S Andromedâ Fr.: S Andromedae The only supernova seen to date in the Andromeda galaxy and the first supernova observed beyond our own Galaxy. It was recorded on Aug. 20, 1885, by Ernst Hartwig (1851-1923) at Dorpat Observatory (Tartu) in Estonia and independently by other astronomers. S Andromedae reached magnitude 6 between Aug. 17 and 20, and had faded to magnitude 16 by February 1890. It is now believed that S Andromedae was a Type Ia supernova. Also known as SN 1885A. See also: S, from the second variable star to be discovered in constellation → Andromeda |
sayyârak-e S Fr.: astéroïde S A moderately bright type of asteroids (albedo 0.10 to 0.22) consisting mainly of iron- and magnesium-silicates such as olivine and pyroxene. They are dominant in the inner main belt within 2.2 AU, common in the central belt within about 3 AU, but become rare further out. The largest is 15 Eunomia (about 330 km in its largest dimension). |
xuše-ye S Fr.: amas S A → star cluster situated within an arcsecond, or
0.04 pc, from the → Galactic Center, in the vicinity
of the → supermassive black hole
Sgr A*. The cluster members are about 40 → main sequence → B-type stars
with relatively high orbital → eccentricities
(0.3 ≤ e&le 0.95).
The most famous member of the S cluster is S2 because of its brightness and its
fast orbital motion near Sgr A*. Same as Same as the Sgr A* cluster and |
setâre-ye S Zarrin-mâhi Fr.: étoiles S Doradus A type of massive, → blue supergiant, → variable star, also known as a → Hubble-Sandage variable or a → Luminous Blue Variable (LBV). S Doradus stars are the most luminous stars in the Galaxy and are easily identified in other nearby galaxies. They are named after the prototype, S Doradus, in the → Large Magellanic Cloud. |
setâre-ye S Fr.: étoile de type S A → red giant of → spectral type S whose spectrum is dominated by → molecular bands arising from → zirconium → oxide (ZrO). S stars also have strong → cyanogen bands and contain spectral lines of → lithium and → technetium. Almost all S stars are → long-period variables. See also: S, letter of alphabet; → star. |
farâravand-e s Fr.: processus s A → nucleosynthesis process by which → chemical elements heavier than → copper are formed through a slow flux of → neutrons absorbed by atomic nuclei (→ neutron-capture element). The → capture of neutrons occurs on time scales that are long enough to enable unstable nuclei to decay via the emission of a → beta particle before absorbing another neutron. Prominent s-process elements include → barium, → zirconium, and → yttrium. See also: → r-process. |
sayârak-e gune-ye S Fr.: astéroïde de type S A type of → asteroid containing → pyroxene and → olivine silicates, probably mixed with metallic iron, similar to → stony meteorites. S-type asteroids show high albedo of 0.10-0.22. They include about 17% of known asteroids and occupy the inner → asteroid belt. |
setâre-ye gune-ye S Fr.: étoile de type S |
mowj-e S Fr.: onde S → shear wave. |
S5-HVS1 Fr.: S5-HVS1 The fastest → main sequence → hypervelocity star (HVS) with a → heliocentric → radial velocity of 1017 ±2.7 km s-1. The star S5-HVS1 is an → A-type with a → luminosity of ~ 2.35 Msun located at a distance of ~ 9 kpc from the Sun. The current 3D velocity of the star in the Galactic frame is 1755 ± 50 km s-1. When integrated backwards in time, the orbit of the star points unambiguously to the → Galactic Center, implying that S5-HVS1 was kicked away from → Sgr A* with a velocity of ~ 1800 km s-1 and travelled for 4.8 Myr to its current location. This is so far the only HVS confidently associated with the Galactic Center. The ejection trajectory and transit time of S5-HVS1 coincide with the orbital plane and age of the annular disk of young stars at the Galactic Centre, and thus may be linked to its formation. With the S5-HVS1 ejection velocity being almost twice the velocity of other hypervelocity stars previously associated with the Galactic Center, the question arises whether they have been generated by the same mechanism or whether the ejection velocity distribution has been constant over time (Koposov, S.E., et al., 2019, arXiv:1907.11725). See also: S5, or S5, short for Southern Stellar Stream Spectroscopic Survey; HVS, → hypervelocity star (HVS). |
oskar-e Sachs-Wolfe Fr.: effet de Sachs-Wolfe The effect of → gravitational potentials
on the → anisotropy
of the → cosmic microwave background radiation, See also: Rainer Kurt Sachs (1932- ) & Arthur Michael Wolfe (1939- ), 1967, ApJ 147, 73; → effect. |
taxtâl-e Sachs-Wolfe Fr.: plateau de Sachs-Wolfe An almost horizontal region in the → CMB angular power spectrum belonging to a → multipole index 10 ≤ l ≤ 100. This feature is due to the → Sachs-Wolfe effect. See also: → Sachs-Wolfe effect; → plateau. |
sa'delmalek (#) Fr.: Sadalmelik A supergiant star of type G2 Ib situated in the constellation → Aquarius. At a distance of 750 light-years, it has a luminosity 3000 times that of the Sun, and a diameter about 60 times the solar diameter. Variant designations: Sadalmelek; Sadlamulk; El Melik; Saad el Melik. See also: From Ar. Sa’d al-Malik ( |
Sadr (#) Fr.: Sadr The star that lies at the center of → Cygnus’s → Northern Cross. This F8 → supergiant is situated some 1,500 → light-years away and has an → apparent visual magnitude of 2.20. See also: From Ar. as-sadr ( |
Peykân (#) Fr.: Flèche The Arrow. A very small → constellation, Etymology (EN): From L. sagitta “arrow.” Etymology (PE): Peykân, → arrow. |
Nimasb (#) Fr.: Sagittaire The Archer. A large constellation belonging to the → Zodiac, situated between → Scorpius and → Capricorn. It is located in the southern hemisphere at approximately 19h right ascension, 25° south declination. The constellation, part of which lies in the → Milky Way, contains the → Trifid Nebula, → Lagoon nebula, star clusters, and globular clusters. The center of the Galaxy lies in the direction of Sagittarius. Abbreviation: Sgr; Genitive: Sagittarii. Etymology (EN): From L. sagittarius “archer,” literally “pertaining to arrows,” from → sagitta “arrow” + -arius “-ary.” In Gk. mythology, Sagittarius is identified as a centaur, half human, half horse. In some legends, the Centaur Chiron was the son of Philyra and Saturn, who was said to have changed himself into a horse to escape his jealous wife, Rhea. Chiron was eventually immortalized in the constellation of → Centaurus, or in some version, Sagittarius. Etymology (PE): Nimasb, from Mid.Pers. nêmasp “centaur, Sagittarius,” from
nêm, nêmag “mid-, half” (Mod.Pers. nim);
Av. naēma- “half;” cf. Skt. néma- “half” +
asp “horse” (Mod.Pers. asb); |
Nimasb A Fr.: Sagittarius A A strong radio source at the center of our Galaxy. It is a complex object with three components: Sgr A West is a thermal radio source made of several dust and gas clouds, which orbit → Sgr A* and fall onto it at velocities as high as 1000 km per second. Sgr A East is a → non-thermal source, about 25 → light-years across, that appears to be a → supernova remnant. Sgr A* is the most plausible candidate for the location of a Galactic → supermassive black hole with a mass of about 4 million → solar masses. See also: → Sagittarius. |
bâzu-ye Nimasb Fr.: bras du Sagittaire One of the → spiral arms of the Milky Way Galaxy. It lies between the Sun and the the → Scutum-Crux arm. Also known as the Sagittarius-Carina Arm. See also: → Sagittarius; → arm. |
Nimasb B2 Fr.: Sagittarius B2 A massive (3 × 106 → solar masses),
dense (up to 108 particles
per cm3) → H II region and
→ molecular cloud complex
located near the → Galactic center
(about 390 → light-years from it) and See also: → Sagittarius. |
kahkešân-e kutule-ye beyzigun-e nimasb Fr.: galaxie naine elliptique du Sagittaire A satellite galaxy of the Milky Way discovered only in 1994 since
most of it is obscured by the Galactic disc.
At only 50,000 light years distant from our Galaxy’s core,
it is travelling in a polar orbit around the Galaxy. Our Galaxy See also: → Sagittarius; → dwarf; → elliptical; → galaxy. |
kahkešân-e kutule-ye bisâmân-e Nimasb Fr.: galaxie naine irrégulière du Sagittaire A dwarf irregular galaxy, discovered in 1977, that is a member of the Local Group of galaxies.
It has a diameter of 1,500 light-years and lies about 3.5 million light-years away. See also: → Sagittarius; → dwarf; → irregular; → galaxy. |
oskar-e Sagnac Fr.: effet Sagnac The → phase difference between two light waves
moving in opposite directions along a closed circular loop when the loop
is rotating. More specifically, consider See also: Named after Georges Sagnac (1869-1928), French physicist, who discovered the phenomenon in 1913; → effect. |
hamugeš-e Saha Fr.: équation de Saha An equation that gives the number of atoms of a given species in various stages of See also: Named after the Indian astrophysicist Megh Nad Saha (1894-1956), who first derived the equation in 1920; → equation. |
âtaš-e sepant Elmo Fr.: feu de Saint-Elme A blue/violet light better seen at night on a pointed object, such as the mast of a Etymology (EN): Saint Elmo the Italian rendering of St. Erasmus of Formiae (died 303) the patron saint of Mediterranean sailors; → fire. Etymology (PE): Âtaš, → fire, sepant “saint, holy,” → heiligenschein. |
Seyf (#) Fr.: Saiph A → supergiant star of visual magnitude 2.06 and → spectral type B0.5 Ia marking the right knee of Orion. It is about 700 light-years away. See also: Saiph “sword,” from Ar. as-saiph al-jabbâr
( |
butârhâ-ye Sakharov Fr.: conditions de Sakharov The three conditions that are necessary for the generation of a
→ baryon asymmetry in the
→ early Universe. These conditions are:
See also: Named after Andrei Sakharov (1921-1989), who in 1967 described these three minimum conditions (A. D. Sakharov, 1967, Zh. Eksp. Teor. Fiz. Pis’ma 5, 32; 1967, JETP Lett. 91B, 24); → condition. |
barâxt-e Sakurai Fr.: objet de Sakurai A → post-asymptotic giant branch star
that in 1995 underwent sudden re-brightening due to a See also: Named after Yukio Sakurai, a Japanese amateur astronomer, who serendipitously
discovered it on February 20, 1996, when searching for comets; |
karyâ-ye Salpeter Fr.: équation de Salpeter The first mathematical description of the → initial mass function (IMF) of newly formed stars of solar to → intermediate-masses. It is proportional to M -2.35, where M is the stellar mass. → Salpeter slope. See also: Named after the Austrian-Australian-American astrophysicist Edwin Ernest Salpeter (1924-2008); → function. |
farâravand-e Salpeter Fr.: processus de Salpeter An equation describing how the nuclei of helium fuse together, See also: Named after the Austrian-Australian-American astrophysicist Edwin Ernest Salpeter (1924-2008); → process. |
šib-e Salpeter Fr.: pente de Salpeter The value of the exponent in the → initial mass function as See also: → Salpeter function; → slope. |
namak (#) Fr.: sel
Etymology (EN): O.E. sealt; cf. O.N., O.Fris., Goth. salt, Du. zout,
Ger. Salz from PIE *sal- “salt;” cf. Etymology (PE): Namak “salt;” Mid.Pers. namak “salt.” |
angošt-e namak Fr.: doigts de sel Oceanography: One of several alternating columns of rising and descending water resulting from a → mixing process that occurs when warm salty water overlies a colder and relatively fresher layer of water. If the overlying salty water loses enough heat, it sinks down into the colder, fresher water, lengthening into a finger of salty water. Becuse the finger loses heat faster than it loses salt, the salt finger will continue to sink (salty water is denser than fresh water of the same temperature). Hence the salt finger loses more heat and displaces the colder water around it, which rises up and mixes into the warm salty layer above. Salt fingers are an example of → double-diffusive convection and play an important role in oceanic mixing. See also → fingering instability, → fingering convection. |
šuré (#) Fr.: salpètre A chemical compound, potassium nitrate, KNO3. It is a naturally occurring mineral source of nitrogen, and is used in the manufacture of fireworks, fluxes, gunpowder, etc. Etymology (EN): M.E. sal peter, salpetre, from O.Fr. salpetre, from M.L. sal petrae “salt of rock,” from L. sal, → salt
Etymology (PE): Šuré, related to šur “salty;” Mid.Pers. šôr “salty,” šorag “salt land;” cf. Skt. ksurá- “razor, sharp knife;” Gk. ksuron “razor;” PIE base *kseu- “to rub, whet.” |
nemunân Fr.: échantillon Statistics: A portion of the units of a population. The
units are selected based on a randomized process with a known probability of selection.
The sample is used to make inferences about the population by examining or
measuring the units in the sample.
→ specimen = nemuné ( Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. essample, from L. exemplum “a sample,” literally “that which is taken out,” from eximere “to take out, remove.” Etymology (PE): Nemunân, from nemun, from nemudan “to show;”
Mid.Pers. nimūdan, nimây- “to show,” from O.Pers./Av. ni-
“down; into,” → ni- (PIE), + māy-
“to measure;” cf. Skt. mati “measures,” matra- “measure;” |
noqte-ye nemunân Fr.: point de l'échantillon Statistics: Each possible outcome in a → sample space. |
andâze-ye nemunân Fr.: taille de l'échantillon |
fazâ-ye nemunân Fr.: espace des échantillons |
nemunân-giri Fr.: échantillonnage The act, process, or technique of selecting a number of cases from all the cases in a particular population. Etymology (EN): → sample + → -ing. Etymology (PE): Nemunân-giri, literally “taking sample,” from nemunân→ sample + giri verbal noun of
gereftan “to take, seize, hold;” Mid.Pers.
