones at vertical speeds of roughly 100 km/s, fanning out and disappearing at heights of about 40-50 km. See also → sprite; → elve. |
našt-e âbi Fr.: fuite bleue Leakage phenomenon in a filter, causing an unwanted response to the blue or green light. Etymology (EN): → blue; leak, from M.Du. leken “to drip, to leak,” or from O.N. leka, cognate of O.E. leccan “to moisten,” from P.Gmc. *lek- “deficiency” (cf. O.H.G. lecchen “to become dry,” Ger. lechzen “to be parched with thirst”). Etymology (PE): Našt “leak,” origin unknown; âbi, → blue. |
gerdâl-e âbi Fr.: boucle bleue |
mâh-e âbi Fr.: lune bleue The second full moon in a calendar month. For a blue moon to occur, the first of the full moons must appear at or near the beginning of the month so that the second will fall within the same month. Full moons are separated by 29 days, while most months are 30 or 31 days long; so it is possible to fit two full moons in a single month. This happens every two and a half years, on average. See also: The folkloric term blue Moon for the calendrical event is
new, and apparently goes back to the Maine Farmers’ Almanac for
1937. But its original meaning in that work was the third full Moon
in a season when there were four full Moons in that season.
Some have related the term to the much older English
expression moon is blue, which goes back to a couplet from 1528,
interpreting it as “something that occurs rarely.” |
nâhiye-ye âbi Fr.: région bleue The portion of the → visible spectrum lying between 455 and 492 nm. |
âsmân-e âbi (#) Fr.: ciel bleu A phenomenon which results from → Rayleigh scattering of sunlight by → atmospheric molecules. → Nitrogen and → oxygen molecules that compose about 78% and 21% of the air, respectively, are small compared to the light → wavelengths, and thus more effective at scattering shorter wavelengths of light (blue and violet). The → selective scattering by these → molecules is responsible for producing the blue skies on a clear sunny day. The sky over the horizon appears much paler in color, because the scattered blue light must pass through more air. Some of it gets scattered away again in other directions. Hence, less blue light reaches the observer’s eyes. |
veylân-e âbi Fr.: traînarde bleue, traînard bleu Any of stars, often found in → globular clusters and old → open clusters, that lie on the blueward extension of the → main sequence beyond the → turnoff point. Blue stragglers have an anomalously blue color and high luminosity in comparison with other cluster members. The most probable ways in which they could form are: → mass transfer or → coalescence in → close binary systems, encounters or collisions in overcrowded cores of globular clusters. |
abarqul-e âbi Fr.: supergéante bleue An evolved star of spectral type O, B, or A; e.g. → Rigel, → Deneb. See also: → blue; → supergiant. |
bâl-e âbi Fr.: aile bleue |
âbipelâr Fr.: myrtille, bleuet |
kahkešân-e âbipelâr Fr.: galaxie myrtille, ~ bleuet A galaxy having a very small size
(< 1 kpc), very low stellar mass emission line strength and gas ionization. narrow-band surveys, Blueberry galaxies have similarly strong emission lines but about 10-100 times smaller stellar mass, → star formation rate, and luminosity. So Blueberry galaxies represent the faint-end of → Green Pea galaxies and → Lyman alpha emitting galaxies (Yang et al, 2017, arxiv/1706.02819, and references therein). |
âbikib Fr.: décalage vers le bleu |
hamneye âbikib Fr.: composante décalée vers le bleu |
Fr.: estomper
Etymology (EN): Probably akin to M.E. bleren “to blear.” Etymology (PE): Târ “dark, obscure, cloudy” Mid.Pers. târ, from Mid./Mod.Pers. târ “dark, obscure, cloudy.” |
vine-ye târ, ~ nâtig, tasvir-e ~ Fr.: image estompée, ~ floue An image which is dim, indistinct, or vague in appearance, for instance
when the optics is not well-focused or when the seeing is poor.
The same as → unsharp image, contrary to |
târšod Fr.: estompage In → galactic dynamics models, the See also: Verbal noun of → blur. |
qânun-e Bode Fr.: loi de Bode |
1) tan; 2) jesm (#) Fr.: corps
Etymology (EN): Body, from O.E. bodig “trunk, chest,” related to O.H.G. botah, of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): 1) Tan, from Mid.Pers. tan “body, person;”
O.Pers. tanūš “body,” tanūm [acc.sg.] “(to) oneself;”
Av. tanū- “body, person, self,” tanūm [acc.sg.];
cf. Skt. tanūš- “body, self;” PIE base *ten-uh- “body.”
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radebandi-ye Boeshaar-Keenan Fr.: classification de Boeshaar-Keenan A system for the classification of → S-type stars. The system involves the designations of a C/O index and a temperature type. Moreover, when possible, it uses intensity estimates for → ZrO bands, the → TiO bands, the → Na I D-lines, the YO bands, and the Li I 6708 line. See also: Philip C. Keenan & Patricia C. Boeshaar, 1980, ApJS, 43, 379; → classification. |
Bohr Fr.: Bohr Niels Bohr (1885-1962), Danish physicist who made several important contributions to modern physics. He won the 1922 Nobel prize for physics in recognition of his work on the structure of atoms. |
atom-e Bohr Fr.: atome de Bohr The simplest model of an atom according to which electrons move |
magneton-e Bohr (#) Fr.: magnéton de Bohr A fundamental constant, first calculated by Bohr, for the intrinsic → spin magnetic moment of the electron. It is given by: μB = eħ/2me = 9.27 x 10-24 joule/tesla = 5.79 x 10-5 eV/tesla, representing the minimum amount of magnetism which can be caused by the revolution of an electron around an atomic nucleus. It serves as a unit for measuring the magnetic moments of atomic particles. See also: → Bohr; magneton, from → magnet
|
model-e Bohr Fr.: modèle de Bohr A model suggested in 1913 to explain the stability of atoms which |
šo'â'-e Bohr Fr.: rayon de Bohr |
farâvas-e naxost-e Bohr Fr.: premier postulat de Bohr One of the postulates used in the → Bohr model, whereby there are certain steady states of the atom in which electrons can only travel in stable orbits. In spite of their acceleration, the electrons do not radiate electromagnetic waves when they move along stationary orbits. |
farâvas-e Bohr Fr.: postulat de Bohr One of the three postulates advanced in the → Bohr model which led to the correct prediction of the observed line spectrum of hydrogen atom. See also → Bohr’s first postulate, → Bohr’s second postulate, → Bohr’s third postulate, |
farâvas-e dovom-e Bohr Fr.: deuxième postulat de Bohr One of the postulates used in the → Bohr model, whereby when an atom is in the steady state an electron travelling in a circular orbit should have → quantized values of the → angular momentum which comply with the condition p = n(h/2π), where p is the angular momentum of the electron, h is → Planck’s constant, and n is a positive integer called → quantum number. |
farâvas-e sevom-e Bohr Fr.: troisième postulat de Bohr One of the postulates used in the → Bohr model, whereby the atom emits (absorbs) a quantum of electromagnetic energy (→ photon) when the electron passes from an orbit with a greater (lesser) n value to one with a lesser (greater) value. The energy of the quantum is equal to the difference between the energies of the electron on its orbits before and after the transition or “jump”: hν = ε1 - ε2, where h is the → Planck’s constant and ν the frequency of the transition. |
noqte-ye juš (#) Fr.: point d'ébullition The temperature at which a liquid changes to a gas (vapor) at normal atmospheric pressure. In other words, the temperature at which the vapor pressure of a liquid is equal to the external pressure. Etymology (EN): M.E. boillen; O.Fr. boillir, from L. bullire “to bubble, seethe,” from bulla “a bubble, knob;” → point. Etymology (PE): Noqté, → point; juš “boiling,” present stem of jušidan “to boil;” Khotanese jis- “to boil;” Av. yaēšiiant- “boiling;” cf. Skt. yas- “to boil, become hot,” yasyati “boils, seethes;” Gk. zein “to bubble, boil, cook;” O.H.G. jesan “to ferment, foam;” Ger. Gischt “foam, froth,” gären “to ferment;” O.E. gist; E. yeast. |
guyce-ye Bok Fr.: globule de Bok A small, roughly spherical cloud of → interstellar dust and gas that appears as a dark compact globule when viewed against the background of an → H II region. Bok globules range in mass from about 1 to 1,000 or more → solar masses, and in size from about 10,000 → astronomical units to 3 → light-years. They typically have temperatures of around 10 → Kelvin. Bok globules are thought to represent a stage in the collapse of a dense fragment of → molecular clouds that are in the process of forming new stars. → elephant trunk. Etymology (EN): In honor of Bart Jan Bok (1906-1983), the Dutch-American astronomer, who first observed these objects. In 1947, in collaboration with Edith F. Reilly, he put forward the hypothesis that these globules were undergoing → gravitational collapse to form new stars (Bok & Reilly, 1947, ApJ 105, 255); → globule. |
garzin Fr.: bolide A → meteor which is extremely bright, particularly
one that breaks up during its passage through the
→ atmosphere. Etymology (EN): Bolide, Fr., from L. bolis, bolidis, Etymology (PE): Garzin “arrow;” cf. Tâleši ger “meteor” (from Proto-Iranian *garH- “to throw”), cognate with Gk. ballein, as above; → ballistics. |
tafsanj Fr.: bolomètre
Etymology (EN): From Gk. bole “stroke, beam of light,” from ballein “to throw” + middle suffix -o- + → -meter.. Etymology (PE): Tafsanj, from taf “heat, warmth; light, brightness,” from tâbidan, “→ radiate,”
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tafsanji, tafsanjik Fr.: bolométrique |
aršâyeš-e tafsanji, ~ tafsanjik Fr.: correction bolométrique The difference between the → visual magnitude and → bolometric magnitude. See also: → bolometric; → correction. |
tâbandegi-ye tafsanji, ~ tafsanjik Fr.: luminosité bolométrique The total rate of energy output of an object integrated over all wavelengths. See also: → bolometric; → luminosity. |
borz-e tafsanji, ~ tafsanjik Fr.: magnitude bolométrique The magnitude of an astronomical object for the entire range of its electromagnetic spectrum. See also: → bolometric; → magnitude. |
pâyâ-ye Boltzmann Fr.: constante de Boltzmann See also: → Boltzmann’s constant. |
karvand-e Boltzmannn Fr.: facteur de Boltzmann The factor e-E/kT involved in the probability for atoms having an excitation energy E and temperature T, where k is Boltzmann’s constant. See also: → Boltzmann’s constant; → factor. |
pâyâ-ye Boltzmann Fr.: constante de Boltzmann The physical constant, noted by k, relating the mean
→ kinetic energy of → molecules
in an → ideal gas to their
→ absolute temperature.
It is given by the ratio of the → gas constant to
→ Avogadro’s number. See also: Named after the Austrian physicist Ludwig Boltzmann (1844-1906), who made important contributions to the theory of statistical mechanics; → constant. |
disul-e dargâšt-e Boltzmann Fr.: formule d'entropie de Boltzmann In → statistical thermodynamics, a probability equation relating the → entropy S of an → ideal gas to the quantity Ω, which is the number of → microstates corresponding to a given → macrostate: S = k. ln Ω. Same as → Boltzmann’s relation. See also: → Boltzmann’s constant; → entropy; → formula. |
hamugeš-e Boltzmann Fr.: équation de Boltzmann
See also: → Boltzmann’s constant; → equation. |
bâzâneš-e Boltzmann Fr.: relation de Boltzmann A relation between the → entropy
of a given → state of a
→ thermodynamic system and
the → probability of the state:
S = k . ln Ω where S is the entropy of
the system, k is → Boltzmann’s constant, and
Ω the thermodynamic probability of the state. Boltzmann’s relation connects
→ statistical mechanics and
→ thermodynamics. Ω is the number of possible
→ microstates of the system, and it represents the
→ randomness of the system. See also: → Boltzmann’s constant; → relation. |
band (#) Fr.: lien The → attractive force that holds together neighboring → atoms in → molecules. Etymology (EN): Bond, variant of band,
from M.E. bende, O.E. bend, from O.Fr. bande, bende,
PIE *bendh- “to bind”
(cf. Goth bandi “that which binds;” Av./O.Pers. band-
“to bind, fetter,” banda- “band, tie” (see below); Etymology (PE): Band “band, tie,” from Mid.Pers., O.Pers./Av. band- “to bind,” banda- “band, tie,” also present stem of bastan “to bind, shut,” → shutter. |
sepidâ-ye Bond Fr.: albedo de Bond The fraction of the total amount of electromagnetic radiation falling upon a non-luminous spherical body that is reflected in all directions by that body. The bond albedo takes into account all wavelengths at all → phase angles. Compare with → geometric albedo. See also: Named after the American astronomer George Phillips Bond (1825-1865), who proposed it; → albedo. |
farbâl-e Bondi-Hoyle Fr.: accrétion de Bondi-Hoyle The → accretion of mass
by a star (assumed as point particle) moving at a steady speed through an
infinite, uniform gas cloud. See also: Named after Hermann Bondi (1919-2005), an Anglo-Austrian mathematician and cosmologist and Fred Hoyle (1915-2001), British mathematician and astronomer best known as the foremost proponent and defender of the steady-state theory of the universe; → accretion. |
šo'â'-e farbâl-e Bondi-Hoyle Fr.: rayon de l'accrétion de Bondi-Hoyle In the → Bondi-Hoyle accretion process, the radius where the
gravitational energy owing to star is larger than the kinetic energy and, therefore, RBH = 2 GM / (v2 + cs2) where G is the gravitational constant, M is the stellar mass, v the gas/star relative velocity, and cs is the sound speed. See also: → Bondi-Hoyle accretion; → radius. |
Bonner Durchmusterung Fr.: Bonner Durchmusterung A catalog of 324,188 stars in the → declination zones +89 to -01 degrees. The goal of the survey was to obtain a → position and estimated → visual magnitude for every star visible with the 78 mm → refracting telescope at Bonn. Actual → magnitude estimates were made and reported to 0.1 mag for all stars down to 9.5 mag. Positions are given to the nearest 0.1 sec in → right ascension and 0.1 arcmin in declination. The survey was carried out by Friedrich W. Argelander (1799-1875) and his assistants in the years 1852-1861. See also: The Ger. name means Bonn Survey. |
jerm-e Bonnor-Ebert Fr.: masse de Bonnor-Ebert The largest gravitationally stable mass of the → Bonnor-Ebert sphere. See also: After W.B. Bonnor (1956) and R. Ebert (1955); → mass. |
epehr-e Bonnor-Ebert, kore-ye ~ Fr.: sphère de Bonnor-Ebert A sphere of interstellar gas at uniform temperature in equilibrium under its own gravitation and an external pressure. The pressure of a hotter surrounding medium causes the sphere to collapse. → Bonnor-Ebert mass. See also: → Bonnor-Ebert mass; → sphere. |
ketâb (#), nâmé (#), nask (#) Fr.: livre A bound set of printed or manuscript pages. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. boc “book, written document;” cf. Ger. Buch “book;” Du. boek; O.N. bôk; Gothic boka. Etymology (PE): Ketâb, loanword from Ar. |