griftan, gir- “to take, hold, restrain;” O.Pers./Av. grab- “to take, seize,” |
varak-e nemunân-giri Fr.: biais de l'échantillonnage |
irang-e nemunân-giri Fr.: erreur d'échantillonnage That part of the difference between a population value and an estimate thereof, derived from a random sample, which is due to the fact that only a sample of values is observed; as distinct from errors due to imperfect selection, bias in response or estimation, errors of observation and recording, etc. |
farbin-e nemunân-giri Fr.: théorème d'échantillonnage Same as → Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem. |
yekâ-ye nemunân-giri Fr.: unité d'échantillonnage |
mâsé (#) Fr.: sable Hard granular powder, consisting of fine grains of rock or minerals, usually quartz fragments, found on beaches, in deserts, and in soil. Etymology (EN): O.E. sand; cf. O.N. sandr, O.Fris. sond, M.Du. sant, Ger. Sand; PIE base *samatha- (cf. Gk. psammos “sand,” L. sabulum). Etymology (PE): Mâsé “sand,” of unknown origin. |
mâse-sang (#) Fr.: grès Variously colored → sedimentary rock composed mainly
of sand-like quartz grains cemented by calcite, clay, or iron oxide. |
mâse-bâd (#) Fr.: tempête de sable |
kâtâlog-e Sanduleak Fr.: catalogue de Sanduleak A deep → objective prism survey of the → Large Magellanic Cloud carried out with the Curtis Schmidt telescope on Cerro Tololo in Chile. A total of 1272 stars, generally brighter than → photographic magnitude ~ 14, are listed in the catalog as proven or probable LMC members. The stars are identified on the charts in the LMC Atlas of Hodge & Wright (1967). See also: By Nicholas Sanduleak (1933-1990), American astronomer, published in 1970 as Contribution No. 89 of the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory; → catalog. |
sanculottide (#) Fr.: sans-culottide One of the 5 or 6 → epagomenal days added to the 12 months of 30 days each in the → French Republican Calendar. Sansculottides began on September 17 or 18 and approximately ended on the → autumnal equinox, on September 22 or 23 of the → Gregorian calendar. These days were kept as festivals of Virtue, Genius, Labor, Opinion, and Rewards. There was a sixth Sanculottide, called Revolution, in → leap years. See also: From Fr. sans-culotte, literally “without knee breeches,” |
kâtâlog-e setâre-yi-ye SAO Fr.: catalogue SAO A general whole-sky catalog compiled by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
which results from the combination of several earlier catalogs. Etymology (EN): SAO acrynome of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory; |
Sâros (#) Fr.: saros The period of 223 → synodic month, equaling 6585.32 days or 18 years, 11.33 days, after which the Sun, Earth, and Moon return to approximately the same relative geometry. When two eclipses are separated by a period of one Saros, they occur at the same node with the Moon at nearly the same distance from Earth and at the same time of year. Thus, the Saros is a useful tool for organizing eclipses into families or series. Each series typically lasts 12 or 13 centuries and contains 70 or more eclipses (F. Espenak, NASA). See also: Gk. saros, from Akkadian shār, Sumerian shar “multitude, large number.” The ancient astronomers knew the Saros cycle, but they did not use the term Saros. In the Almagest, Ptolemy refers to the Saros as the “periodic time” (periodikos chronos) and gives it the following properties: 223 → synodic months = 239 → anomalistic months = 242 → draconistic months = 6,585 1/3 days = 241 revolutions in longitude plus 10 2/3 degrees. Edmund Halley seems to have been the first to apply this term to an eclipse cycle, in 1691. |
1) mâhvâré; 2) bandevâr Fr.: satellite
Etymology (EN): From M.Fr. satellite, from L. satellitem “attendant.” Etymology (PE): 1) Mâhvâré, from mâh, → moon, + -vâré, -vâr
similarity suffix. |
kahkešân-e bandevâr Fr.: galaxie satellite A galaxy that orbits a larger one due to gravitational attraction. The Milky Way has at least ten satellite galaxies: the Large Magellanic Cloud, the Small Magellanic Cloud, Ursa Minor Dwarf, Draco Dwarf, Sculptor Dwarf, Sextans Dwarf, Carina Dwarf, Fornax Dwarf, Ursa Major I, and → Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy. |
xatt-e bandevâr Fr.: raie satellite |
anjâlidan Fr.: saturer
Etymology (EN): From L. saturatus, p.p. of saturare “to fill full, sate, drench,” from satur “sated, full,” from PIE base *sā- “to satisfy.” Etymology (PE): Anjâlidan “to saturate, to fill” (Dehxodâ, Steingass), ultimately from
Proto-Iranian *ham-gar-, from *ham- “together,” denoting “much, many,” |
anjâlidé Fr.: saturé
See also: Past participle of → saturate (v.. |
havâ-ye anjâlidé Fr.: air saturé Air that contains the maximum amount of → water vapor that is possible at the given → temperature and → pressure, i.e. air in which the → relative humidity is 100%. |
âve-ye anjâlidé Fr.: liquide saturé |
luyeš-e anjâlidé Fr.: solution saturée |
boxâr-e anjâlidé Fr.: vapeur saturante A vapor at the pressure and temperature at which it can exist in dynamical equilibrium with its liquid. Any compression of its volume at constant temperature causes it to condense to liquid at a rate sufficient to maintain a constant pressure. The term “saturated” is a misnomer, since it does not have the same meaning as a → saturated solution in chemistry. There is no question of one substance being dissolved in another. |
anjâl, anjâleš Fr.: saturation Physics: Degree of magnetization of a substance which cannot be exceeded
however strong the applied magnetizing field. See also: Verbal noun of → saturate. |
jarayân-e anjâl, ~ anjâleš Fr.: courant de saturation The maximum current that can be obtained in a specific circuit under specified conditions. See also: → saturation; → current. |
darhâzeš-e anjâl, ~ anjâleš Fr.: induction à saturation The maximum intrinsic magnetic induction possible in a material. See also: → saturation; → induction. |
nešâl-e anjâl, ~ anjaalesh Fr.: signal de saturation, ~ saturé In radar, a signal whose amplitude is greater than the dynamic range of the receiving system. See also: → saturation; → signal. |
Keyvân (#) Fr.: Saturne The sixth → planet
from the Sun and the second largest with an
equatorial diameter of 120,536 km orbiting at an average distance of
1,429,400,000 km (9.54 → astronomical units) from Sun.
With an → eccentricity of 0.05555, Its average orbital speed being 9.69 km/s, it takes Saturn 29.457 Earth years (or 10,759 Earth days) to complete a single revolution around the Sun. However, Saturn also takes just over 10 and a half hours (10 hours 33 minutes) to rotate once on its axis. This means that a single year on Saturn lasts about 24,491 Saturnian solar days. Saturn has a mass of 5.6836 × 1026 kg (95.159 → Earth masses) and a mean density of 0.687 g cm-3. Like Jupiter, Saturn is about 75% → hydrogen and 25% → helium with traces of → water, → methane, and → ammonia, similar to the composition of the primordial Solar Nebula from which the solar system was formed. The temperature on Saturn is ~ -185 °C. Like Jupiter, Saturn has a solid core of iron-nickel and rock (silicon and oxygen compounds). The core has an estimated mass of 9-22 Earth Masses and a diameter of about 25,000 km (about 2 Earth diameter). The core is enveloped by a liquid → metallic hydrogen layer and a → molecular hydrogen layer. Saturn’s interior is hot (12,000 K at the core). The planet radiates more energy into space than it receives from the Sun. Most of the extra energy is generated by the → Kelvin-Helmholtz mechanism as in Jupiter. Saturn has 62 known satellites. → Saturn’s ring. On 1 July 2004 NASA/ESA’s → Cassini-Huygens became the first to orbit Saturn, beginning a 13 year mission that revealed many secrets and surprises about Saturn and its system of rings and moons. Etymology (EN): O.E. Sætern “Italic god,” also “most remote planet” (then known), from L. Saturnus, Italic god of agriculture, possibly from Etruscan. Etymology (PE): Keyvân Mid.Pers. Kêwân, borrowed from Aramean kâwân, from Assyrian kaiamânu. |
miq-e Keyvân Fr.: nébuleuse Saturne A planetary nebula in the Aquarius constellation discovered by William Herschel in 1782. See also: → Saturn, such named by Lord Rosse in the 1840s, because the
object has a vague resemblance to the planet Saturn in low-resolution telescopes; |
halqehâ-ye Keyvân (#) Fr.: anneaux de Saturne A system of rings around Saturn made up of countless small particles, ranging in size from micrometers to meters, that orbit the planet. The ring particles are made almost entirely of → water ice, with some contamination from → dust and other chemicals. The ring system is divided into six major components: D, C, B, A, F, and G rings, listed from inside to outside. But in reality, these major divisions are subdivided into thousands of individual → ringlets. The large gap between the A and B rings is called the Cassini division. Saturn’s rings are extraordinarily thin: though they are 250,000 km or more in diameter, they are less than one kilometer thick. → A ring, → B ring, → C ring, → D ring, → F ring, → G ring. |
bužidan Fr.: sauvegarder, sauver
Etymology (EN): M.E. sa(u)ven, from O.Fr. sauver “keep (safe), protect, redeem,” from L.L. salvare “make safe, secure,” from L. salvus “safe;” ultimately from PIE root *sol- “whole,” → general. Etymology (PE): Bužidan, variants buzidan/buz- “to pluck off hair, wool;” cf. Gk. phugo, L. fugio “I flee”, Goth. us-baugjan “to wipe off” (Cheung 2007). |
dorin-e SB1 Fr.: binaire SB1 Same as → single-lined binary. See also: SB, for → spectroscopic binary; 1, for → single-lined; → binary. |
dorin-e SB2 Fr.: binaire SB2 Same as → double-lined binary. See also: SB, for → spectroscopic binary; 2, for → double-lined; → binary. |
marpel-paziri Fr.: scalibilité, extension graduelle, évolutivité, facteur d'échelle, extensibilité |
marpel-pazir Fr.: scalable, échelonnable, extensible, évolutif. |
marpeli, marpelvâr Fr.: scalaire Any quantity which is sufficiently defined only with its magnitude, when given in
appropriate units. Compare → vector. See also: Of or pertaining to → scale. |
cagâli-ye marpeli Fr.: densité scalaire A → tensor density of → order 0. |
meydân-e marpeli Fr.: champ scalaire A → field whose value at every point of space is independent of → direction and → position. Examples include → temperature distribution throughout space and → pressure distribution in a → fluid. Similarly, a → potential field, such as the Newtonian → gravitational field or the electric potential in → electrostatics are scalar fields. In quantum field theory, a scalar field is associated with → spin zero particles, such as → mesons or → bosons. Therefore, the → Higgs boson is associated with a scalar field. The → derivative of a scalar field results in a → vector field is called the → gradient. In contrast to a vector field, a scalar field is → invariant under the → rotation of the → coordinate system. The → inflation in the → early Universe is supposed to be driven by a scalar field, called the → inflaton field. |
partureš-e marpeli Fr.: perturbation scalaire The energy density fluctuations in the → photon-baryon plasma See also: → scalar; → perturbation. |
âmâyeš:gar-e marpeli Fr.: processeur scalaire |
farâvard-e marpeli Fr.: produit scalaire A multiplication of two vectors giving a scalar. The scaler product of V1
and V2 is defined by: |
mowj-e marpeli Fr.: onde scalaire In theories of gravitation, a kind of → gravitational wave, transversal and/or longitudinal, characterized by → spin zero. |
negare-ye marpel-tânsori Fr.: théorie scalaire-tensorielle An alternative to the standard → general relativity of gravity that contains not only the → tensor field (or → metric), but also a → scalar field. In this formalism, the → gravitational constant is considered to vary over time. As a consequence, the measured strength of the gravitational interaction is a function of time. Same as → Jordan-Brans-Dicke theory. |
1) marpel; 2) marpelidan Fr.: 1) échelle; 2) augmenter/réduire proportionnellement 1a) A succession or progression of steps or degrees. 1b) A standard of measurement or estimation; point of reference by which
to gauge or rate.
Etymology (EN): M.E., from L. scalae “ladder, stairs.” Etymology (PE): Marpel, literally “measuring stick, measuring step,” on the model of Ger.
Maßstab |
forud-marpelidan Fr.: |
karvand-e marpel Fr.: facteur d'échelle Math.:
A number which scales, or multiplies, some quantity. In the equation
y = Cx, C is the scale factor for x. C is also the
coefficient of x, and may be called the constant of proportionality of
y to x. |
bolandi-ye marpel Fr.: hauteur d'échelle |
darun-marpelidan Fr.: In computer science, to reduce the number of nodes (servers), as opposed to → scale out. Scale-in is a type of → horizontal scaling. See also → scale up, → scale down. |
borun-marpelidan Fr.: In computer science, to upgrade a system by increasing the number of nodes. |
farâz-marpelidan Fr.: In computer science, to increase the processing power of the same node/system by
increasing its resources (CPU, RAM, etc.). |
sebar-e nâjur-pahlu Fr.: triangle scalène A triangle no two sides of which are equal. Etymology (EN): From L.L. scalenus, from Gk. skalenos “uneven, unequal, rough,”
from skallein “chop, hoe,” related to Etymology (PE): Sebar, → triangle; nâjur-pahlu “dissimilar sides,” from nâjur “dissimilar, ill-matched” + pahlu “side, flank” (Mid.Pers. pahlug “side, rib,” Av. pərəsu- “rib,” Ossetic fars “side, flank,” cf. Skt. párśu- “rib,” Lith. piršys (pl.) “horse breast”). |
marpelgar Fr.: An electronic circuit devised to give a single pulse after a prescribed number of input pulses have been received. See also: Agent noun from → scale. |
marpeleš Fr.:
|
keler Fr.: cuir chevelu |
1) rajrub kardan, rajruftan; 2) rajrub Fr.: 1) balayer; 2) balayage
Etymology (EN): M.E. scannen, from L.L. scandere
“to read or mark so as to show metrical structure,” Etymology (PE): Rajrub, literally “sweeping along rows,” from raj “row, line”
The second component
rub stem of rubidan, ruftan “to sweep,”
related to robudan “to rub, carry off;”
Mid.Pers. rôb- “to rub, sweep, attract;” |
rajrubgar Fr.: scanneur Any device for exposing an image on film, a sensitized plate, etc., by tracing light along a series of many closely spaced parallel lines. See also: Agent noun of → scan. |
rajrub Fr.: balayage The process of analyzing or synthetizing successively the light values of the elements making up a picture area, according to a pre-determined method. See also: Verbal noun of → scan. |
Fr.: scaphe A → sundial consisting of an inverted half sphere and a central vertical → gnomon used by ancient Greeks. See also → Eratosthenes experiment. Etymology (EN): Gk. skaphe “boat, skiff; a bowl.” |
šâné (#), ketf (#) Fr.: omoplate A flat triangular bone a pair of which form the back part of the shoulder. Commonly known as → shoulder blade. Etymology (EN): L. scapula “shoulder.” Etymology (PE): Šâné, Mid.Pers. šânag “shoulder-blade.” |
tondé (#) Fr.: escarpe Geology: A line of cliffs produced by faulting, erosion, or landslides. → cliff. Etymology (EN): From It. scarpa. Etymology (PE): Tondé “a steep slope of a mountain,” from tond “swift, rapid, brisk;
fierce, severe” (Mid.Pers. tund “sharp, violent;” Sogdian tund
“violent;” cf. Skt. tod- “to thrust, give a push,” tudáti
“he thrusts;” L. tundere
“to thrust, to hit” (Fr. percer, E. pierce, ultimately from
L. pertusus, from p.p. of pertundere “to thrust or bore through;” |
1) parâkandan; 2) parâkaneš Fr.: 1) diffuse; 2) diffusion, dispersion
Etymology (EN): M.E. scateren, schateren “to disperse, break up, destroy;” cf. M.Du. schaderen “to scatter.” Etymology (PE): Parâkandan “to scatter, to disperse;” Mid.Pers. parakandan “to scatter”
(cf. apakandan “to throw”), from Proto-Iranian *pari-kan-, from
*pari, *par- “around” (cf. Pers.
pirâ-, variant par- “around, about,” from
Mid.Pers. pêrâ; O.Pers. pariy “around, about,” Av. pairi
“around, over,” per- “to pass over, beyond;” |
parâkandé (#) Fr.: diffus
See also: Past participle of → scatter. |
parâkanandé Fr.: diffuseur A → particle that causes → scattering of another particle through interaction with it. |
parâkaneš (#) Fr.: diffusion The process in which the direction of motion of → particles
or → waves is changed randomly because of their
→ interactions (→ collisions)
with other particles of the → medium transversed. Two parameters govern scattering: 1) the wavelength (λ) of the incident radiation,
and 2) the size of the scattering particle (r), usually expressed as the nondimensional
size parameter, x = 2πr / λ. The size parameter defines
three types of scattering:
See also:
→ atmospheric scattering,
→ backscattering,
→ Brillouin scattering,
→ coherent scattering,
→ Compton scattering,
→ elastic scattering,
→ forward scattering,
→ last scattering,
→ last scattering surface,
→ multiple scattering,
→ noncoherent scattering,
→ quasi-single-scattering approximation,
→ Raman scattering,
→ scattering angle,
→ scattering coefficient,
→ scattering of stars,
→ selective scattering,
→ single scattering,
→ spin-flip scattering,
→ surface of last scattering,
→ Thomson scattering. Related terms: → diffraction; → diffusion; → dispersion; → distribution. See also: Verbal noun of → scatter. |
zâvie-ye parâkaneš Fr.: angle de diffusion The angle between the → incident radiation on a → particle (such as a water droplet in a rainbow) and the scattered radiation (such as the light ray leaving the droplet). Scattering angle is a function of → impact parameter. In other words, The angle along which the change of direction has taken place, irrespective whether radiation is scattered by particles or reflected (refracted) by a surface. See also: → scattering; → angle. |
hamgar-e parâkaneš Fr.: coefficient de diffusion The fraction of light scattered per unit distance in a medium. See also: → scattering; → coefficient. |
parâkaneš-e setâregân Fr.: diffusion des étoiles The progressive increase of random motions of → disk stars
with increasing stellar → ages. While some initial random See also: → scattering; → star. |
Asb-šâné Fr.: Scheat The second-brightest star in the constellation → Pegasus. It is a giant star of spectral type M2.5 II-III whose magnitude varies between 2.3 and 2.7. Etymology (EN): Scheat, from Ar. as-sâq “leg,” erroneously taken from
the Ar. name of δ Aquarii as-sâq al-sâkib al-ma’
( Etymology (PE): Asb-šâné, literally “the Horse’s Shoulder,” from asb→ horse + šâné “shoulder” (Lori šona, Kurd. šân, Gilaki cân, con), maybe related to Skt. skandhá- “shoulder, trunk of tree, bulk” (Pali khandha-, Ashkun kándä, Bashkarih kân, Tôrwâldi kan “shoulder”), from skand- “to jump, leap, spring out,” skandati “he jumps;” cf. L. scandere “to climb.” |
karyâ-ye Schechter Fr.: fonction de Schechter A mathematical expression that describes the → luminosity function of galaxies. The function correctly reflects the facts that the luminosity function decreases with increasing luminosity and that the decrease is particularly marked at high luminosities. It is expressed as: φ(L) = φ(L/L)α exp
(-L/L),
which has two parts and three parameters:
φ is an empirically determined amplitude,
α is an empirically derived exponent, and L is a
characteristic luminosity which separates the low and high luminosity parts. See also: Named after the American astronomer Paul Schechter (1948-), who proposed the function in 1976 (ApJ 203, 297); → function. |
qânun-e Schmidt Fr.: loi de Schmidt A power-law relation between → star formation rate (SFR) and a corresponding measure of gas density. For external galaxies it is usually expressed in terms of the observable surface density of gas (Σgas): SFR ∝ Σgasn. The exponent n is determined to be 1.4 ± 0.15 (Kennicutt 1998, ApJ 498, 541). The validity of the Schmidt law has been tested in dozens of empirical studies. The Schmidt law provides a tight parametrization of the global star formation law, extending over several orders of magnitude in SFR and gas density. See also: Named after Maarten Schmidt (1929-), a dutch-born American astronomer, who also discovered the first → quasar (3C 273) in 1963. |
teleskop-e Schmidt, durbin-e ~ (#) Fr.: télescope de Schmidt A telescope with a spherical concave primary mirror in which the aberration produced by the spherical mirror is compensated for by a thin correcting lens placed at the opening of the telescope tube. Its very wide-field performance makes it suitable for surveys. See also: Named after Bernhard Woldemar Schmidt (1879-1935), a German optician of |
teleskop-e Schmidt-Cassegrain, durbin-e ~ (#) Fr.: télescope Schmidt-Cassegrain A mixture of the → Cassegrain telescope with a very short → focal length and of a Schmidt design (due to the presence of the → corrective plate), used mainly in → amateur astronomy. The main advantage of this telescope is its compact design. However, Schmidt-Cassegrain telescopes produce fainter images with less contrast than other telescope designs with similar → aperture sizes. This is due to the comparatively large → secondary mirror required to reflect the light back the → eyepiece. See also: → Schmidt telescope; → Cassegrain telescope. |
bâzâneš-e Schmidt-Kennicutt Fr.: relation Schmidt-Kennicutt Same as the → Schmidt law. See also: Named after the American astrophysicists Maarten Schmidt (1929-), the pioneer of research in this field, and Robert C. Kennicutt, Jr. (1951-), who developed the study; → relation. |
dânešpažuh, dânešvar (#) Fr.: 1) lettré, érudit; 2) boursier
Etymology (EN): M.E. scoler(e); O.E. scolere “student,” from M.L. scholaris, from L.L. scholaris “of a school,” from L. schola, from Gk. skhole “school, lecture, discussion; leisure, spare time.” Etymology (PE): Dânešpažuh, from dâneš→ science + pažuh agent noun of pažuhidan “to search,” → research. Dânešvar, from dâneš, as befor, + -var possession suffix. |
hadd-e Schönberg-Chandrasekhar Fr.: limite de Schönberg-Chandrasekhar During the → main sequence stage, a star burns the hydrogen in its core and transforms it into helium. When the helium mass amounts to about 10% of the initial stellar mass, the star can no longer maintain the → hydrostatic equilibrium in its core; the star increases its volume and leaves the main sequence in order to become a → red giant. See also: Named after the Brazilian astrophysicist Mario Schönberg (1914-1990) and Subramahmanyan Chandrasekhar, → Chandrasekhar limit, who were the first to point out this limit and derive it (1942, ApJ 96, 161). |
dabestân (#) Fr.: école
Etymology (EN): M.E. scole, O.E. scôl, from L. schola, from Gk. scholé “spare time, leisure,” from skhein “to get.” Etymology (PE): Dabestân, from Mid.Pers. dibistân “school,” literally “place of writing” or “the place where documents are kept,” from dib, dip “→ document,” + -istân suffix of place, → summer. |
varqe-ye Schottky Fr.: barrière de Schottky A junction between a metal and a semiconductor, which exhibits rectifying characteristics. A Schottky barrier has a very fast switching action and low forward voltage drop of about 0.3 volts, compared with 0.6 volts in silicon diodes, which use adjacent p-type and n-type semiconductors. See also: Named after Walter Hans Schottky (1886-1976), German physicist, who described the phenomenon; → barrier. |
âk-e Schottky Fr.: défaut de Schottky An unoccupied position in a crystal lattice which forms when oppositely charged ions leave their lattice sites, creating vacancies. See also: Named after Walter Hans Schottky (1886-1976), German physicist; → defect. |
diod-e Schottky (#) Fr.: diode Schottky A → semiconductor diode containing a → Schottky barrier. Such a diode has a low forward voltage drop and very fast switching characteristics. Also called Schottky barrier diode and hot electron diode. See also: → Schottky barrier; → diode. |
nufe-ye Schottky Fr.: bruit de Schottky Excess voltage generated by random fluctuations in the emission of electrons from a hot cathode, causing a hissing or sputtering sound (shot noise) in an audio amplifier and causing snow on a television screen. Same as → shot effect, → shot noise. See also: Named after Walter Hans Schottky (1886-1976), German physicist; |
hamugeš-e Schrödinger Fr.: équation de Schrödinger A fundamental equation of physics in → quantum mechanics the solution of which gives the → wave function, that is a mathematical expression that contains all the information known about a particle. This → partial differential equation describes also how the wave function of a physical system evolves over time. See also: Named after Erwin Schrödinger (1887-1961), the Austrian theoretical physicist, Nobel Prize 1933, who first developed the version of quantum mechanics known as → wave mechanics; → equation. |
hamugeš-e Schrödinger Fr.: équation de Schrödinger A fundamental equation of physics in → quantum mechanics the solution of which gives the → wave function, that is a mathematical expression that contains all the information known about a particle. This → partial differential equation describes also how the wave function of a physical system evolves over time. See also: Named after Erwin Schrödinger (1887-1961), the Austrian theoretical physicist, Nobel Prize 1933, who first developed the version of quantum mechanics known as → wave mechanics; → equation. |
gorbe-ye Schrödinger (#) Fr.: chat de Schrödinger A → thought experiment intended to illustrate the
→ superposition principle in
→ quantum mechanics. Etymology (EN): Named after Erwin Schrödinger (1887-1961), → Schrodinger equation, who proposed the thought experiment in 1935 in order to illustrate the inconsistency of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics; cat, from M.E. cat, catte; O.E. catt, catte (cf. O.Fris, M.D. katte, O.H.G. kazza, Ir. cat, Welsh cath), probably from L.L. cattus, catta “cat.” Etymology (PE): Gorbé, from Mid.Pers. gurbag “cat;” → Schrodinger equation, |
gorbe-ye Schrödinger (#) Fr.: chat de Schrödinger A → thought experiment intended to illustrate the
→ superposition principle in
→ quantum mechanics. Etymology (EN): Named after Erwin Schrödinger (1887-1961), → Schrödinger equation, who proposed the thought experiment in 1935 in order to illustrate the inconsistency of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics; cat, from M.E. cat, catte; O.E. catt, catte (cf. O.Fris, M.D. katte, O.H.G. kazza, Ir. cat, Welsh cath), probably from L.L. cattus, catta “cat.” Etymology (PE): Gorbé, from Mid.Pers. gurbag “cat;” → Schrodinger equation, |
oskar-e Schröter Fr.: effet de Schröter A phenomenon in which the observed and predicted phases of Venus do not coincide. At eastern elongation, when the planet is visible in the evening sky, dichotomy (half-phase) usually comes a day or two earlier than predicted, while at western elongation dichotomy occurs a day or two later. See also: Named after Johan Schröter (1745-1816), German astronomer, who first described the effect in 1793; → effect. |
oskar-e Schröter Fr.: effet de Schröter A phenomenon in which the observed and predicted phases of Venus do not coincide. At eastern elongation, when the planet is visible in the evening sky, dichotomy (half-phase) usually comes a day or two earlier than predicted, while at western elongation dichotomy occurs a day or two later. See also: Named after Johan Schröter (1745-1816), German astronomer, who first described the effect in 1793; → effect. |
varqe-ye Schwarzschild Fr.: barrière de Schwarzschild An upper theoretical limit to the → eccentricity
of orbits near a → supermassive black hole (SBH).
It results from the impact of → relativistic precession
on the stellar orbits. This phenomenon acts in such a way as to
“repel” inspiralling bodies from the eccentric
orbits that would otherwise lead to capture
as → extreme mass ratio inspiral (EMRI)s.
In other words, the presence of the
Schwarzschild barrier reduces the frequency of EMRI events, in contrast to See also: → Schwarzschild black hole; → barrier. |
siyahcâl-e Schwarzschild Fr.: trou noir de Schwarzschild A → black hole with zero → angular momentum (non-rotating) and zero electric charge derived from Karl Schwarzschild 1916 exact solution to Einstein’s vacuum → field equations. See also: Karl Schwarzschild (1873-1916), German mathematical physicist, who carried out the first relativistic study of black holes. → black hole. |
metrik-e Schwarzschild Fr.: métrique de Schwarzschild In → general relativity, the → metric that describes the → space-time outside a static mass with spherically symmetric distribution. See also: → Schwarzschild black hole; → metric. |
šo'â'-e Schwarzschild Fr.: rayon de Schwarzschild The critical radius at which a massive body becomes a → black hole,
i.e., at which light is unable to escape to infinity: See also: → Schwarzschild black hole; → radius. |
takini-ye Schwarzschild Fr.: singularité de Schwarzschild A region of infinite → space-time curvature postulated to lie within a → black hole. See also: → Schwarzschild black hole; → singularity. |
luyeš-e Schwarzschild Fr.: solution de Schwarzschild The first exact solution of → Einstein’s field equations that describes the → space-time geometry outside a spherical distribution of mass. See also: Briefly following Einstein’s publication of → General Relativity,
Karl Schwarzschild discovered this solution in 1916 |
sanjdiâr-e Schwarzschild Fr.: critère de Schwarzschild The condition in stellar interior under which → convection occurs. It is expressed as: |dT/dr|ad < |dT/dr|rad, where the indices ad and rad stand for adiabatic and radiative respectively.
This condition can also be expressed as: ∇ad<∇rad,
where ∇ = d lnT / d lnP =
P dT / T dP with T and P denoting temperature and
pressure respectively. See also: Named after Karl Schwarzschild (1873-1916), German mathematical physicist (1906 Göttinger Nachrichten No 1, 41); → criterion. |
dâneš (#) Fr.: science
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. science, from L. scientia “knowledge,”
from sciens (genitive scientis), pr.p. of scire
“to know,” probably originally “to separate one thing from another, to distinguish,”
related to scindere “to cut, divide;”
PIE base *skei- “to cut, split;” cf. Pers.
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;”
Gk. skhizein “to split;” Etymology (PE): Dâneš, verbal noun of dân-, dânestan “to know” (Mid.Pers.
dânistan “to know”), variant šenâxtan, šenâs-
“to recognize, to know” (Mid.Pers. šnâxtan, šnâs- “to know, recognize”); |
dâneš-dizan Fr.: science fiction |
dâneši, dânešik Fr.: scientifique Of or pertaining to science or the sciences. Etymology (EN): From M.Fr. scientifique, from M.L. scientificus “pertaining to science,” from L. scientia “knowledge,” → science,
Etymology (PE): Dâneši, dânešik, from dâneš, → science
|
bâšâ-ye dâneši, ~ dânešik Fr.: fait scientifique An agreement by competent observers of a series of observations of the same phenomena.
From time to time scientific facts are revised by additional data See also: → scientific; → fact. |
raveš-e dâneši Fr.: méthode scientifique The process by which scientists, collectively
and over time, endeavor to construct an accurate (that is, reliable,
consistent, and non-arbitrary) representation of the world.
If the experiments bear out the hypothesis it may come to be regarded as a theory or law of nature. If the experiments do not bear out the hypothesis, it must be rejected or modified. What is key in the description of the scientific method just given is the predictive power (the ability to get more out of the theory than you put in) of the hypothesis or theory, as tested by experiment. It is often said in science that theories can never be proved, only disproved. There is always the possibility that a new observation or a new experiment will conflict with a long-standing theory (Frank L. H. Wolfs, University of Rochester). See also: → scientific; → method. |
namâdgân-e dâneši, ~ dânešik Fr.: notation scientifique A compact format for writing very large or very small numbers.