Booli (#) Fr.: de Boole A → variable or → function which takes the value → true or → false. → Boolean algebra. See also: After the English mathematician George Boole (1815-1864), the founder of mathematical, or symbolic, logic. |
jabr-e Booli (#) Fr.: algèbre de Boole Any of a number of possible systems of mathematics that deals with → binary digits instead of numbers. In Boolean algebra, a binary value of 1 is interpreted to mean → true and a binary value of 0 means → false. Boolean algebra can equivalently be thought of as a particular type of mathematics that deals with → truth values instead of numbers. See also: → Boolean; → algebra. The term Boolean algebra was first suggested by Sheffer in 1913. |
miq-e bumerâng Fr.: nébuleuse du Boomerang A → nebula displaying two nearly symmetric lobes of matter that are being ejected from a central star at a speed of about 600,000 km per hour (each lobe nearly one light-year in length). The Boomerang Nebula resides 5,000 → light-years from Earth in the direction of the Southern constellation → Centaurus. See also: Boomerang, adapted from wo-mur-rang, boo-mer-rit, in the language of Australian aborigines; → nebula. |
Gâvrân, Gâyâr Fr.: Bouvier The Herdsman, the Ox Driver. A constellation in the northern hemisphere, at right ascension about 14h 30m, north declination about 30°. Its brightest star is → Arcturus. Abbreviation: Boo; genitive form: Boötis. Etymology (EN): L. Boötes, from Gk. bootes “plowman,” literally “ox-driver,” Etymology (PE): Gâvrân “ox-driver,” from gâv “ox, cow” + rân
“driver,” from rândan “to drive." |
Gâvrân, Gâyâr Fr.: Bouvier The Herdsman, the Ox Driver. A constellation in the northern hemisphere, at right ascension about 14h 30m, north declination about 30°. Its brightest star is → Arcturus. Abbreviation: Boo; genitive form: Boötis. Etymology (EN): L. Boötes, from Gk. bootes “plowman,” literally “ox-driver,” Etymology (PE): Gâvrân “ox-driver,” from gâv “ox, cow” + rân
“driver,” from rândan “to drive." |
dâyere-ye Borda Fr.: cercle de Borda An instrument which was an improved form of the
→ reflecting circle, used for measuring angular distances.
In Borda’s version the arm carrying the telescope was extended right
across the circle. The telescope and a clamp and tangent screw were
at one end, and the half-silvered horizon glass at the far end from
the eye. In practice, with the index arm clamped, the observer first aims See also: After the French physicist and naval officer Jean-Charles de Borda (1733-1799), who made several contributions to hydrodynamics and nautical astronomy. Borda was also one of the most important metrological pioneers; → circle. |
zâdé (#) Fr.: né Brought forth by → birth. Past participle of bear. → born-again AGB star. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. boren, p.p. of beran “to bear, bring, wear”, from
P.Gmc. *beranan (O.H.G. beran, Goth. bairan Etymology (PE): Zâdé “born,” p.p. of zâdan “give birth” (Av. zan- “to bear, give birth to a child, be born,” infinitive zizâite, zâta- “born,” cf. Skt. janati “begets, bears,” Gk. gignesthai “to become, happen,” L. gignere “to beget,” gnasci “to be born,” PIE base *gen- “to give birth, beget”). |
setâre-ye AGB-ye bâzzâdé Fr.: étoile AGB recyclée A → post-AGB star that undergoes a last → thermal pulse when it is already on the → white dwarf → cooling track. The thermal pulse will expand the hot central star, whereby hydrogen will be ingested into the → helium burning shell. This will temporarily return the star to the → AGB phase it has previously left. See also: → born; → again; → asymptotic giant branch; → star. |
miq-e sayâreyi-ye bâzzâd Fr.: nébuleuse planétaire recyclée A → planetary nebula which is thought to have experienced a → very late thermal pulse (VLTP) when the central star (→ CSPN) was on the → white dwarf cooling track. The VLTP event occurs when the thermonuclear → hydrogen shell burning has built up a → shell of helium with the critical mass to ignite its → fusion into carbon and oxygen (→ helium shell burning). Since the → white dwarf envelope is shallow, the increase of pressure from this last helium shell flash leads to the ejection of newly processed material inside the old planetary nebula, leaving the stellar core intact. As the stellar envelope expands, its → effective temperature decreases and the star goes back to the → asymptotic giant branch (AGB) region in the → H-R diagram. The subsequent stellar evolution is fast and will return the star back to the → Post-AGB track in the H-R diagram: the envelope of the star contracts, its effective temperature and ionizing photon flux increase, and a new fast stellar wind develops (see, e.g. J. A. Toalá et al. 2015, ApJ 799, 67). |
bor (#) Fr.: bore A soft, brown, nonmetallic chemical element; symbol B. → Atomic number 5; → atomic weight 10.81; → melting point about 2,300°C; → specific gravity 2.3 at 25°C; → valence +3. Boron occurs as borax and boric acid. It is used for hardening steel and for producing enamels and glasses. Since it absorbs slow neutrons, it is used in steel alloys for making control rods in nuclear reactors. Boron was separated in 1808 by Joseph Louis Gay Lussac (1778-1850) and Louis Jacques Thénard (1777-1857) and independently by Sir Humphry Davy (1778-1829). Etymology (EN): From bor(ax), from M.Fr. boras, from M.L. borax, from Ar. buraq, from Pers. burah “borax, nitre, used in soldering gold” + (car)bon. Etymology (PE): Bor, loan from Fr., as above. |
cagâlâk-e Bose-Einstein Fr.: condensat de Bose-Einstein A state of matter in which a group of atoms or subatomic particles, cooled to within → absolute zero, coalesce into a single quantum mechanical entity that can be described by a → wave function. When a group of atoms are cooled down to very near absolute zero, the atoms hardly move relative to each other, because they have almost no free energy to do so. Hence the atoms clump together and enter the same → ground energy states. They become identical and the whole group starts behaving as though it were a single atom. A Bose-Einstein condensate results from a → quantum transition phase called the → Bose-Einstein condensation. This form of matter was predicted in 1924 by Albert Einstein on
the basis of the quantum formulations of the Indian physicist
Satyendra Nath Bose. Bose-Einstein condensate was created for the first time in the laboratory in 1995. The three physicist who succeeded in producing BEC, Eric A. Cornell, Wolfgang Ketterle, and Carl E. Wieman, were awarded the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics. Cornell and Wieman managed to do that with about 2,000 → rubidium atoms cooled down to 20 nano K, while Ketterle used more than 100,000 → sodium atoms. See also: → boson; → Einstein; → condensate. |
cagâleš-e Bose-Einstein Fr.: condensation de Bose-Einstein A → quantum phase transition during which the → bosons constituting a sufficiently cooled boson gas are all clustered in the → ground energy state. The phase transition results in a → Bose-Einstein condensate. This phenomenon occurs when the temperature becomes smaller than a critical value given by: Tc = (2πஈ / km)(n / 2.612)2/3, where m is mass of each boson, ħ is the → reduced Planck’s constant, k is → Boltzmann’s constant, and n is the particle number density. When T ≤ Tc, the → de Broglie wavelength of bosons becomes comparable to the distance between bosons. See also: → boson; → Einstein; → condensation. |
vâbâžeš-e Bose-Einstein Fr.: distribution de Bose-Einstein For a → population of independent → bosons, a function that specifies the number of particles in each of the allowed → energy states. See also: → boson; → Einstein; → distribution. |
âmâr-e Bose-Einstein (#) Fr.: statistique de Bose-Einstein Same as → Bose-Einstein distribution. See also: → boson; → Einstein; → statistics. |
boson (#) Fr.: boson Any of a class of particles (such as the → photon,
→ pion, or → alpha particle)
that have zero or integral → spin and do not obey Etymology (EN): Boson, in honor of the Indian-American physicist Satyendra Nath Bose (1894-1974). |
giyâhšenâsi (#) Fr.: botanique |
Boteyn (#) Fr.: Botein A dim, red star in the constellation → Aries;
a → giant of → spectral type Etymology (EN): Botein, from Ar. Al-Butain “the little belly.” Etymology (PE): Boteyn, from Ar. Al-Butain. |
botri (#) Fr.: bouteille A portable vessel for liquids, typically cylindrical and often of glass or plastic Etymology (EN): From O.Fr. bo(u)teille, from L.L. butticula diminutive of L. buttis “a cask.” Etymology (PE): Botri, loan from Fr. bouteille or E. bottle, as above. |
tah (#), pâyin (#) Fr.: bas, fond
Etymology (EN): M.E. botme; O.E. botm, bodan “ground, soil, lowest part” (cf. O.Fris. boden “soil,” O.N. botn, O.H.G. bodam, Ger. Boden “ground, earth, soil”), akin to Pers. bon “basis; root; foundation; bottom;” Mid.Pers. bun “root; foundation; beginning;” Av. būna- “base, depth” (Skt. bundha-, budhná- “base, bottom,” Pali bunda- “root of tree;” Gk. pythmen “foundation;” L. fundus “bottom, piece of land, farm,” O.Ir. bond “sole of the foot”). Etymology (PE): Tah “bottom; end” |
diseš-e sâxtâr az pâyin bé bâlâ Fr.: formation des structures du bas vers le haut A → structure formation scenario in which small galaxies form first, and larger structures are then formed in due course. Contrary to → top-down structure formation. See also: → bottom; → up; → structure; → formation; → galaxy. |
gordâle (#) Fr.: bloc Geology: A → sedimentary particle that is larger than 256 mm in size. Boulders are the largest particles of sediment that occur in streams and can reach the size of a small house (geology.com/dictionary). Etymology (EN): From late M.E. bulder, possibly from Swedish bullersten “noisy stone” (large stone in a stream, causing water to roar around it), from buller “noisy” + sten “stone.” Etymology (PE): Gordâle “boulder” (used in various areas of Iran: Šuštar, Kermânšâh, Nahâvand, Ali-Gudarz), from gord “kidney” + similarity/relation suffix -âl, → -al. |
1) bandidé; 2) karân Fr.: lié; lien
|
bâr-e bandidé Fr.: charge liée Any electric charge which is bound to an atom or molecule, in contrast to free charge, such as metallic conduction electrons, which is not. Also known as → polarization charge. |
xuše-ye bandidé Fr.: amas lié A cluster of astronomical objects, such as stars or galaxies, held together by their mutual gravitational attraction. → bound system. Etymology (EN): Bound, p.p. of → bind; → cluster. Etymology (PE): Xušé, → cluster; bandidé p.p. of bandidan, → bind. |
roxdâd-e bandidé Fr.: occurrence liée Any → occurrence of a → variable x in an x-bound part of a → wff. See also: → bound; → occurrence. |
madâr-e bandidé Fr.: orbite liée |
râžmân-e bandidé Fr.: système lié A system composed of several material bodies the total energy of which (the sum of kinetic and potential energies) is negative, e.g. a → bound cluster. Etymology (EN): Bound, p.p. of → bind; → system. Etymology (PE): Aâžmân, → system; bandidé p.p. of bandidan, → bind. |
gozareš-e bandidé-bandidé Fr.: transition liée-liée A transition between two energy levels of an electron bound to a nucleus. The electron remains tied to the nucleus before and after the transition. → bound-free transition; → free-free emission. See also: Bound, p.p. of → bind; → transition. |
gozareš-e bandidé-âzâd Fr.: transition liée-libre A transition in which a bound electron is liberated. → free-bound emission; → free-free emission. |
karân (#) Fr.: limite, bord
Etymology (EN): From Fr., from O.Fr. bodne, from M.L. bodina, butina “boundary, boundary marker.” Etymology (PE): Karân, karâné, kenâr from Mid.Pers. karânag, Av. karana- “boundary.” |
butârhâ-ye karân, ~ karâni Fr.: conditions à la limite
|
oskar-e karân Fr.: effet de bords |
lâye-ye karâni Fr.: couche limite A layer of fluid that is formed wherever a fluid flows past a
solid surface and the effects of → viscosity
are important. The boundary level forms because as the fluid moves past the
object, the molecules which are in direct contact with
the surface stick to the surface. The molecules
just above the surface are slowed down in their collisions with the molecules
sticking to the surface. These molecules in turn slow down the flow just above
them, but less effectively. This creates a thin layer
of fluid near the surface in which the velocity changes from zero at
the surface to the free stream value away from the surface.
The boundary layer may be either → laminar
or → turbulent in character, |
karânmand (#), karândâr (#) Fr.: limité General: Having bounds or limits. See also: Adj. from → bound. |
karyâ-ye karânmand, ~ karândâr Fr.: fonction bornée The function y = f(x) in a given range of the argument x if there exists a positive number M such that for all values of x in the range under consideration the inequality | f(x) | ≤ M will be fulfilled. → unbounded function. |
nazdineš-e Boussinesq Fr.: approximation de Boussinesq A simplification in the equations of → hydrodynamics that treats the density as constant except in the → buoyancy term. This approximation is motivated by the fact that when pressure and temperature differences in a flow are small, then it follows from the thermodynamic → equation of state that a change in the density is also small. See also: Named after Joseph Valentin Boussinesq (1842-1929), a French physicist |
1) kamân; 2) farâl Fr.: proue 1a) A bent, curved, or arched object. 1b) A weapon made of a curved, flexible strip of material
Etymology (EN): 1) M.E., from O.E. boga “archery bow, arch, rainbow” (cf.
O.Norse bogi, Du. boog, Ger. Bogen “bow”);
PIE root *bheug- “to bend;” cf. Skt. bhujati “bends;”
O.H.G. boug, O.E. beag “a ring”).
Etymology (PE): 1) Kamân “bow, arc,” Farâl, from farâ “forward” (farâ raftan “to go forward, proceed,” farâ rândan “to drive forward”), equivalent to → pro-, + relation suffix -âl, → -al. Compare farâl with prow “bow,” Fr. la proue “prow, bow,” from dialectal It. proa, prua, from L. prora “bow,” from Gk. proira, related to pro “before, forward.” |
farâl-toš farâl-šok Fr.: choc de proue A → shock wave created in front of an object moving through a medium with a velocity higher than that of the → sound waves in that medium. See, for example, → magnetosphere. |
farâl-mowj, mowj-e farâl Fr.: onde de proue |
sâzokâr-e fluoresti-ye Bowen Fr.: mécanisme de fluorescence de Bowen A mechanism, made possible by certain chance coincidences between
→ spectral lines of He II, O III and N III in some
→ planetary nebulae , See also: After I. S. Bowen who first discovered this mechanism in 1935; → fluorescence; → mechanism. |
ja'bé (#), quti (#) Fr.: boîte A container, case, or receptacle, usually rectangular, of wood, metal, cardboard, etc.
(Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E., O.E., probably from L.L. buxis, from L. buxis, from Gk. pyxis “boxwood box,” from pyxos “box tree,” of uncertain origin. Etymology (PE): Ja’bé, from Ar. ja’bah; quti, from Turk. |
kuž-e quti/bâdâm-zamini Fr.: bulbe box/peanut A → galaxy bulge that shows |
qânun-e Boyle-Mariotte (#) Fr.: loi de Boyle-Mariotte In a → perfect gas where mass and temperature are kept constant, the volume of the gas will vary inversely with the absolute pressure. The law can be expressed as PV = constant, where P = absolute pressure and V = volume. See also: After Robert Boyle (1627-1691), an Irish philosopher, chemist, and physicist, and Edme Mariotte (1620-1684), a French physicist and pioneer of neurophysiology, who discovered the law independently, the first one in 1662 and the second one in 1676; → law. |
setâre-ye Bq Fr.: étoile Bq An obsolete designation used in early objective-prism studies to denote → B-type stars with “abnormal spectra” characterized by → forbidden emission lines. → B[e] star. See also: → star. |
brâ Fr.: bra In Dirac’s notation for describing a quantum state, a vector which together with → ket constitutes the dual vector → bracket. A bra is shown by <|, the mirror image of the symbol for a ket vector. The scalar product of a bra vector < B| and a ket vector |A> is written < B|A >, i.e. as a juxtaposition of the symbols for the bra and the ket vectors, that for the bra vector being on the left, and the two vertical lines being contracted to one for brevity. See also: From bra- the first syllable in → bracket. |
brâket Fr.: bracket In Dirac’s notation, an expression which is a → scalar product of the dual vectors → bra and → ket which describe a quantum state. The bra vector appears on the left of the ket vector. See also: From M.Fr. braguette “codpiece armor.” |
seri-ye Brackett Fr.: série de Brackette A series of lines in the infrared spectrum of atomic hydrogen due to electron jumps between the fourth and higher energy levels (Br α has wavelength 4.052 μm, Br γ 2.166 μm). Etymology (EN): Named after the American physicist Frederick Brackett (1896-1980); → series. |
zâviye-ye Bragg Fr.: angle de Bragg The grazing angle between an incident beam of X-rays and a given set of crystal planes for which the secondary X-rays from the planes combine to give a single beam. See also: → Bragg’s law; → angle. |
qânun-e Bragg Fr.: loi de Bragg A parallel beam of monochromatic X-rays of wavelength λ, incident on a given set of parallel crystal planes at a grazing angle θ will give rise to a reflected beam whenever: n λ = 2d . sinθ, where n is an integer representing the difference in path length, and d is the perpendicular distance between a pair of adjacent planes. See also: Named after William Lawrence Bragg (1890-1971), British physicist,
who, in collaboration with his father, William Henry Bragg (1862-1942),
joint Nobel Prize in Physics 1915, pioneered X-ray analysis and spectrometry; |
1) legâm, tormoz 2) legâmidan, tormoz kardan Fr.: 1) frein; 2) freiner
Etymology (EN): From O.Du. braeke “flax brake,” from breken “to break.” Etymology (PE): Legâm originally “a horse bit,” on the model of Fr. frein “horse bit; motor brake;” and Ger. Bremse “horse bit; brake;” tormoz, loan from Russ. тормоз. |
legâmeš Fr.: freinage The act or fact of stopping by means of or as if by means of a brake. See: → magnetic braking; → radiative braking; → tidal braking; → braking index. See also: Verbal noun of → brake. |
dišan-e legâmeš Fr.: indice de freinage A parameter indicating the rate at which a → pulsar slows down. Neutron stars are powered by → rotational energy and lose energy by accelerating particle → winds and by emitting → electromagnetic radiation. The → rotation frequency, Ω, thus decreases with time and this slowdown is usually described by the relation Ω. = - kΩn, where k is a positive constant which depends on the → moment of inertia and the → magnetic dipole moment of the → neutron star and n is the braking index. Conventionally, the braking index is derived by differentiation of the above equation, yielding n = ΩΩ.. / Ω.2. In a highly simplified model in which the spin-down torque arises from dipole radiation at the rotation frequency, one expects n = 3 (Johnston, S., Galloway, D., 1999, arXiv:astro-ph/9905058). |
1) šâxé (#); 2) šâxé zadan (#) Fr.: 1) branche; 2) se ramifier 1a) General: A shoot or arm-like limb of a tree; anything like a
limb of a tree; any offshoot from a main trunk. 1b) Astro.:→ asymptotic giant branch; 1c) Math.: Any of the two halves of a → hyperbola. 1d) Math.: A section of a curve separated by
→ discontinuity from the rest of the curve. 2a) To put forth branches. 2b) To spread in branches. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. branche, from L.L. branca “a claw, paw.” Etymology (PE): 1) Šâxé “branch,” from Mid.Pers šâk, cf.
Mod.Pers. šâx, šax “branch; horn,” Skt. sakha-
“a branch, a limb,” Arm. cax, Lit. šaka,
O.S. soxa, PIE *kakhâ “branch.”
|
šâxé-zad Fr.: branchement The act of dividing into branches. → branching ratio. |
vâbar-e šâxé-zad Fr.: rapport de branchement A quantity used to describe a → radionuclide
that has more than one
→ decay mode. BRi = ki/(k1 + k2 + …) = ki/k, where k is → decay constant. |
breyn (#) Fr.: brane In theoretical physics, an entity which can have any number of allowed spatial dimensions.
It is usually accompanied by a prefix, i.e. p-brane, indicating the number of
dimensions. For example, a 0-brane is a zero-dimensional point-like particle,
a 1-brane is a → string, a 2-brane is a “membrane,” Etymology (EN): Brane, short for membrane, from L. membrana “parchment,” from membrum “limb, member of the body,” → member. Etymology (PE): Breyn, loanword from E., as above. |
1) šekastan; boridan; gosastan; 2) šekast; boreš, boré; gosast Fr.: 1) couper, rompre; 2) brisure, coupure
Etymology (EN): From break, from M.E. breken, O.E. brecan, from P.Gmc. *brekan (cf. Du. breken, O.H.G. brehhan, Ger. brechen), from PIE base *bhreg- “to break” (see also → fraction). Etymology (PE): 1) Šekastan, škan- “to break, split;”
Mid.Pers. škastan “to break;” Av. scind-, scand
“to break, cleave;” Proto-Iranian *skand- “to break, cleave;”
PIE sken- “to cut off.”
|
tâbandegi-ye boré Fr.: luminosité de coupure A characteristic luminosity around which the → luminosity function of a sample of galaxies changes to a steeper slope or exponentially declines. See also: → break; → luminosity. |
tondâ-ye gosast Fr.: vitesse de rupture The velocity of a → rotating star at which the
→ centrifugal force equals the
→ gravitational force. Also known as
→ critical velocity.