Numbers are made up of three parts: the coefficient, the base and the exponent. See also: → scientific; → notation. |
dânešigi Fr.: scientificité The quality of the practices and theories that aim at establishing reproducible regularities See also: → scientific + → -ity. |
dânešmand (#) Fr.: scientifique |
susu (#) Fr.: scintillation
Etymology (EN): From L. scintillationem (nominative scintillatio), Etymology (PE): Susu, from su “light,” related to suz “burning,” present stem of
suxtan;
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,” |
susu šomâr Fr.: compteur à scintillation A device for detecting and measuring ionizing radiation by means of flashes produced when the radiation particles strike a sensitive layer of phosphor. See also: → scintillation; → counter. |
saxtdâtik Fr.: scléronome Relating to a constraint or system that does not contain time explicitly. For example, a pendulum with an inextensible string of length l0 is described by the equation: x2 + y2 = l02 is both → holonomic and scleronomous. Etymology (EN): From Gk. sclero-, from skleros “hard” + -nomous, → -nomy. Etymology (PE): Saxtdâtik, from saxt, → hard,
|
Každom (#) Fr.: Scorpion The Scorpion. A large and impressive constellation in the → Zodiac, which lies between → Libra to the west and → Sagittarius to the east. Scorpius is located in the southern hemisphere near the center of the Milky Way at approximately 17h right ascension, -40° declination. The bright, red star → Antares marks the heart of the scorpion. The constellation contains deep sky objects such as the open clusters M6 and M7, and the globular clusters M4 and M80. Also in the southern end of the constellation there is the open star cluster NGC 6231. Abbreviation: Sco; genitive: Scorpii. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. scorpion, from L. scorpionem (nominative scorpio), from Gk. skorpios “a scorpion,” from PIE base *(s)ker- “to cut,” → shear. According to Gk. mythology, the constellation represents a giant scorpion sent forth by the earth-goddess Gaia to kill the giant Orion when he threatened to slay all the beasts of the earth. Orion and the Scorpion were afterward placed amongst the stars as a pair of constellations. The two opponents are never seen in the sky at the same time, for one constellation sets as the other rises. The scorpion’s claws were originally formed by Libra. Etymology (PE): Každom “scorpion,” variants kajdom, gaždom literally
“crooked tail,” |
Každom X-1 Fr.: Scorpius X-1 The first and the brightest X-ray source in the sky, after the Sun, discovered in 1962. Scorpius X-1 is a low-mass → X-ray binary consisting of a compact object like a → neutron star or a → black hole, and a low-mass stellar companion. The compact object has a mass of 1.4 → solar masses and the companion 0.42 solar masses. The orbital period is 18.9 hours, and the system lies at a distance of about 9,000 → light-years. The X-rays come from → accretion, where material from the companion overflows its → Roche lobe and spirals down onto the compact object. The luminosity results from the transformation of the falling material’s → gravitational potential energy to heat by → viscosity in the → accretion disk. See also: Named such by the discoverers (Giacconi et al. 1962), because it was the first extrasolar → X-ray source of the sky detected in the constellation → Scorpius. |
âhazeš-e Každom-Kentawros Fr.: association Scorpius-Centaurus The nearest → OB association to the Sun. It contains several hundred stars, mostly → B stars which concentrate in the three subgroups: Upper Scorpius, Upper Centaurus Lupus, and Lower Centaurus Crux. Upper Scorpius is the youngest subgroup, Upper Centaurus Lupus the oldest subgroup of the association. Isochrone fitting to the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram indicates
that the star formation occurred some 5-20 Myr ago. The Sco-Cen association is probably a member of the → Gould Belt (Preibisch & Mamajek, 2008, astro-ph/0809.0407). See also: → Scorpius; → Centaurus; → association. |
did-e târiki Fr.: vision scotopique Vision that occurs when the eye is dark-adapted. In scotopic vision, the
level of luminance is so low that the retinal cones are not Etymology (EN): Scotopic, from L. Gk. skoto- combining form of skotos “darkness” + -opia akin to ope “view, look,” ops “eye, face;” → vision. Etymology (PE): Did, → vision; târiki noun from târik “dark,” Mid.Pers. târig “dark,” târ “darkness,” Av. taθra- “darkness,” taθrya- “dark,” cf. Skt. támisrâ- “darkness, dark night,” L. tenebrae “darkness,” Hittite taš(u)uant- “blind,” O.H.G. demar “twilight.” |
pardé (#) Fr.: écran
Etymology (EN): M.E. screne; O.Fr. escren “a screen against heat,” from M.Du. scherm “screen, cover,” or Frank. *skrank “barrier;” cf. O.H.G. skirm, skerm “protection,” scrank “barrier;” Ger. Schrank “cupboard.” Etymology (PE): Pardé, from Mid.Pers. pardag “curtain, veil, covering;” loaned in Armenian partak “veil,” and Georgian p’ardag-i “curtain;” cognate with Gk. pelas, pella, L. pellis “skin;” O.E. filmen “thin skin;” PIE root *pel- “to cover.” |
rixtâr-e pardé Fr.: fonte d'écran A character used for on-screen → display. See also → printer font. |
andaržireš-e bâparde-ye Coulomb Fr.: interaction de Coulomb écrantée The → Coulomb interaction reduced owing to the presence of See also: → screen; → coulomb; → interaction. |
oskar-e pardé Fr.: effet d'écran Same as → shielding effect. |
pic (#) Fr.: vis A piece of metal, consisting of a threaded and usually tapered shank that has a slotted head by which it is turned into something in order to fasten things together. Etymology (EN): M.E. scrwe, screw, from M.Fr. escroue “nut, cylindrical socket,” of uncertain origin. Etymology (PE): Pic “screw,” present stem of picidan “to twist, entwine, coil.” |
Peykartarâš (#) Fr.: Sculpteur A minor and faint → constellation in the southern sky at 0h 30m → right ascension, 33° south → declination. Its brightest star is variable with a mean magnitude of only 4.31. Sculptor contains the south Galactic pole. It also contains the → Sculptor Dwarf, which is a member of the → Local Group. Abbreviation: Scl; Genitive: Sculptoris. Etymology (EN): Sculptor was introduced by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille (1713-1762). Etymology (PE): Peykartarâš, from peykar
“form, figure, body” (from Mid.Pers. pahikar
“picture, image;” from O.Pers. patikara- “picture, (sculpted)
likeness,” from patiy “against” (Av. paiti; Skt. prati;
Gk. poti/proti + kara- “doer, maker,” from kar-
“to do, make, build;” Av. kar-; Skt. kr-; cf. Skt.
pratikrti- “an image, likeness, model; counterpart”) +
tarâš “cutter,” from tarâšidan “to cut, hew; scape; shave;”
(Mid.Pers. tâšitan “to cut, cleave; create by putting together
different elements;” Av. taš- “to cut off, fashion, shape, create,”
taša- “axe” (Mod.Pers. taš tišé “axe”), |
kahkešân-e kutule-ye beyzigun-e Peykartarâš Fr.: galaxie naine elliptique du Sculpteur A → dwarf elliptical galaxy
that is a satellite of our → Milky Way. See also: → Sculptor; → dwarf; → elliptical; → galaxy. |
goruh-e Peykartarâš Fr.: groupe du Sculpteur The nearest group of galaxies to our → Local Group, lying near the south Galactic pole at about 10 million → light-years distance. The Sculptor Group is dominated by five galaxies, four spiral (NGC 247, 253, 300, and 7793) and one irregular (NGC 55). The brightest of the five is NGC 253. The nearest galaxy in this group is NGC 55 which at a distance of 5 million light-years lies on the border of the Local Group. |
Separ (#) Fr.: Ecu de Sobieski The Shield. A small constellation in the southern Milky Way,
at 18h 40m right ascension, 10° south declination. Its brightest star has a visual
magnitude of 3.85. Scutum contains several open clusters, as well as a globular cluster
and a planetary nebula. The two best known deep sky objects in Scutum Etymology (EN): Scutum was created by Johannes Hevelius in 1683, who originally named it L. Scutum Sobiescianum “the shield of Sobieski” to commemorate the victory of the Polish forces led by King John III Sobieski in the Battle of Vienna, and thus refers to Sobieski’s Janina Coat of Arms. Later, the name was shortened to Scutum “shield.” Etymology (PE): Separ “shield,” from Mid.Pers. spar “shield;” cf. Skt. phalaka- “board, lath, leaf, shield,” phálati “(he) splits;” Gk. aspalon “skin, hide,” spolas “flayed skin,” sphalassein “to cleave, to disrupt;” O.H.G. spaltan “to split;” Goth. spilda “board;” PIE base *(s)p(h)el- “to split, to break off.” |
bâzu-ye Separ-Calipâ Fr.: bras Écu-Croix A spiral arm of our Galaxy located between the Sagittarius Arm and the Norma Arm, though it is rather less prominent than either of these two better defined spiral arms. It originates relatively close to the Sun’s present position in the Galaxy, and follows a sweeping arc of about 80,000 light years to the opposite side of the Galactic disk. |
dahre (#) Fr.: faux An agricultural implement consisting of a long, curving blade fastened at an angle to a handle, for cutting grass, grain, etc., by hand (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. sythe, sithe, from O.E. sithe, sigdi “sickle;” cf. West Frisian seine “scythe,” Du. zicht “sickle,” Ger. Sense “scythe;” from PIE root *sek- “to cut.” Etymology (PE): Dahre “scythe,” variant of dâs, → sickle; dialectal variants (Dari Yazd) dare, (Laki) dara “butcher’s cleaver,” (Gilân, Lâsgard, Sorxe) dâra, (Tabari) dahra, dâhra, darra. |
daryâ (#) Fr.: mer
Etymology (EN): O.E. sæ “sheet of water, sea, lake;” cf. Du. zee, Ger. See, O.N. sær “sea,” Goth saiws “marsh.” Etymology (PE): Daryâ “sea;” Mid.Pers. daryâp variant zrah; O.Pers. drayah-; Av. zrayah- “sea;” cf. Skt. jráyas- “expanse, space, flat surface.” |
ofoq-e daryâ Fr.: horizon de mer The → apparent horizon formed by the sea. |
jost-o-ju (#) Fr.: recherche To explore or examine in order to find something. Etymology (EN): M.E. serchen, cerchen, from O.Fr. cerchier “to search,” from L. circare “to go about, wander, traverse,” from circus “circle.” Etymology (PE): Jost-o-ju interfixed jost and juy past and present stem of jostan/juyidan “to seek, strive for;” Proto-Iranian *iud- “to struggle for something, to fight” (Av. yūδ- “to fight, struggle;” Mod.Pers. justan, juy- “to search, seek, ask for”); cf. Mid.Pers. vijuyihitan “to search, seek.” |
jost-o-ju-ye huš-e ostar-zamini Fr.: recherche d'intelligence extra-terrestre The scientific attempt to detect → intelligent
extraterrestrial → life by
surveying the sky to find the existence of → transmissions, See also: → search; → extraterrestrial; → intelligence. |
sadaf (#), kelâcak (#) Fr.: coquille |
fasl (#) Fr.: saison One of the four periods of the year astronomically defined by the position of the Sun with respect to the equator. As a result of the obliquity of the ecliptic, the angular distance between the Sun and the equator varies in the course of the year. This circumstance gives rise to seasons. The current lengths of the astronomical seasons, around the year 2000, are about: spring 92.76 days, summer 93.65 days, autumn 89.84 days, and winter 88.99 days. The seasons are unequal because the Earth’s orbit is slightly elliptical and the Sun is not exactly at the center of the orbit. Moreover, the Earth moves faster when it is close to the Sun than when it is farther away, so the seasons that occur when the Earth is close to the Sun pass more quickly. Etymology (EN): M.E. sesoun, seson, from O.Fr. seison “a sowing, planting,” from L. sationem (nominative satio) “a sowing,” from p.p. stem of serere “to scatter seed over land.” Etymology (PE): Fasl, from Ar. faSl “cutting, dividing; section.” |
1) sekanjân; 2) sekânt (#) Fr.: sécante
Etymology (EN): From L. secant-, stem of secans, pr.p. of secare “to cut,” Etymology (PE): 1) Sekanjân, agent noun from sekanjidan “to shave, cut, scape,” cognate with
šekastan “to break,” → section. |
radebandi-ye Secchi Fr.: classification de Secchi A pioneering work in → spectral classification conducted in the 1860s. Secchi divided stars into four main groups based on the visual observation of spectra. Class I: The white and bluish stars with a continuous spectrum crossed by hydrogen bands, the metallic bands being absent or weak. Examples, → Sirius, → Vega. Class II: Yellow stars, with spectra in which the hydrogen bands were less prominent and the metallic lines more strong. Examples, Sun, → Capella. Class III: Red or orange stars, showing bands or flutings. Examples, → Antares, → Betelgeuse. Class IV: Red stars, showing bands similar to Class III, but with the sharp edge of the flutings toward the other end of the spectrum. Secchi’s scheme was superseded by the photographic → Harvard classification system. See also: Pietro Angelo Secchi (1818-1878), Italian astronomer and Jesuit priest; → classification. |
1) dovom (#), dovomin (#); 2) sâniyé (#) Fr.: seconde
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. second, from L. secundus “following, next in
order,” from root of sequi “to follow;”
PIE base *sekw- “to follow;” cf. Pers. az from;
Mid.Pers. hac “from;” Etymology (PE): 1) Dovom, dovomin “ordinal number of do, |
nazdineš-e dovom Fr.: deuxième approximation Math: In calculus, limiting an equation to its
→ second derivative, See also: → second; → approximation. |
rombeš-e dovom Fr.: deuxième effondrement An early evolutionary period in the process of star formation which
succeeds the → first collapse. |
parmâs-e dovom Fr.: deuxième contact |
maqze-ye dovom Fr.: deuxième cœur A hydrostatic object predicted to result from the → second collapse of a → molecular cloud in an early stage of star formation. |
vâxane-ye dovom Fr.: dérivée seconde In → calculus, the → derivative of a → first derivative. It is usually written as f’’(x), d2y/d2x, or y’’. See also: → second; → derivative. |
âzmun-e vâxane-ye dovom Fr.: test de la dérivée seconde A method, used in → calculus, for determining whether a given → stationary point of a → function is a → local minimum or → local maximum. See also: → second; → derivative; → test. |
borunkašid-e dovom Fr.: deuxième dragage A → dredge-up process that occurs after core helium burning, in which the convective envelope penetrates much more deeply, pushing hydrogen burning shell into close proximity with the helium burning shell (→ first dredge-up). This arrangement is unstable and leads to burning pulses. The reason is that the hydrogen shell burns out until there is enough helium for the helium combustion to occur and all the helium is rapidly burnt. Afterward the hydrogen shell again burns outward and the process repeats. |
setâre-ye âzâneš-e dovom Fr.: étoile de deuxième génération A star whose formation is induced by an older star itself formed previously in the same region. See also → stimulated star formation, → sequential star formation, → triggered star formation. See also: → second; → generation; → star. |
qânun-e dovom-e mekânik-e siyah-câl Fr.: deuxième loi de la mécanique des trous noirs The surface area of a black hole’s horizon can never decrease. See also: → second; → law; → black hole; → mechanics. |
qânun-e dovom-e garmâtavânik Fr.: deuxième loi de la thermodynamique
See also: → second; → law; |
kuântomeš-e dovom Fr.: deuxième quantification In quantum mechanics, the quantization of the field that replaces potential in Newtonian mechanics, whereby the field variables become operators from which the creation (of particle) operators and destruction operators can be constructed. See also: → second; → quantization. |
guyik-e râye-ye dovom Fr.: logique du seconde ordre An n extension of → first-order logic that quantifies not only → variables that range over → individuals, but also quantifies over → relations. |
dovomân Fr.: secondaire
See also: Etymology (EN): From → second + -ary a
suffix occurring on adjectives (elementary; honorary; stationary) and Etymology (PE): Dovomân, from dovom, → second. |
javv-e dovomân, havâsepehr-e ~ Fr.: atmosphère secondaire An atmosphere of a planet that forms after primordial gases had been See also: → secondary; → atmosphere. |