The simplest expression of the break-up velocity for an OB star, ignoring See also: → break + up; M.E.; O.E. up, uppe, → hyper-; → velocity. |
tarâšekâft Fr.: percée
Etymology (EN): → break; → through. Etymology (PE): Tarâšekâft, from tarâ-, → trans-,
|
bereš (#) Fr.: brèche A rock composed of angular fragments (over two millimeter diameter) of older rocks melded together with a matrix of smaller particles or a mineral cement. Etymology (EN): From It. breccia “broken (rock),” from a Germanic source akin to O.H.G. brecha “a breaking,” ultimately from PIE *bhreg- “to break,” → fraction. Etymology (PE): Bereš, loan from Fr. |
berešidan Fr.: bréchifier |
berešidé, beršmand Fr.: bréchifié Characterized by, converted into, or resembling a breccia; especially of a rock structure marked by an accumulation of angular fragments, or of an ore texture showing mineral fragments without notable rounding. See also: → breccia, → brecciated. |
sang-e berešidé Fr.: roche bréchifiée A rock formed by the process of → brecciation. See also: → brecciated; → rock. |
berešeš Fr.: bréchification |
nasim (#) Fr.: brise A wind or current of air, especially a light or moderate one (2-14 m/sec). Etymology (EN): From O.Sp. briza “cold northeast wind;” alternatively from East Frisian brisen “to blow fresh and strong.” Etymology (PE): Nasim “gentle breeze,” from Ar. |
farâravand-e Breit-Wheeler Fr.: processus Breit-Wheeler The production of an → electron-positron pair in the → collision of two → gamma ray → photons (γγ → e+e-). It is the → inverse process of → Dirac annihilation (e+e-→ γγ). The Breit-Wheeler process is the simplest way by which pure → light can be potentially transformed into → matter. However, as of 2014, this process has never been observed in practice because of the difficulty in preparing colliding → gamma ray beams. See also: Breit, G. & Wheeler, J. A. 1934, Collision of two light quanta. Phys. Rev. 46, 1087; → process. |
legâm-tâbeš Fr.: rayonnement de freinage, bremsstrahlung The → electromagnetic radiation
emitted by a → fast
moving → charged particle Etymology (EN): Bremsstrahlung, from Ger. Bremse “brake”
Etymology (PE): Legâm-tâbeš, from legâm, → brake,
|
zâviye-ye Brewster (#) Fr.: angle de Brewster The → angle of incidence for which the sum of the incident angle and the → angle of refraction is 90°. The value of Brewster’s angle for glass is 57° and for water is 53°. Same as → polarizing angle. See also: → Brewster’s law; → angle. |
noqte-ye Brewster Fr.: point de Brewster A → neutral point located 15 to 20° directly below the Sun. See also: → Brewster’s law; → point |
qânun-e Brewster Fr.: loi de Brewster The amount of the polarization of light reflected from a surface is a maximum when the reflected ray is at right angles to the refracted ray. See also → polarizing angle. See also: Named after Sir David Brewster (1781-1868), Scottish physicist; → law. |
pol (#) Fr.: pont
Etymology (EN): M.E. brigge, O.E. brycge, from P.Gmc. *brugjo (cf. Ger. Brücke), from PIE *bhru- “log, beam.” Etymology (PE): Pol, Mid.Pers. puhl,, Av. pərətav- “bridge, passage.” |
deraxšân, rowšan Fr.: brillant Giving out or reflecting much light, shining. Etymology (EN): O.E. bryht, from beorht “bright, splendid,” from
P.Gmc. *berkhiaz, from PIE base *bhereg- “to gleam, white”
(cf. Av. brāz- “to shine, gleam, flash, radiate,” Etymology (PE): Deraxšân and rowšan both from M.P. rôc, O.Pers. raucah-, Av. raocah- “light, luminous; daylight;” cf. Skt roka- “brightness, light”, cognate with Gk. leukos “white, clear”, L. lux “light” (also lumen, luna), PIE *leuk- “light, brightness”. The Mod.Pers. words ruz “day,” foruq “light”, and afruxtan “to light, kindle” also belong to this family, as well as the E. light, Ger. Licht, and Fr. lumière. |
qul-e tâbnâk Fr.: géante lumineuse An → evolved star which is more → luminous than normal → giant stars (→ luminosity class III) and between ordinary giants and → supergiants (class I). It is denoted by the symbol II. Examples are → Canopus and → Adhara. |
miq-e rowšan, ~ deraxšân Fr.: nébuleuse brillante In contrast to a → dark nebula, a bright cloud of interstellar gas and dust. The term designates both emission nebulae and reflection nebulae. |
rowšaneš Fr.: embrillancement The act or process of becoming bright or brighter. → limb brightening, → gravity brightening See also: Verbal noun of brighten, from → bright. |
deraxšandegi (#) Fr.: brillance General:The state or quality of being bright. Etymology (EN): → bright + → -ness. Etymology (PE): Deraxšandegi, from deraxš, present stem of deraxšidan “to shine,” → bright,
|
vâbâžeš-e deraxšandegi Fr.: distribution de brillance A statistical distribution of the brightness of an astronomical extended object. Etymology (EN): → brightness; → distribution. Etymology (PE): Vâbâžeš, → distribution; deraxšandegi, → brightness. |
damâ-ye deraxšandegi Fr.: température de brillance In radio astronomy, the temperature of a source calculated on the assumption that it is a blackbody emitting radiation of the observed intensity at a given wavelength. → antenna temperature. See also: → brightness; → temperature. |
karyâ-ye Brillouin Fr.: fonction de Brillouin A mathematical function appearing in the → magnetization equation of a → paramagnetic substance. See also: → Brillouin zone; → zone. |
parâkaneš-e Brillouin Fr.: diffusion de Brillouin Scattering of electromagnetic waves in solids and liquids when, as a result of the scattering process, an acoustic → phonon is emitted or absorbed. Brillouin scattering is analogous to → Raman scattering. See also: → Brillouin zone; → scattering. |
zonâr-e Brillouin Fr.: zone de Brillouin Crystallography: One of the several regions which, in reciprocal space, represent the solution of the wave equations for the propagation of → phonons or electrons in solids. The first Brillouin zone is the Wigner-Seitz cell of the reciprocal lattice. It is a polyhedron obtained by connecting a lattice point to its first neighbors and drawing the planes perpendicular to these connecting lines and passing through their midpoints. The second Brillouin zone is obtained by a similar construction but the second-nearest neighbours. See also: After Léon Brillouin (1889-1969) French physicist; → zone. |
aždem Fr.: saumure
Etymology (EN): M.E. from O.E. bryne “brine,” origin unknown; cognate with Du. brijn. Etymology (PE): Aždem, from Gilaki and Tâti aždem “very salty water” used for preserving fish. |
BRITE-hamaxtarân Fr.: BRITE-Constellation An international collaboration between Austria, Canada, and Poland, currently comprising five nano-satellites to investigate stellar structure and evolution of the brightest stars in the sky and their interaction with the local environment. BRITE is also used to study micropulsation, wind phenomena, and other forms of stellar variability. These nano-satellites aim to monitor stars brighter than V ~ 5 mag using two color pass-bands, over various observing campaigns. Each nano-satellite hosts a 3 cm telescope, providing a wide field of view (24° x 20°) to simultaneously observe up to a few dozen stars (Weiss et al. 2014). See also: BRITE, short for → BRIght Target Explorer; → bright; → target; → explorer. |