jesm-e dovomân Fr.: corps secondaire A body that revolves around a more massive body
under the → gravitational attraction of the latter The less massive component in a → binary system. |
kabizande-ye dovomân Fr.: calibrateur secondaire An indicator of extragalactic distances that relies
on → primary calibrators in our Galaxy. See also: → secondary; → calibrator. |
pil-e dovomân Fr.: An electric cell that can be charged by passing a current through it in reverse direction to its discharge. Same as → accumulator. See also → primary cell. |
partowhâ-ye keyhâni-ye dovomân Fr.: rayons cosmiques secondaires A burst of secondary charged and neutral particles arising when
→ primary cosmic rays
collide with the atmospheric oxygen or nitrogen nuclei
in the upper atmosphere. The |
lâvak-e dovomân, kandâl-e ~ Fr.: cratère secondaire |
gereft-e dovomân Fr.: éclipse secondaire Of a transiting → exoplanet, the event and the interval of time during which the planet passes behind its host star. → primary eclipse. |
elektronhâ-ye dovomân Fr.: électrons secondaires Electrons ejected from the atoms of a material when bombarded with high energy electrons. Secondary electrons are produced when an incident electron excites an electron in the material and loses some of its energy in the process. The excited electron moves toward the surface of the sample undergoing elastic and inelastic collisions until it reaches the surface, where it can escape if it still has sufficient energy. The secondary electron yield depends on many factors, and is generally higher for high atomic number targets, and at higher angles of incidence. |
gosil-e dovomân Fr.: émission secondaire The emission of → secondary electrons from the surface of a material when an incident particle (often, charged particle such as electron or ion) impacts the material with sufficient energy. |
âyene-ye dovomân Fr.: miroir secondaire The second reflecting surface in a → reflecting telescope. It directs the light either out a side opening of the tube (→ Newtonian telescope) or back toward a → focal point behind and through the → primary mirror (→ Cassegrain telescope). The secondary is usually suspended in the beam and therefore obstructs part of the primary. |
rangin-kamân-e dovomân Fr.: arc-en-ciel secondaire A fainter rainbow appearing about 10° above the → primary rainbow, as viewed by the observer. The secondary rainbow is about twice as wide, and has its colors reversed. |
setâre-ye dovomân Fr.: étoile secondaire In a → binary system, the star that revolves around the more massive → primary component. |
râz (#) Fr.: secret
Etymology (EN): From L. secretus “set apart, withdrawn; hidden, concealed,” p.p. of secernere “to set apart, part, divide; exclude,” from se- “without, apart,” properly “on one’s own” + cernere “to separate,” → crisis. Etymology (PE): Râz, from Mid.Pers. râz “secret, mystery;” cognate with Mod.Pers. rastan/rah- “to escape, be liberated;” O.Pers. (+*aua-) avarad- “to leave, abandon;” cf. Skt. rah- “to be lost, be lonely,” rahas- “loneliness, privacy; a secret, mystery” (Cheung 2007). |
dabirxâné (#) Fr.: secrétariat The officials or office entrusted with administrative duties, maintaining records, and overseeing or performing secretarial duties, especially for an international organization (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): From Fr. secrétariat, from M.L. secretariatus, from secretarius, → secretary. Etymology (PE): Dabirxâné, literally “house of secretaries,” from dabir, → secretary, + xâné, → house. |
dabir (#) Fr.: secrétaire A person, usually an official, who is in charge of the records, correspondence, minutes of meetings, and related affairs of an organization, company, association, etc. (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. secretarie “one trusted with private or secret matters; confidant,” from
M.L. secretarius “confidential officer, confidant, clerk, notary,” Etymology (PE): Dabir, from Mid.Pers. dipîr, contraction of dipîvar (Mid.Pers. dip, dīp “document;” dīb “letter”); from O.Pers., from Proto-Ir. *dipī-uara- “he who preserves the documents;” cf. O.Pers. dipī- “inscription” + *Huar- “to cover;” cf. Av. vār- “to cover, hide, protect.” |
dabir-harvain Fr.: secrétaire général |
sekanj (#) Fr.: section A part that is cut off or separated. Etymology (EN): From M.Fr. section, from L. sectionem “a cutting, division,” from secare “to cut;” PIE base *sek- “cut” (cf. O.C.S. seko, sesti “to cut,” Lith. isekti “to engrave, carve;” O.S. segasna, O.E. sigðe “scythe;” O.E. secg “sword,” seax “knife, short sword”). Etymology (PE): Sekanj “a scraping, shaving, |
1) diryâz; 2) a), b) giyâné, giyâni; c) giyânbâvar Fr.: 1) séculaire; 2) laïc 1a) General: Going on from age to age; continuing through long ages. 1b) Astro.: Gradual or taking place over a long period.
→ secular acceleration;
→ secular change. 2a) (adj.) Worldly or material rather than spiritual. Etymology (EN): Secular from O.Fr. seculer, from L.L. sæcularis “of an age, occurring once in an age,” from sæculum “age, span of time, generation, the spirit of the age.” Etymology (PE): 1) Diryâz “long lasting, from dir “slowly, tardily;
late” (Mid.Pers. dêr, variants dagr, drâz “long;”
(Mod.Pers. derâz “long,” variant Laki, Kurdi
|
birâheš-e diryâz Fr.: aberration séculaire The smallest component of the aberration of starlight which is caused by the motion of the solar system through space. → annual aberration; → diurnal aberration. See also: → secular; → aberration. |
šetâb-e diryâz Fr.: accélération séculaire The apparent gradual increase in the → Moon’s motion in its orbit, as measured relative to → mean solar time. Secular acceleration corresponds to an extremely gradual reduction in the speed of the → Earth’s rotation. The slow-down of the Earth’s spin comes mainly from → tidal frictions from the Moon. Historically, Edmond Halley (1656-1742) was the first to suggest that the Moon’s mean rate of motion relative to the stars was gradually increasing. In 1693, Halley compared eclipses of recent, medieval, and classical Babylonian time, and discovered that the Moon’s mean motion had been gradually increasing. Using Lunar Laser Ranging measurement, based on laser reflectors left by the Apollo astronauts on the Moon’s surface (1969 to 1972), the secular acceleration is derived to be -25".4 ± 0".1 century 2 (Xu Huaguan et al., 1996, in Earth, Moon and Planets 73, 101). This corresponds to a linear increase of about 3.5 cm yr-1 in the mean Earth-Moon distance. See also: → secular; → acceleration. |
degaršod-e diryâz, degareš-e ~ Fr.: changement séculaire A continuous, non-periodic change in one of the attributes of the states of a system. Often, a change in an orbit due to dissipation of energy. See also → canonical change. |
nâpâydâri-ye diryâz Fr.: instabilité séculaire Instability caused by a slow dissipation of energy. See also: → secular; → instability. |
didgašt-e diryâz Fr.: parallaxe séculaire |
partureš-e diryâz Fr.: perturbation séculaire A variation of planetary orbital elements which is always in the same direction as time increases. See also: → secular; → perturbation. |
pâydâri-ye diryâz Fr.: stabilité séculaire |
tarm-e diryâz Fr.: terme séculaire In perturbation theory used in celestial mechanics, a steadily increasing disturbance. → periodic term. |
varteš-e diryâz Fr.: variation séculaire Same as → secular perturbation. |
giyânbâvari Fr.: laïcité The view that religious considerations should be excluded from civil affairs or public education. See also: → secular. |
giyâneš Fr.: laïcisation The process of organizing society or aspects of social life around non-religious values or principles. See also: Verbal noun of secularize “giyânidan” ( |
1) zilé; 2) zilidan Fr.: 1) sécurisé, en sécurité, sûr; 2) obtenir, fixer, attacher
Etymology (EN): From L. securus “free from care, quiet, easy,” also “careless, reckless;” of things, “free from danger, safe,” from *se cura, from se “without, free from,” + cura, → care. Etymology (PE): Zilé, from Tabari zil, zilé “firm, fixed,” zil hâkerdan “to fix, fasten,” of unknown origin. |
zilegi Fr.: sécurité |
sazkard bâ SED Fr.: ajustement par distribution de l'énergie spectrale A technique that uses → spectral energy distribution results from models to reproduce observational data. See also: → spectral energy distribution; → fitting. |
nehešt (#) Fr.: sédiment Mineral or organic material which has been transported and deposited by an agent of erosion such as water, wind, and ice. Etymology (EN): From Fr. sédiment, from L. sedimentum “a settling, sinking down,” from stem of sedere “to settle, sit” Etymology (PE): Nehešt past stem of neheštan “to place, deposit,” from
ne- “down, below,” → ni- (PIE), +
heštan “to place, put” from Mid.Pers.
hištan, hilidan “to let, set, leave, abandon;” Parthian Mid.Pers.
hyrz; O.Pers. hard- “to send forth,” ava.hard- “to abandon;” |
nehešti (#) Fr.: sédimentaire Of, pertaining to, or of the nature of sediment. See also: Adj. of → sediment. |
sang-e nehešti Fr.: roche sédimentaire A rock composed of materials that were transported to their present position by wind or water. → Sandstone, → shale, and → limestone are sedimentary rocks. See also: → sedimentary; → rock. |
Sednâ (#) Fr.: Sedna A trans-Neptunian object (numbered 90377) and a likely → dwarf planet, it is the most distant large object yet found orbiting the Sun. It is at present over 90 A.U.s away, 3 times as far as Pluto. Its precise diameter is unknown, probably 1,600-2,200 km (about 12-17% of Earth). Its estimated orbital period is 12,050 years. Formerly known as 2003 VB12 See also: In Inuit mythology, Sedna (Inuktitut Sanna) is a goddess of the marine animals, especially mammals such as seals. |
fâz-e Sedov-Taylor Fr.: phase de Sedov-Taylor The second phase in the evolution of a
→ supernova remnant (SNR)
occurring after the → free expansion phase.
After the passage of the → reverse shock,
the interior of the SNR is so hot that the energy
losses by radiation are very small (all atoms are → ionized, See also: After Sedov, L. (1959, Similarity and Dimensional Methods in Mechanics, New York, Academic Press) and Taylor, G. I. (1950, Proc. Roy. Soc. London, A, 201, 159 and 175); → phase. |
didan (#) Fr.: voir To perceive with the eyes; look at. Etymology (EN): M.E. seen, from O.E. seon “to see, look, behold, understand, know,” ultimately from PIE *sekw- “to see, notice;” cognate with Du. zien “to see,” Ger. sehen “to see,” Danish, Swedish and Norwegian Bokmal se “to see,” L. signum “mark, token.” Etymology (PE): Didan “to see, regard, catch sight of, contemplate, experience;” Mid.Pers. ditan; O.Pers. dī- “to see;” Av. dā(y)- “to see,” didāti “sees;” cf. Skt. dhī- “to perceive, think, ponder; thought, reflection, meditation,” dādhye; Gk. dedorka “have seen.” |
oskar-e Seebeck Fr.: effet de Seebeck An → electromotive force produced in a closed electric circuit formed by connecting conductors of different metals in series when the two junctions junctions are maintained at different temperatures. The circuit constitutes a → thermocouple. See also: Named for the German physicist Thomas Seebeck (1770-1831), who discovered the effect; → effect. |
toxm (#) Fr.: germe A small single crystal of a semiconductor from which is grown the large single crystal for the manufacture of semiconductor devices. Etymology (EN): O.E. sed, sæd; cf. O.N. sað, O.S. sad, O.Fris. sed, M.Du. saet, O.H.G. sat, Ger. Saat; PIE base *se- “to sow.” Etymology (PE): Toxm “seed” (Tabari tim “seed; race,” Laki tôm “seed”), from Mid.Pers. tôhm, tôhmak, tôm, tuxm “seed; extraction; descent;” Av. taoxman- “seed;” O.Pers. taumī:- “family;” cf. Skt. tókman- “offspring, children, race, child,” tokma- “young shoot, young blade of corn.” |
haste-ye toxm Fr.: noyau germe A nucleus from which a variety of → fusion → chain reactions derive in → stellar nucleosynthesis. |
šekân Fr.: seeing A measure of the blurring and degradation of the image of astronomical objects caused by → turbulence in the Earth’s atmosphere, including the telescope environment. Seeing causes the images of stars to break up into → speckle patterns, which change very rapidly with time. See also → Fried parameter; → differential image motion monitor. Etymology (EN): → see; → -ing. Etymology (PE): Šekân “wrinkle, plait; curl; rupture, breach,” variant of
šekan “fold, curl; ripples on water,” from šekastan
“to break, split;” Mid.Pers. škastan “to break;”
Av. scind-, scand “to break, cleave;” |
gerde-ye šekân, disk-e ~ Fr.: tache de seeing The angular size of a stellar image for long exposures, as determined by the
ratio λ/r0, where λ is the wavelength and r0
the typical size of → turbulence patches.
→ Fried parameter. |
pahregar-e šekân Fr.: moniteur de seeing An optical instrument that follows the variation of → atmospheric turbulence by continuously measuring the → seeing conditions. |
borank Fr.: segment
Etymology (EN): From L. segmentum “a strip or piece cut off,” originally a geometric term, from secare “to cut” + -mentum “-ment.” Etymology (PE): Borank, from Kermâni borang “a slice (of fruit);”
Borujerdi boleng “piece, section,” ultimately from *brin-ka-
(probable contracted forms Lari peng and pengi “portion or part of anything”),
related to boridan “to cut off;” Mid.Pers. brīn-, blyn-,
britan, brinitan “to cut off,” Av. brī- “to shave, shear,” brin-
(with prefix pairi-); |
âyen-ye borankidé Fr.: miroir segmenté A large telescope mirror consisting of smaller mirror segments designed to act as a single, larger reflecting surface. Because current monolithic mirrors cannot be constructed larger than about eight meters in diameter, the use of segmented mirrors is a key component for larger aperture telescopes. |
savâyidan Fr.: séparer, isoler To separate or set apart from others or from the main body or group; isolate. Etymology (EN): From M.E. segregat, from L. segregatus, p.p. of segregare “separate from the flock, isolate, divide,” from se- “apart from” + greg-, ablative of grex, gregis “herd, flock, crowd,” cf. Gk. gergera “swarm, flock;” maybe related to Old Khotanese -gris- in hamgris- “to assemble.” Etymology (PE): Savâyidan, from savâ “separate, apart;” probably related to |
savâyeš Fr.: ségrégation The act or practice of segregating. The state or condition of being segregated. → mass segregation. See also: Verbal noun of → segregate. |
larze-yi (#) Fr.: sismique Of, subject to, or caused by → vibrations of the → Earth. → seismic wave. |
mowj-e laez-yi (#) Fr.: onde sismique An → elastic wave generated in the
→ Earth by an → impulse
such as an → earthquake or an |
larzé- (#) Fr.: sismo- A combining form meaning “earthquake;” → seismology, → seismograph, etc. Etymology (EN): From Gk. seismo- combining form of seismos “shock, earthquake,” from seiein “to shake.” Etymology (PE): Larzé-, from larzé “shaking, trembling,” from larzidan “to tremble, shiver;” Mid.Pers. larzidan “to shake, tremble;” Manichean Mid.Pers. rarz- “to shiver with fever;” Proto-Iranian *rarz- “to shake, tremble.” |
larzenegâr (#) Fr.: sismographe, séismographe An instrument that detects, magnifies, and records → seismic waves, especially those caused by → earthquakes or → explosions. |
larzešenâsi (#) Fr.: sismologie, séismologie |
perzâné Fr.: rarement |
gozidan (#) Fr.: sélectionner, choisir To choose from among several. Etymology (EN): From L. selectus, p.p. of seligere “to choose out, gather apart,” from se- “apart” + legere “to gather, select.” Etymology (PE): Gozidan “to select, choose;” Mid.Pers. vicitan, wizidan, wizin- “to choose, select, discriminate,” related to cin-, cidan “to gather, collect;” Av. vicidāi- “to discern,” viciθa- “separation, discernment;” from vi- “apart, away from” (O.Pers. viy- “apart, away;” cf. Skt. vi- “apart, asunder, away, out;” L. vitare “to avoid, turn aside”)
|
razan-e gozineš Fr.: règle de sélection Any of a set of rules specifying the relationships between the
→ quantum numbers that characterize the initial and final states of a
quantum-mechanical system in a → discrete transition.