tord (#) Fr.: cassant, friable A → substance that has a low → elastic limit. For example → glass, which breaks if its low elastic limit is exceeded. Etymology (EN): M.E. britel, from brit-, akin to O.E. brytan “to crush, break to pieces,”
Etymology (PE): Tord “brittle, fragile;” ultimately from Proto-Ir. *tard-
“to split, pierce;” related to tâlidan (Dehxodâ) “to spoliate, plunder,”
eftâlidan “to tear, break,” → dissipate;
cf. Shughni tidarδ- “to tear, pluck,”
zidarδ- “to tear, break;” |
pahn (#) Fr.: large Wide in extent from side to side. Etymology (EN): M.E. bro(o)d, from O.E. brad; cf. O.N. breiðr, Du. breed, Ger. breit, Goth. brouþs. Etymology (PE): Pahn “wide, broad,” from
Mid.Pers. pah(a)n; Av. paθana- “broad, wide, spacious;”
PIE root *pete- “to spread;” cf. L. patere “to be open,” |
šidsanji-ye pahn-bând Fr.: photométrie à bande large Photometric measurements carried out through filters See also: → broad; → band; → photometry. |
radio kahkašân-e pahn-xatt Fr.: galaxie radio à raies larges A radio galaxy that shows broad optical emission lines. → broad-line region. See also: → broad; → line; → radio galaxy. |
nâhiye-ye pahn-xatt Fr.: région à raies larges The inner region of a → quasar or an → active galactic nucleus exhibiting broad → spectral lines which indicate ionized matter moving with speeds in excess of 10,000 km sec-1, probably due to the presence of an → accretion disk surrounding a → supermassive black hole. Also called Type I AGN. See also → obscuring torus. |
pahnidan Fr.: élargir |
pahneš Fr.: élargissement The act of making something wider. → instrumental broadening; → line broadening. Etymology (EN): Broadening, from → broad + → -ing noun froming suffix. Etymology (PE): Pahneš, from pahn (→ broad, present tense stem of pahnidan “to broaden” + -idan infinitive suffix) + eš verbal-noun suffix. |
xuše-ye Brocchi Fr.: amas de Brocchi Same as the → Coathanger and Collinder 399. See also: Named after the American amateur astronomer D. F. Brocchi who created a map of the cluster in the 1920s for calibrating photometers; → cluster. |
xatt-e šekasté (#) Fr.: ligne brisée |
brom (#) Fr.: brome The only liquid non-metallic chemical element; symbol Br. → Atomic number 35; → atomic weight 79.904; → melting point -7.2°C; → boiling point 58.78°C; → specific gravity of liquid 3.12 at 20°C; → valence -1, +1, +3, +5, or +7. A member of the halogen group of elements. Volatilizes readily at room temperature to a red vapor with strong disagreeable odor and very irritating effect on the eyes and throat. Occurs in combination with various metals, as potassium, sodium and magnesium bromides, which are found in mineral waters, in river and sea-water, and occasionally in marine plants and animals. Its compounds are widely used in photography and medicine. Discovered by Antoine-Jerome Balard (1802-1876) in 1826. Its two stable → isotopes are 79Br (50.69%) and 81Br (49.31%). Etymology (EN): From Fr. brome, from Gk. bromos for “stench, bad odor,” coined by its discoverer. Etymology (PE): Brom, loan from Fr., as above. |
boronz (#), mefraq (#) Fr.: bronze A class of → alloys in which → copper
and → tin are the dominant elements. The name Etymology (EN): From Fr. bronze, from It. bronzo, from M.L. bronzium, of unknown origin, maybe from Iranian, cf. Mid.Pers. brinj “bronze, brass;” Mod.Pers. berenj “brass.” Etymology (PE): Boronz, loan from Fr., as above. Mefraq, from Ar. |
asr-e boronz (#) Fr.: âge du fer A period of time between the → Stone Age and the → Iron Age when bronze was used widely to make tools, weapons, and other implements. The Bronze Age starts at different areas of the world at different times. The earliest use of bronze for making farm tools and weapons are found in Near and Middle East and date back to about 3700 BC. The Bronze Age starts about 2300 BC in Europe. |
barâdar (#) Fr.: frère Son of the same parents as another person. Etymology (EN): M.E.; O.E. brothor; cognate with Du. broeder, Ger. Bruder, Goth. brothar, Skt. bhrātr, Gk. phrater, L. frater, Pers. barâdar, as below, Rus. brat; PIE *bhrater. Etymology (PE): Barâdar, from Mid.Pers. brât(ar) “brother;” O.Pers. brata-; Av. brātar- “brother;” cognate with E. brother, as above. |
qahve-yi (#) Fr.: brun A dusky color between red and black. Etymology (EN): M.E. broun, from O.E. brun “dark,” cf. Du. bruin,
Ger. braun; PIE base *bher- “shining, brown,” Etymology (PE): Qahvei-yi, color of qahvé “coffee.” |
kutule-ye qahvei Fr.: naine brune A star-like object whose mass is too small to sustain See also: The term brown dwarf was first used by Jill Tarter in her 1975 PhD thesis; → brown; → dwarf. |
sardeš-e kutule-ye qahve-yi Fr.: refroidissement de naine brune The process whereby a → brown dwarf cools over time after the → deuterium burning phase, which lasts a few 107 years. The → effective temperature and luminosity decrease depending on the mass, age, and → metallicity. Even though massive brown dwarfs may start out with star-like luminosity (≥ 10-3→ solar luminosities), they progressively fade with age to the point where, after 0.5 Gyr all → substellar objects are less luminous than the dimmest, lowest mass stars. More explicitly, brown dwarfs may start as star-like objects hotter than 2200 K, with → M dwarf spectral types, and, as they get older, pass through the later and cooler L, T, and Y spectral types (→ L dwarf, → T dwarf, → Y dwarf). |
kavir-e kutulehâ-ye qahvei Fr.: désert des naines brunes The observational result indicating a deficit in the frequency of
→ brown dwarf companions to Sun-like stars, |
jonbeš-e Brawni Fr.: mouvement brownien The continuous random motion of solid microscopic particles immersed in a fluid, which is due to bombardment by the atoms and molecules of the medium. It is named after the botanist Robert Brown, who in 1827 first noticed that pollen seeds suspended in water moved in an irregular motion. While there were suspicions that the motion was caused by the collision of atoms against the particles, the first quantitative explanation of the phenomenon, based on the kinetic theory of gases, was forwarded by A. Einstein in 1905. When Einstein’s paper appeared, the notion of atoms and molecules was still a subject of heated scientific debate. Ernst Mach and the physical chemist Wilhelm Ostwald were among those who chose to deny their existence. Etymology (EN): Named after Robert Brown (1773-1858), a Scottish botanist, who first in 1827 noticed the erratic motion of pollen grains suspended in water. → motion. |
basâmad-e Brunt-Väisälä Fr.: fréquence de Brunt-Väisälä The frequency at which an air parcel will oscillate when subjected to
an infinitesimal perturbation in a stably stratified atmosphere. N2 = -(g/ρ)∂ρ/∂z , where g is the → gravitational acceleration,
ρ is density, and z geometric height. See also: Named aster David Brunt (1886-1965), British meteorologist (1927, Q.J.R.Met.Soc. 53, 30) |
tangol, hobâb Fr.: bulle General:A small body of gas within a liquid; a thin film of
liquid inflated with air or gas.