Transitions that do not agree with the selection rules are called
→ forbidden and have
considerably lower probability. There are several types of selection rules
(→ rigorous selection rule, |
daršam-e gozineši Fr.: absorption sélective Absorption which varies with the wavelength of radiation incident upon an absorbing substance. Etymology (EN): Selective, verbal noun of → select; |
parâkaneš-e gozineši Fr.: diffusion sélective A type of scattering that occurs when certain → particles are more effective at scattering a particular → wavelength of light, as in → Rayleigh scattering. See also: → selective; → scattering. |
mâhgereft-e ofoqi Fr.: selenelion Same as → horizontal eclipse. Etymology (EN): From Gk. selene “Moon,” related to sela “light, brightness, flame,”
Etymology (PE): → horizontal eclipse. |
mâhgereft-e ofoqi Fr.: selenelion Same as → horizontal eclipse. Etymology (EN): From Fr. selenelion, contraction of → selenehelion. Etymology (PE): → horizontal eclipse. |
mâh-markazi Fr.: sélénocentrique |
pâyâ-ye gerâneši-ye mâh-markazi Fr.: constante gravitationnelle sélénocentrique A parameter representing the product of the → gravitational constant by the → lunar mass. It is 49.03 x 1011 m3 s-2. See also: → selenocentric; → gravitational; → constant. |
mâh-negâri (#) Fr.: sélénographie |
xod- (#) Fr.: auto- A combining form of self with a range of related meanings. Etymology (EN): From M.E., from O.E. self, seolf, sylf “one’s own person, same;” cf. O.Fris. self, Du. zelf, O.H.G. selb, Ger. selbst. Etymology (PE): Xod-, from xod; Mid.Pers. xwad “self; indeed;” |
xod-daršam Fr.: auto-absorption The decrease in the radiation from a material caused by the absorption of a part of the radiation by the material itself. See also: → self-; → absorption. |
xod-âgâhi, xištan-âgâhi Fr.: connaissance de soi The → state or → condition of being aware of one’s own → personality or → individuality. |
xod-gerânandé Fr.: auto-gravitant |
xod-gerâni Fr.: auto-gravité The → gravitational attraction of a system of masses, such of a
planet, that allows the system to be held together by their mutual gravity. |
xod-darhâzandegi Fr.: auto-inductance The inductance associated with an isolated electric circuit that is characteristic of the circuit’s physical design. See also: → self-; → inductance. |
xod-darhâzeš Fr.: auto-induction |
gerde-ye xod-pardé, disk-e ~ Fr.: disque auto-écranté A model of → accretion disk around a
→ pre-main sequence star or
a → protostar in which the outer parts of the disk are
geometrically flat, in contrast to a → flared disk.
Inward of a certain radius (0.5-1 AU from the star)
the dust in the disk evaporates. Because the dust is the
main source of opacity and the gas in the disk is usually optically thin,
the irradiation burns a hole in the disk. Moreover, the inner rim puffs up,
similarly to the case of flared disks. The difference lies in the outer parts.
The inner rim casts its shadow
over the disk all the way out. Since the disk thickness is almost constant, no
photons can reach the surface of the disk and the outer parts of the disk remain
shadowed by the inner rim and the midplane temperatures decrease accordingly.
This model explains the observed Etymology (EN): → self-; → shadow; → disk. Etymology (PE): Gerdé, → disk; xod-, → self-; pardé, → screen. |
xod-separkard Fr.: auto-écrantage The phenomenon whereby the → photodissociation |
xod-hamânad Fr.: auto-similaire
|
farâravand-e xod-hamânad Fr.: processus auto-similaire |
xod-hamânadi Fr.: auto-similarité The property of being → self-similar. See also: → self-; → similarity. |
hamugeš-e Sellmeier Fr.: équation de Sellmeier An empirical relation between the → refractive index of a medium and the wavelength of light passing through the medium: n2 - 1 = Σ (Aiλ2/(λ2
where n is the refractive index at wavelength λ, and Ai and λi are constants. See also: Named after Wolfgang Sellmeier who derived the equation in 1871; |
cemârik Fr.: sémantique
Etymology (EN): From Fr. sémantique, from Gk. semantikos “significant,” from semainein “to show, signify, indicate by a sign,” from sema “sign.” Etymology (PE): Cemârik, from cemâr, → meaning, + -ik, → -ic. |
cemârik Fr.: sémantique The study of the → meaning of signs or symbols, as opposed to their formal relations (→ syntactics). |
šosar (#) Fr.: sperme, semence Biology: The male reproductive fluid, containing spermatozoa in suspension. → inseminate, → insemination; → fecundate, → fecundation. Etymology (EN): M.E., from L. semen “seed;” akin to serere “to sow;” cf. O.C.S. seme, O.H.G. samo; E. sow. Etymology (PE): From Mid.Pers. šusar “semen; liquid, fluid;” Av. xšudra- “semen; liquid, fluid;” related to Pers. šostan/šuy- “to → wash.” |
nim- (#), nimé- (#) Fr.: semi-, demi- A combining form meaning “half,” freely prefixed to English words of any origin. Etymology (EN): From L. semi- “half,” from PIE *semi-; cf. Skt. sāmi “half,” sāmi-krita- “half-done;” Gk. hemi- “half;” O.E. sam-; Goth. sami- “half.” Etymology (PE): Nim, nimé “half,” from Mid.Pers. nêm, nêmag “half;” |
xatt-e nime-bažkam Fr.: raie semi-interdite A → spectral line for which the upper and lower
→ energy levels have different values of
S, the total → spin angular momentum. These lines
violate the quantum mechanical → selection rule
under → LS coupling, ΔS = 0.
For example, the Ca I λ6573 line results from transition between the upper
→ triplet state (3P1) with a total |
gozareš-e nime-bažkam Fr.: transition semi-interdite An → atomic transition whose probability is reduced by a factor of the order of 106 because of → selection rules. Same as → interconnection line. See also: → semi-; → forbidden; → transition. |
âse-ye nime-mehin Fr.: demi grand axe |
nim-hâzâ, nime-rasânâ Fr.: semi-conducteur Any of various solid crystalline substances, such as germanium or silicon, which has conducting properties intermediate between metals and insulators. See also: → semi-; → conductor. |
juhe-ye nim-hâzâ Fr.: jonction semi-conducteur In a semiconductor device, a region of transition between semiconducting regions of different electrical properties. See also: → semiconductor; → junction. |
nim-hambaz Fr.: semi-convection An instability occurring in the region just outside the → convective core of a → massive star. The instability occurs when a → superadiabatic layer is stabilized by a chemical gradient. In fact, semiconvection takes place if → Schwarzschild’s criterion for convection is fulfilled but at the same time → Ledoux’s criterion is not fulfilled. The time-scale of semiconvection is the thermal time-scale, which is short compared to the nuclear time-scale in → main sequence stars but long compared to the time-scale of convection. However, semiconvection has a profound influence on the → post-main sequence star evolution. It affects the convective mixing above the hydrogen shell source, determines the appearance and extent of → blue loops in the → Hertzsprung-Russell diagram during core → helium burning, and is essential for defining the extent of the convective cores during core helium burning (See, e.g., N. Langer, 2012, Ann. Rev. Astron. Astrophys. 50, 107). See also: → semi-; → convection. |
dorin-e nim-jodâ Fr.: bianire semi-détachée A binary system whose secondary member fills its Roche lobe but whose primary member does not. Etymology (EN): → semi-; detached, p.p. of detach, from O.Fr. destachier (Fr. détacher), from des- “apart,”
Etymology (PE): Dorin, → binary; nim-jodâ, from nim-→ semi- + jodâ “separate,” from Mid.Pers. yut “separate, different;” Av. yuta- “separate, apart.” |
râšmân-e nim-jodâ Fr.: système semi-détaché Same as → semidetached binary. Etymology (EN): → semi-; detached, p.p. of detach, from O.Fr. destachier (Fr. détacher), from des- “apart,”
Etymology (PE): Râžmân, → system; nim-jodâ, from nim-→ semi- + jodâ “separate,” from Mid.Pers. yut “separate, different;” Av. yuta- “separate, apart.” |
nim-tarâmun Fr.: demi-diamètre |
nime-ârvini Fr.: semi-empirique Describing an → equation or → formula that results from a → combination of → experiment and → theory. |
disul-e nime-ârvini-ye kâruž-e bandeš Fr.: formule semi-empirique de l'énérgie de liaison Same as → Weizsacker formula. See also: → semiempirical; → binding; → energy; → formula. |
nim-târ-e râst Fr.: demi-latus rectum Half the → latus rectum. For an ellipse, semilatus rectum has the expression l = b2/a, where a and b are semi-major and minor axes of the ellipse. It can also be expressed in terms of → eccentricity, e, as: l = a(1 - e2). See also: → semi-; → latus rectum. |
nešânik Fr.: sémiotique |
nešânik Fr.: sémiotique The study of linguistic and non-linguistic signs and symbols used in natural and artificially constructed languages. Semiotics is usually divided into three branches:
|
vartande-ye nime-besâman Fr.: variable semirégulière A type of giant or supergiant pulsating variable star, with intermediate or
late spectra, showing noticeable periodicity in its light changes, accompanied or
sometimes interrupted by various irregularities. Periods lie in the
range from 20 to more than 2000 days, while the shapes of the light
curve may be rather different and variable with each cycle. The
amplitudes may be from several hundredths to several magnitudes
(usually 1-2 magnitudes in the V filter).
Examples are Betelgeuse, Antares, and Rasalgethi. |
mehtar (#) Fr.: 1) aîné; 2) supérieur; de dernière année
2a) Of higher or the highest rank or standing. 2b) (in American schools, colleges, and universities) Of or relating to students in their final year or to their class (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E., from L. senior “older,” comparative of senex (genitive
senis) “old,” from PIE root *sen- “old;” Etymology (PE): Mehtar “greater, elder, governor,” from meh “great, large, principla,” cognate with L. mas, → Big Bang, + comparative suffix -tar. |
hess-kard, hesseš Fr.: sensation |
1) hess; 2) hess kardan, hessidan Fr.: 1) sens; 2) sentir
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. sens, from L. sensus “perception, feeling, undertaking,” from sentire “perceive, feel, know.” Etymology (PE): Hess, loan from Ar. Hess kardan, hessidan infinitives from hess. |
hess-paziri Fr.: sensibilité |
hess-pazir, hessidani Fr.: sensible |
ofoq-e hess-pazir, ~ hessidani Fr.: horizon sensible |
hessmand Fr.: sensitif |
hessmandi Fr.: sensibilité
See also: State noun from → sensitive. |
hessgar Fr.: senseur A device that receives and responds to a signal or stimulus (light, temperature, radiation level, or the like) by transmitting to a control equipment with the required degree of accuracy. → wavefront sensor. |
sahân Fr.: 1) phrase; 2) sentence
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. sentence “judgment, decision; statement of authority,” from L. sententia “thought, opinion; judgment,” also “a thought expressed,” from sentientem, p.p. of sentire “be of opinion, feel, perceive.” Etymology (PE): Sahân, related to soxan, → speech and
pâsox, → response; Mid.Pers saxwan “speech, word;”
O.Pers. θanh- “to declare, say;”
Av. səngh- (sanh-) “to declare;” |
sahâni Fr.: phrastique |
guyik-e sahâni Fr.: logique des propositions, ~ phrastique Same as → propositional logic. See also: → sentential; → logic. |
1) jodâ (#); 2) jodâ kardan, jodidan Fr.: 1) séparé; 2) séparer
See also: → separation. |
jodâyi (#) Fr.: séparation General:
The act or process of separating. The place at which a division or parting occurs. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. separation, from L. separationem, from separare “to pull apart,” from se- “apart” + parare “make ready, prepare.” Etymology (PE): Jodâyi state noun of jodâ “separate,” from Mid.Pers. yut “separate, different;” Av. yuta- “separate, apart.” |
kâruž-e jodâyi Fr.: énergie de séparation The energy required to remove a particle (a proton or a neutron) from a particular atomic nucleus. See also: → separation; → energy. |
jodâgar Fr.: séparateur A person or thing that separates. → decimal point. |
jodâgar Fr.: séparatrice
Etymology (EN): From L. separatrix “she that separates,” → separation; -trix a suffix. Etymology (PE): Jodâgar, from jodâ “separate,” → separation,
|
peyâyé, rešté Fr.: 1) suite, séquence; 2) suite
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. sequence “answering verses,” from M.L. sequentia
“a following, a succession,” from L. sequentem (nominative sequens),
pr.p. of sequi “to follow;”
PIE base *sekw- “to follow;” cf. Pers. az from;
Mid.Pers. hac “from;” Etymology (PE): Peyâyé, literally “that follows; a subsequent event,” from pey
“after; step,” related to pâ “foot”
(Mid.Pers. pâd, pây, Av. pad-, Skt. pat,
Gk. pos, gen. podos, L. pes, gen. pedis,
P.Gmc. *fot, E. foot, Ger. Fuss, Fr. pied;
PIE *pod-/*ped-) +
ây- present stem of âmadan “to come, arrive, become” |
peyâye-yi Fr.: séquentiel Following in order of time or place. See also: Adj. from → sequence. |
diseš-e peyâye-yi-e setâré Fr.: formation séquentielle d'étoiles The formation of second-generation stars in a → molecular cloud, as triggered by the presence of → massive stars. The observation that some nearby → OB associations contain distinct, spatially separate subgroups of → OB stars in a sequence of monotonically changing age led Blaauw (1964, ARA&A 2, 213) to suggest that star formation in fact occurs in sequential bursts during the lifetimes of the corresponding molecular clouds. The first quantitative model of this mechanism was presented by Elmegreen and Lada (1977, ApJ 214, 725), who showed that the powerful ultraviolet photons of the massive star create an → ionization front which advances in the molecular cloud and is preceded by a → shock front. The compressed neutral gas lying between the ionization and shock fronts is gravitationally unstable and collapses in time-scales of a few million years to form a new generation of massive stars. The propagation of successive births of OB groups would produce a chain of associations presenting a gradient of age. Elmegreen and Lada estimated the propagation velocity to be 5 km s-1. For a region with a length larger than 100 pc, this would imply an age difference of the order of 20 million years between the extremities. See also → stimulated star formation, → triggered star formation; → collect and collapse model. See also: → sequential; → star formation. |
risvâr Fr.: 1) feuilleton, périodique; 2) en série, de série |
seri (#), rise (#) Fr.: série
Etymology (EN): From L. series “row, chain, series,” from serere “to join, link, bind together,” from PIE base *ser- “to line up, join.” Etymology (PE): Seri, loan from Fr., as above. |
padel Fr.: sérieux
Etymology (EN): From M.E., from O.Fr. serios “grave, earnest” and directly from Late L. seriosus, from L. serius “weighty, important, grave,” probably from a PIE root *swer- “slow, heavy;” cf. Lith. sveriu, sverti “to weigh, lift,” svarus “heavy, weighty;” O.E. swaer “heavy,” Ger. schwer “heavy,” Gothic swers “honored, esteemed,” literally “weighty”). Etymology (PE): Padel, from Balôci padel “serious,” of unknown origin. |
Mâr (#) Fr.: Serpent The Serpent.
An inconspicuous, irregular constellation situated on both sides of
→ Ophiuchus. The constellation is divided into two unequal
parts, originally called Serpens Caput
“Serpent’s Head” at 15h 30m right ascension, 15° north declination, and
Serpens Cauda “Serpent’s Body” at 18h 30m right ascension, 0° declination. The
brightest star, Alpha Serpentis, is of second magnitude. Etymology (EN): From L. serpens “snake,” from pr.p. of serpere “to creep,” from PIE *serp- “to crawl;” cf. Skt. sarp- “to creep, crawl,” sárpati “creeps,” sarpá- “serpent;” Gk. herpein “to creep,” herpeton “serpent;” Alb. garper “serpent.” Etymology (PE): Mâr “snake, serpent;” Mid.Pers. mâr “snake;” Av. mairya- “snake, serpent.” |
farâpâl-e Sérsic Fr.: profile de Sérsic A mathematical function that describes how the → intensity
I of a → galaxy varies
with distance R from its center.
It is given by:
(dln I/dln R) =
-(b/n)(R/Re)1/n. The constant b is
chosen such that Re is the → effective radius; See also: J. L. Sérsic, 1963, Boletin de la Asociacion Argentina de Astronomia, Vol. 6, p.41; → profile. |
zâvaridan Fr.: servir To render assistance; be of use. To have definite use. See also: Verbal form of service, → server. |
zâvar Fr.: serveur General: Something that serves or is used in serving. Etymology (EN): Server, agent noun from serve, from M.E. serven, from O.Fr. servir “to serve,” from L. servire “to serve,” originally “be a slave,” related to servus “slave;” cognate with Av. har- “to guard, watch,” harətar- “guardian,” hāra- “caring for;” Mid./Mod.Pers. zinhâr “protection, security; beware! mind!” Etymology (PE): Zâvar “attendant, servant” (Dehxodâ), zâvari “attendance, service” (Dehxodâ), maybe related to Skt. sev- “to attend upon, serve,” sevā- “service, attendance, worship,” sevati “serves, attends,” sevaka- “attendant, servant, follower.” |
zâvari, zâvareš (#) Fr.: service
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. servise, from L. servitium “slavery, servitude,”
from servus “slave,” servire “to serve,” originally “be a slave;” Etymology (PE): Zâvari “service” (Dehxodâ) → server. |
nepâheš bâ zâvari, ~ zâvareši Fr.: observation de service Observation approved by the selection committee of an observatory which is carried out by the staff astronomers of the observatory. See also: → service; → observation. |
1) hangard; 2) forušodan (#); 3) beštidan Fr.: 1) ensemble; 2) se coucher; 3) placer, poser, régler
3a) (tr.v.) To put (something or someone) in a particular place. 3b) To adjust a device to a desired position. Etymology (EN): 1) M.E. sette, from O.Fr. sette “sequence,” variant of secte,
from M.L. secta “religious group, sect,” from L. secta
“manner, following, school of thought,” literally
“something to follow, pathway, course of conduct, school of thought,” from
sectari “to pursue, accompany,”
“a way, road,” from sequi “to follow,” → sequence.
Etymology (PE): 1) Hangard, from Mid.Pers. hangart “whole, complete,”
hangartik “complete,” hangartênitan “to collect, assemble,” from
*hamkard- literally
“created, cut together,” from
han- variant of ham- “together,” cognate with
L.L. insimul
“at the same time,”
from in- intensive prefix + simul “together, at the same time”
(cf. Gk. homos “same,” Mod./Mid.Pers. (→ com-),
|
parkeš-e hangard Fr.: partition d'un ensemble A collection of → nonempty subsets of a set A such that every element of A is in exactly one of the subsets. In other words, A is the → disjoint → union of these subsets. |
negare-ye hangard Fr.: théorie des ensembles |
barbeštidan Fr.: installer To install and configure hardware and software on a computer. See also: Verb of → setup. |
1) forušod (#); 2) bešte Fr.: 1) coucher; 2) configuration, réglage
|
dâyerehâ-ye âmaj-giri Fr.: cercles de pointage Two graduated disks attached to the right ascension and declination axis of an equatorial mount used in amateur astronomy that help an observer find astronomical objects in the sky by their equatorial coordinates. Etymology (EN): M.E.; O.E. settan “cause to sit, put in some place, fix firmly” (cf. O.N. setja, O.Fris. setta, Du. zetten, Ger. setzen); → circle. Etymology (PE): Dâyeré, → circle; âmâj-giri
“taking aim,” from âmâj “aim, target,”
→ point + giri “taking” (vebal noun of
gereftan “to take, seize, hold;” Mid.Pers.
griftan, gir- “to take, hold, restrain;” O.Pers./Av. grab- “to take, seize,” |
1) niyâšândan; 2) niyâšidan Fr.: 1) stabiliser, régler, mettre en ordre, calmer; 2) se dépose, retomber, s'apaiser, s'installer
Etymology (EN): M.E. set(t)len, O.E. setlan “to place,” derivative of setl “a seat; stall; position, abode;” related to sittan “to sit,” from Proto-Germanic *setla- (cognates: Middle Low German, Middle Dutch setel, Dutch zetel, German Sessel, Gothic sitls), from PIE *sedla- (cognates: L. sella “seat, chair,” O.C.S. sedlo “saddle,” O.E. sadol “saddle”), from root *sed-. Etymology (PE): Niyâšidan, from Yidghda niâst- , Munji niôst- “to sit down;” Nâini âš-/âšis- “to become seated;” Baluci ništ, related to nešastan “to sit down,” → sit (see also → reside); ultimately from Proto-Ir. *had- “to sit, be setaed.” |
gerde-ye niyâšidé Fr.: disque stabilisé A → galactic disk that has undergone → disk settling. |
niyâšeš Fr.: stabilisation; dépose The act of a person or thing that settles. → disk settling, → dust settling. |
barbešt Fr.: installation
Etymology (PE): Barbešt, from prefix bar-, → on-. |
haft (#) Fr.: sept A → cardinal number between → six and → eight. Etymology (EN): From M.E. seoven(e), seofne, seven, O.E. seofon, cognate with M.Du. seven, Du. zeven, O.H.G. sibun, Ger. sieben, related to Pers. haft, as below, from PIE *septm “seven.” Etymology (PE): Haft, from Mid.Pers. haft, Av. hapta Skt. sapta, Gk. hepta, L. septem. |
šast-šasti (#) Fr.: sexagésimal Relating to, or based on, the number 60. Etymology (EN): From M.L. sexagesimalis, from L. sexagesimus “sixtieth,” from sexaginta “sixty.” Etymology (PE): Šast-šasti, from Šast, → sixty. |
râžmân-e šast-šasti Fr.: système sexagésimal A number system whose base is 60. It originated with the ancient Sumerians around 2000 B.C., was transmitted to the Babylonians, and is still used in modified form for measuring time, angles, and geographic coordinates. See also: → sexagesimal; → system. |
Šešakân Fr.: Sextant The Sextant. An inconspicuous constellation located on the celestial equator at 10h 20m, 0° declination. Its brightest star, Alpha Sextantis is of 4th magnitude. It was introduced in the 17th century by Johannes Hevelius (1611-1687). Abbreviation: Sex; genitive: Sextantis. See also: The name is L. for → sextant, an instrument that Hevelius made frequent use of in his observations. |
šešakân Fr.: sextant An instrument used mainly in nautical astronomy to determine the angular distances of celestial bodies above the horizon. The sextant consists of a 60° graduated arc, or limb, a small telescope, and two mirrors. Only half of one of the mirrors, the horizon glass, is silvered and, like the telescope, it is fastened to the frame supporting the limb. The other mirror, the index mirror, moves with an index arm pivoted at the center of the arc. The index arm is equipped with a → vernier which moves along the limb. An object in direction S can be observed in the telescope through the un-silvered portion of the horizon glass. By moving the index arm, the second object S’ is made to coincide with S in the telescope. According to the law of reflection, the angle between S and S’ is double the angle between the mirrors. The angular distance between the objects can therefore be obtained from the measurement of angles between the planes of the mirrors. Etymology (EN): From Mod.L. sextans, from L. sextans “a sixth,” from sex→ six. Etymology (PE): Šešakân, from šešak “a sixth,” from šeš, → six + -ak, contraction of yak “one,” (Mid.Pers. êwak; Proto-Iranian *aiua-ka-; O.Pers. aiva- “one, alone;” Av. aēuua- “one, alone” (cf. Skt. éka- “one, alone, single;” Gk. oios “alone, lonely;” L. unus “one;” E. one) + -ân nuance suffix. |
šeštâyé Fr.: sextet Any group or set of six. → Seyfert’s sextet. Etymology (EN): From Latinized sestet, from It. sestetto, diminutive of
sesto “sixth,” from L. sextus “sixth,” from sex, Etymology (PE): Šeštâyé, from šeš, → six,
|
šeštâyi Fr.: sextuplet |
kahkešân-e Seyfert Fr.: galaxie de Seyfert A member of an important class of → active galaxies See also: Named after Carl Keenan Seyfert (1911-1960), the American astronomer who first identified this type of galaxies in 1943; → galaxy. |
Šeštâye-ye Seyfert Fr.: Sextette de Seyfert A group of galaxies about 190 million → light-years away in See also: Discovered by the American astronomer Carl Keenan Seyfert (1911-1960) using photographic plates made at the Barnard Observatory of Vanderbilt University. → sextet. |
Sgr A* Fr.: Sgr A* The object identified as the Galactic → supermassive black hole. See also: → Sagittarius A (Sgr A). |
xuše-ye Sgr A* Fr.: amas Sgr A* |
Sh2-279 Fr.: Sh2-279 A large → H II region in the north part of → Orion’s Sword composed of reflection and emission components ( → reflection nebula, → emission nebula). It includes NGC 1977, NGC 1975, and NGC 1973, separated from each other by a → dark nebula which resembles a running man, as well as the → open cluster NGC 1981. NGC 1977, the designation some sources use to describe the entire complex, is the largest and brightest nebulous component first described by Herschel in 1786. The nebula is approximately 40 arcmin in apparent diameter, and 1,500 → light-years distant. See also: Nebula number 279 in the second edition of the → Sharpless catalog. |
hessgar-e pišân-e mowj-e Shack-Hartmann Fr.: analyseur de front d'onde An optical device, a modern version of the → Hartmann test,
used for analyzing the wavefront of light. Theses sensors can be
used to characterize the performance of optical systems. Moreover,
they are increasingly used in real-time applications, such as See also: Named after the German astronomer Johannes Hartmann (1865-1936), who
first developed the method, and R. V. Shack, who in the late 1960s replaced the |
sivân Fr.: ombre
Etymology (EN): M.E. schade; O.E. scead “partial darkness; shelter,” → shadow. Etymology (PE): Sivân, from Kurd. sayvân “shadow, shade,” variants si, sâ, sâyé, → shadow. |
sâyé (#) Fr.: ombre A dark patch formed by a body which obstructs rays of light. Etymology (EN): M.E. sch(e)adew(e), schadow, shadw(e), Etymology (PE): Sâyé “shadow,” from Mid.Pers. sâyak “shadow;” Av. a-saya-
“throwing no shadow;” Skt. chāya- “shadow;”
Gk. skia “shade;” Rus. sijat’ “to shine;” |
navârhâ-ye sâyé, bândhâ-ye ~ Fr.: ombres volantes |
maxrut-e sâyé Fr.: cône d'ombre |
ardavâl (#) Fr.: schiste, schiste argileux A fissile rock composed mostly of layers of clay-like, fine-grained → sediments. Shale is the most frequently occurring → sedimentary rock. Etymology (EN): Probably from obsolete or dialect shale “scale, shell,” from M.E., from O.E. scealu, → rock. Etymology (PE): Ardavâl “shale,” in the dialectal Mod.Pers. of Golpâyegân, Arâk, Xonsâr, etc. |
nažal Fr.: peu profond |
zâviye-ye nažal Fr.: angle faible Low angle, → grazing incidence. |
sâq (#), pâcé (#) Fr.: jambe, jarret The part of the → leg between the → knee and the → ankle in humans. Etymology (EN): O.E. sceanca “leg, shank, shinbone;” cf. Ger. schenkel “shank, leg,” Dan., Swed. skank “leg;” maybe somehow related to Pers. leng, → leg. Etymology (PE): Sâq “the leg from the ankle to the knee; the stem of a tree,” maybe a variant of šâx “a branch, bough; a horn,” or loan from Ar. |
dargâšt-e Shannon Fr.: entropie de Shannon See also: Claude Elwood Shannon (1916-2001), an American mathematician and pioneer of → information theory; → entropy. |
farbin-e nemunân-giri-ye Shannon Fr.: théorème d'échantillonnage de Shannon Same as → sampling theorem. See also: → Shannon entropy; → sampling; → theorem. |
šekl (#), dise (#) Fr.: forme |
derang-e Shapiro Fr.: effet Shapiro A → general relativity effect whereby an
→ electromagnetic signal passing near a massive
object takes, due to the curved → space-time, See also: Irwin I. Shapiro, an American astrophysicist; → time; → delay. |
dabzeš-e Shapley Fr.: concentration de Shapley Same as the → Shapley supercluster. See also: → Shapley’s wing; → concentration |
abarxuše-ye Shapley Fr.: superamas de Shapley The richest → supercluster of galaxies in the nearby
→ Universe at a → redshift going from z
~0.03 to z ~0.05 (680 million
→ light-years), and extending over several
square degrees on the plane of the sky. It lies behind the See also: → Shapley’s wing; → supercluster |
kâtâlog-e Shapely-Ames Fr.: catalogue de Shapely-Ames A catalog of 1,249 galaxies, brighter than the 13th magnitude, published in 1932. A revised version was published by A.R. Sandage and G. A. Tammann in 1981. See also: By the American astronomer Harlow Shapley (1885-1972) and the American woman astronomer Adelaide Ames (1900-1932), who died in a drowning accident; → catalog. |
Bâl-e Shapley Fr.: Bras de Shapley A large cloud of faint stars extending eastward from the → Small Magellanic Cloud to the → Large Magellanic Cloud. The wing is in fact the tail of a much larger → neutral hydrogen structure linking the SMC to the LMC. Models and observations suggest that the structure known as the → Magellanic Stream results from the Clouds’ interaction with each other and the Milky Way. Several works support the finding that the SMC wing is pointing toward the LMC, and is therefore closer to us than the SMC bar. See also: Named after the American astronomer Harlow Shapley (1885-1972), who discovered this structure (1940, Harvard Bull., 914, 8); → wing. |
cubdast-e sharafeddin Fr.: bâton de Sharafeddin See also: Named after the Iranian mathematician and astronomer Sharafeddin Tusi (c1135-1213), who invented the instrument. Not to be confused with Nasireddin Tusi (1201-1274), → Nasireddin couple; → staff. |