Etymology (EN): Bubble, from M.E. bobel, perhaps from M.Du. bobbel. Etymology (PE): Tangol “bubble,” from štiyâni dialect, maybe
from tan “body” + gol “flower,” literally
“that which has a delicate body (like a flower).” This etymology
is derived from the observation that in Pers. bubble is often likened
to a flower:
qonce-ye âb, kupale-ye âb, quze-ye âb
[Dehxodâ] “water blossom, water flower, water bud." |
otâqak-e tangol, ~ hobâb Fr.: chambre à bulles A tank filled with a transparent liquid that is on the brink of boiling. When a charged particle passes through the liquid, the energy deposited initiates boiling along the path, leaving a trail of tiny bubbles. The bubble chamber is no longer in wide use for particle experiments. |
miq-e tangol, ~ hobâb Fr.: Nébuleuse bulle The → diffuse nebula NGC 7635 in the constellation → Cassiopeia lying at a distance of about 11,000 light-years. About 10 light-years across, it is visible with a small telescope. |
bug Fr.: bug, bogue A defect or imperfection, as in a mechanical device, computer program, or plan (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): From bugge “beetle,” apparently alteration of M.E. budde, Etymology (PE): Bug, from Kurd. Kurmanji bihuk “bug, insect.” |
miq-e Šâparak Fr.: nébuleuse de l'insecte The double-lobed → planetary nebula NGC 6302, which lies in → Scorpius at a distance of about 4000 → light-years. The central very hot star seems to have violently ejected material in two distinct directions. Etymology (EN): → bug; → nebula. Etymology (PE): Šâparak “night butterfly, bat,” from šab “night” + parak “flying,” from paridan “to fly.” |
kuži, barâmadegi Fr.: bulbe, bourrelet
Etymology (EN): Bulge, from O.Fr. bouge “leather bag,” from L. bulga “leather bag,” of Gaulish origin. Etymology (PE): Kuži “convexity,” from kuž, → convex. |
golulé (#) Fr.: balle
Etymology (EN): From M.Fr. boulette “cannonball, small ball,” diminutive of boule “a ball,” from L. bulla “round thing, bubble, knob,” cognate with bowl and boil. Etymology (PE): Golulé “bullet,” variants gullé, goruk, gulu, gudé, guy “ball, sphere;” cf. Skt. guda- “ball, mouthful, lump, tumour;” Pali gula- “ball;” Gk. gloutos “rump;” L. glomus “ball,” globus “globe;” Ger. Kugel, E. clot; PIE *gel- “to make into a ball.” |
xuše-ye golulé Fr.: amas de la Balle, ~ du Boulet A → cluster of galaxies at a Etymology (EN): The name Bullet refers to the smaller subcluster, that has created the bow shock; → cluster. |
Kefeusi-ye quzâr, ~ zokdâr Fr.: céphéide à bosse A subtype of classical → Cepheid variable stars that show a bump on the descending branch of their → light curve. Etymology (EN): Bump “a relatively abrupt convexity or bulge on a surface,” probably imitative of the sound of a blow; → Cepheid. Etymology (PE): Quzdâr, from quz “hump,” variant of kuž, |
bâlârâni Fr.: flottabilité The upward force that a → fluid exerts on an immersed body which
is less dense than the fluid. It is equal to the → weight of
the fluid displaced. Thus a body weighs less when weighed in water, the apparent loss
in weight being equal to the weight of the water displaced. Buoyancy allows a boat to
float on water and provides lift for balloons. Etymology (EN): From buoy, → buoyant + -ancy a suffix used to form nouns denoting state or quality, from L. -antia, from -ant + -ia. Etymology (PE): Bâlârâni literally “pushing up,” from
bâlâ “up, above, high, elevated, height” (variants
boland “high, tall, elevated, sublime,”
borz “height, magnitude”
(it occurs also in the name of the mountain chain Alborz), |
basâmad-e bâlârâni Fr.: fréquence de flottabilité Same as the → Brunt-Vaisala frequency. |
niru-ye bâlârân Fr.: poussée d'Archimède The force that causes immersed bodies to float or rise to the surface of a liquid or upward in a gas. Buoyant force is produced by → gravity and density differences. Same as → buoyancy. See also: From buoy (current meaning) “a float moored in water to mark a location,” from M.E. boye, from O.Fr. buie or M.Du. boeye, from L. boia “fetter, chain” + suffix -ant; → force. |
1) suxtan; 2) suzândan Fr.: brûler
Etymology (EN): Burn, from M.E. bernen, brennen, combination of O.E. beornan
(intr.) and bærnan (tr.), both from P.Gmc. *brenwanan; cf. Etymology (PE): Suxtan, suzândan, from 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.” |
suzeš (#) Fr.: combustion The state, process, or effect of being on fire, burned, or subjected to intense heat. → helium burning; → neon burning; → oxygen burning; → shell burning. See also: Verbal noun of → burn. |
guy-e suzân Fr.: sphère ardente A piece of glass of roundish shape, possibly made of rock crystals or a globular container filled with water, whose use is attested in ancient civilizations. In his comedy The Clouds, the Greek playwright Aristophanes (448-380 BC) mentions globules of glass that were known as burning spheres. Several Roman writers (Pliny, Seneca, Plutarch) speak of burning glasses. In particular, Seneca specifies that small and indistinct written characters appear larger and clearer when viewed through a globular glass filled with water. See also → magnifying glass. |
1) belk; 2) belkidan Fr.: 1) sursaut, flambée, impulsion; 2) éclater 1a) General: An abrupt, intense increase. A period of intense
activity. A sudden outbreak or outburst. An explosion. 1b) Astro.: A period of abrupt increase in the intensity of a
phenomenon, for example → star formation rate
or emission of radiation such as → X-ray burst,
Etymology (EN): M.E. bersten, from O.E. berstan, akin to O.H.G. berstan “to burst;” from PIE *bhres- “to burst, break, crack.” Etymology (PE): 1) Belk, Mod.Pers. “a blaze, a flame.” The term has several
variants, including in dialects: balk [Mo’in],
pâlk (Tokharian AB),
bal (Gilaki, Semnâni, Sorxeyi, Sangesari, Lahijâni),
val (Gilaki), bilese (Kordi), beleyz (Lori),
warq, barx [Mo’in], and the Pers. widespread term gorr
“burst of fire.”
Belk derives probably from Mid.Pers. brâh, Av. braz-
“to shine, gleam, flash, radiate,”
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belk-e diseš-e setâregân Fr.: flambée de formation d'étoiles An intense → star formation activity in a region of → interstellar medium or, more globally, in a → galaxy. It is characterized by a → star formation rate which is much higher than the corresponding average. Same as → starburst. |
belkvar Fr.: source à sursaut |
nemudâr-e parvânevâr Fr.: diagramme en papillon A graph on which the latitudes of → sunspots are plotted against time. It shows how sunspots migrate from high latitudes (30°- 40° north or south) to the solar equator (latitude of about 5°) during each → solar cycle, according to → Sporer’s law. The shape of these distributions, when represented for both hemispheres, resembles the wings of a butterfly. The diagram was first created by Edward W. Maunder in 1904 to illustrate the solar cycle (M.S.: SDE). Etymology (EN): Butterfly, from M.E. butterflye, from O.E. butorfleoge, from butor, butere “butter” floge “fly,” but the etymology is not clear; → diagram. Etymology (PE): Nemudâr, → diagram; parvânevâr “resembling a butterfly,” from parvâné “butterfly”
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sorin (#) Fr.: fesse
Etymology (EN): M.E. buttok, maybe from O.E. buttuc “end; end piece; short piece of land.” Etymology (PE): Sorin, variant sarun; Mid.Pers. sarinak, srinak (Sogdian šun / šôn “hip, haunch”); Av. sraoni- “buttok, hip;” Skt. śroni- “the hip and loins,” Pali soni- “the buttock.” |
pat Fr.: par A preposition used to indicate the agent after a passive verb. By means of. Etymology (EN): M.E., O.E. bi “near, in, by, during, about;” cf. O.S. and O.Fr. bi, M.Du., Du. bij, Ger. bei;cf. Skt. abhi “toward, to,” Gk. amphi- “around, about;” Av. aibi, aiwi, O.Pers. aiby, Pers. af-. Etymology (PE): Pat, from Mid.Pers. pat, pad “to, at, in, on” (Mod.Pers. bé); O.Pers. patiy, Av. paiti “to, at, for, with, by mean of,” cf. Skt. práti “toward, against, again, back, in return, opposite;” Pali pati-; Gk. proti, pros “face to face with, toward, in addition to, near;” PIE *proti. |
pat nâbun Fr.: par défaut |