1) baš; 2) bašidan Fr.: 1) part; 2) partager 1a) The full or proper portion or part allotted or belonging to or
contributed or owed by an individual or group. 1b) One of the equal fractional parts into which the capital stock of a
joint-stock company or a corporation is divided. 2a) To divide and distribute in shares; apportion. 2b) To use, participate in, enjoy, receive, etc., jointly (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. scearu “a cutting, shearing; a part or division,” related to sceran “to cut;” O.H.G. scara “troop, share of forced labor,” Ger. Schar “troop, band,” properly “a part of an army,” O.N. skör “rim;” from PIE root *(s)ker- “to cut.” Etymology (PE): Bâš, from Kurd. (Sorani) baš “share, part;” variant of baxš “share, portion;” baxšidan “to divide,” → division; bâž “tribute, toll, impost,” → distribute. |
1) tiz; 2) tig Fr.: 1) tranchant, pointu; 2) net
Etymology (EN): M.E.; O.E. scearp “cutting, keen, sharp;” cf. Du. scherp, Ger. scharf “sharp;” PIE base *(s)ker- “to cut.” Etymology (PE): Tiz “sharp,” variants tež, tej, tij, tiq, tik, tig; |
vine-ye tig, tasvir-e ~ Fr.: image nette An image with clear and distinct details. Opposite of → blurred image. |
1) tiz kardan; 2) tigidan Fr.: 1) aiguiser; 2) rendre plus net
Etymology (EN): Verbal form of → sharp. Etymology (PE): Tigidan “to sharpen,” verbal form of tig→ sharp. |
kâtâlog-e Sharpless Fr.: catalogue de Sharpless A list of 313 individual → H II regions in the → northern → Milky Way (north of declination -27°). It includes several → planetary nebulae, → supernova remnants, and → reflection nebulae. The first edition (Sh-1) was published in 1953 with 142 objects and second and final version (Sh-2) was published in 1959. The catalog categorizes the H II regions in terms of several parameters, such as diameter, form (circular, elliptical, irregular), structure (amorphous/filamentary), brightness, and number of associated stars, which are further discussed in terms of their spectral classes. See also: Stewart Sharpless (1959) A Catalogue of H II Regions, ApJ Suppl. 4, 257; → catalog. |
Shulé (#) Fr.: Shaula, λ Scorpii The second brightest star in the constellation → Scorpius, lying at a distance of 570 → light-years. With → Lesath (Upsilon Scorpii) both stars make up the Scorpion’s stinger. Shaula is a → multiple star with three visible → components. The first one, Lambda Scorpii A, is classified as a B2 IV → subgiant. The 15th magnitude Lambda Scorpii B has a separation of 42 arcseconds from component A, while the 12th magnitude Lambda Scorpii C is 95 arcseconds from A. It is not known whether or not these components are physically associated with component A. The component A is actually a → triple system consisting of two → B-type stars and a → pre-main sequence star. See also: Shaula, from Ar. ash-shaulah ( |
setâre-ye SHB Fr.: étoile SHB Same as → supra-horizontal branch star. See also: → supra-; → horizontal; → branch; → star. |
1) karn; 2) karnidan Fr.: 1) cisaillement; 2) cisailler
Etymology (EN): M.E. sheren, O.E. sceran, scieran; Etymology (PE): 1) Karn, from Laki caré, Farâhâni carra, Tabari carci
“a scissors for cutting sheep wool,” cognate with Pers. kârd “knife; "
Mid.Pers. kârt “knife,” karēnītan, karītan “to cut;”
Av. karət- “to cut;” cf. Skt. kart- “to cut,”
krpāna- “sword, knife;” |
peymun-e karn Fr.: module de cisaillement |
âšubnâki-ye karni Fr.: turbulence de cisaillement A type of → instability occurring within a
→ fluid as a result of the → shear
caused by → differential rotation. See also: → shear; → turbulence. |
mowj-e karni Fr.: onde de cisaillement |
Sadr (#) Fr.: Shedir The brightest star in the constellation → Cassiopeia. It is a supergiant K0 III star with a visual magnitude of 2.23 at a distance of 230 light-years. It has a large luminosity, 855 times that of our Sun, and a notable size, 48 times that of the Sun. Its effective temperature is 4530 K. Name variants: Schedar, Shedar, and Schedir. Also known as HR 168 and HD 3712. See also: From Ar. as-sadr ( |
gusfand (#) Fr.: mouton A domesticated ruminant mammal with a thick woolly coat and (typically only in the male) curving horns. It is kept in flocks for its wool or meat (OxfordDictionaries.com). Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. sceap; related to O.Frisian skep, O.Saxon scap, O.H.G. scaf, Ger. Schaf. Etymology (PE): Gusfand, guspand, from Mid.Pers. gôspand “cattle in general,” especially “sheep, goats,” as distinguished from horses and cows, Av. gaospənta- “sanctified, consecrated cow,” from gao-, → cow,
|
pusté (#), pukel Fr.: coquille; couche
Etymology (EN): M.E.; from O.E. scell, sciell; cognate with Dutch schil “peel, skin,” O.Norse skel “shell,” from PIE root *(s)ker “to cut,” → bark. Etymology (PE): Pusté “shell,” from pust “skin;” Mid.Pers.
pôst “skin;” O.Pers. pavastā- “thin clay envelope used
to protect unbaked clay tablets;”
Av. pastô-, in pastô.fraθanhəm “of
the breadth of the skin;” Skt. pavásta- “cover,” Proto-Indo-Iranian
pauastā- “cloth.” |
suzeš-e pusté Fr.: combustion en couche The nuclear reactions in a shell around a star’s core that continue after the fuel in the core itself has been exhausted. As the fuel is progressively exhausted, the shell moves outward until it enters regions too cool for the reactions to continue. For example, after the exhaustion of hydrogen in the core, helium burning might take place in the core with a shell of hydrogen burning surrounding it. Stars may have more than one region of shell burning during their stellar evolution, each shell with its own nuclear reactions. → hydrogen shell burning; → helium shell burning. |
kahkešân-e pustedâr Fr.: galaxie en coquille An elliptical galaxy that is surrounded by thin shells of stars which are thought to have been ejected during a galaxy merger. Shell galaxies are different from ring galaxies in that the shells are much further away from the galaxy’s centre and much fainter than the rings. Spectroscopy of the stars in the shell show that they are old whereas the stars in a ring galaxy are young. |
setâre-ye pustedâr Fr.: étoile à enveloppe A main-sequence star, usually of spectral class B to F, whose
spectrum shows bright emission lines superimposed on the normal absorption lines.
The emission spectrum is explained by the presence of a
circumstellar shell of gas surrounding the star at the equator. |
carxeš-e puste-yi Fr.: rotation coquillaire A rotation mode in which internal rotation of a star depends essentially on Etymology (EN): Shellular, the structure of this term is not clear; it may be a combination of → shell (referring to star’s assumed division in differentially rotating concentric shells) + (circ)ular, → circular. The first bibliographic occurrence of shellular is seemingly in Ghosal & Spiegel (1991, On the Thermonuclear Convection: I. Shellular Instability, Geophys. Astrophys. Fluid Dyn. 61, 161). However, surprisingly the term appears only in the title, and nowhere in the body of the article; → rotation. Etymology (PE): Carxeš, → rotation; puste-yi, adj. of pusté, → shell. |
cupân (#), šabân (#) Fr.: berger A person who takes care of sheep; a pastor. → shepherd moon. Etymology (EN): From M.E. shepherde; O.E. sceaphierde, from sceap “sheep” + hierde “herder,” from heord “a herd;” cf. M.L.G., M.Du. schaphirde, M.H.G. schafhirte, Ger. dial. schafhirt. Etymology (PE): Cupân “shepherd,” variants šobân, šabân; Mid.Pers. šubân, from šu + -bân. The first component from Av. pasu-, fšu- “sheep;” Mid.Pers. pâh, pasvīk “cattle;” Laki and Tâti pas “sheep;” Kurd. pez/paz; Ossetain (Digor.) fus, (Iron.) fys; Zazaki pes “small cattle;” Lâri pah; Qasrâni cu; Sogd. psw “cattle, sheep;” cf. Skt. paśu- “cattle;”
L. pecu “flock, farm animals, cattle,” |
mâng-e cupân Fr.: satellites bergers A → natural satellite in orbit near the edge of a
→ planetary ring, whose
→ gravitational force on the ring particles
strongly controls the distribution of material within the ring,
creating ringlets and density waves within the ring and sharp edges
at ring boundaries. Examples include → Saturn’s
→ Prometheus and → Pandora,
which shepherd the narrow outer → F ring
and the → Uranus satellites
→ Cordelia and → Ophelia
and the epsilon ring. The faster-moving inside satellite accelerates the
inner ring particles as it passes them, causing them to spiral out to |
separ (#) Fr.: bouclier, écran
Etymology (EN): M.E. shelde, from Etymology (PE): Separ “shield,” from Mid.Pers. spar “shield;” cf. Skt. phalaka-
“board, lath, leaf, shield,” phálati “(he) splits;”
Gk. aspalon “skin, hide,”
spolas “flayed skin,” sphalassein “to cleave, to disrupt;” |
oskar-e separ Fr.: effet d'écran The decrease in attraction between an electron and the nucleus in any atom with more than one → electron shell. The repulsion forces from other electrons in shells cause the net force on electrons in outer shells to be significantly smaller in magnitude. Also known as → screening effect. |
kib Fr.: décalage A change in place or position, in particular Etymology (EN): Shift, M.E., from O.E. sciftan “to divide, arrange”; akin to O.N. skipa “to arrange, assign.” Etymology (PE): Kib “shift” from kibidan “to shift, displace, turn on one side,” kibidé “displaced, turned on one side.” |
dorošt-ney Fr.: tibia |
1) tâbidan; 2) tâb, foruq Fr.: 1) briller; 2) éclat
Etymology (EN): M.E. s(c)hinen (v.); O.E. scinan “shed light, be radiant;” cf. Etymology (PE): Tâbidan, tâb, → radiate; foruq, → gegenschein. |
toš, šok Fr.: choc A sharp change in the properties of a gas (density, pressure, temperature). Etymology (EN): Shock “sudden blow,” from M.Fr. choc “violent attack,” from O.Fr. choquer “to strike against, clash;” cf. Du. schokken “to shake, jolt, jerk.” Etymology (PE): Toš, from Tabari toš “violent blow,” batoštən
“to strike suddenly,” Kurd. tuš “collision,” maybe related to
Pers. tuš “strength, vigor;”
Av. təviši- “strength,” tavah- “power;”
O.Pers. tauman- “power, strength,” tunuvant- “powerful,”
from tav- “to have power, to be strong, to be able”
(related to tavân “power, strength,” tavânestan “to be powerful,
able;” variants tâv, tâb “power”); cf. |
borunzani-ye šok, ~ toš Fr.: émergence de l'onde de choc A burst of very bright → ultraviolet or
→ soft X-ray radiation expected to occur
in → core-collapse supernovae at the instant when the
→ supernova shock breaks out of the stellar surface.
During the collapse of the progenitor → massive star, Etymology (EN): → shock; breakout “a forceful escape from being confined or restrained,” from break, from M.E. breken, O.E. brecan (cf. Du. breken, O.H.G. brehhan, Ger. brechen), from PIE base *bhreg- “to break” (see also → fraction) + → out. Etymology (PE): Borunzani “emergence, evasion,” from borun, → out,
|
almâs-e toš Fr.: diamant de choc Any of a series of rings/disks that are formed in a jet flow exhausting a → nozzle when there is a huge difference between the exit pressure and the ambient pressure. At sea level, the exhaust pressure might be lower than the thick atmosphere. In contrast, at very high altitudes, the exhaust pressure might be higher than the thin atmosphere. Shock diamonds can appear just as a rocket is taking off, or at high altitudes when it shifts into → supersonic speed. Shock diamonds are also known as Mach diamonds, → Mach disks, Mach rings, doughnut tails, or thrust diamonds. |
pišân-e toš, ~ šok Fr.: front de choc The boundary over which the physical conditions undergo an abrupt change because of a → shock wave. |
mowj-e toš, ~ šok Fr.: onde de choc A narrow region of abrupt, nearly discontinuous change in the physical characteristics of a medium in which the flow of a fluid changes from subsonic to supersonic. Across a shock wave there is always an extremely rapid rise in pressure, temperature, and density of the fluid. |
kuârtz-e tošidé, ~ šokidé Fr.: quartz choqué A form of quartz that has a deformed microscopic structure caused by intense pressure which alters the crystalline structure of quartz along planes inside the crystal. It was first discovered after underground nuclear bomb testing. It is found worldwide at the boundary between Cretaceous and Tertiary rocks. This is further evidence (in addition to iridium enrichment) that the transition between the two geological eras was caused by a large meteorite impact. |
šahâb (#) Fr.: étoile filante |
kutâh (#) Fr.: court
Etymology (EN): M.E. schort; O.E. sceort; cf. O.N. skorta “to be short of,” skort “shortness;” O.H.G. scurz “short.” Etymology (PE): Kutâh “short,” related to kucak “small,” kudak “child, infant;” Mid.Pers. kôtâh “low,” kôtak “small, young; baby;” Av. kutaka- “little, small.” |
gardrâhband Fr.: court-circuit A relatively low → resistance contact, usually accidental, between two points of an → electric circuit with initially different → potential. A short circuit brings about a flow of excess → electric current that can damage the circuit and present a danger for the user. Etymology (EN): → short; → circuit. Etymology (PE): Gardrâhband, literally “link, bind, bond in circuit,” from gardrâh, → circuit, + band, → band. |
dombâledâr-e kutâh-dowré Fr.: comète à courte période A comet with a period less than 200 years. Same as → periodic comet. |
vartande-ye kutâh-dowré Fr.: variable à courte période |
kambud (#) Fr.: pénurie
Etymology (EN): From → short + suffix -age. Etymology (PE): Kambud, from kam “little, few, deficient, scarce” + bud, from budan, → exist. |
nufe-ye Schottky Fr.: effet Schottky Same as → Schottky noise; → shot noise. See also: Translation of Ger. Schroteffekt, from Schrot “small shot, buckshot”
|
nufe-ye Schottky Fr.: bruit de grenaille Same as → Schottky noise and → shot effect. Etymology (EN): → shot effect. Etymology (PE): → Schottky noise. |
duš (#), soft (#) Fr.: épaule The upper joint of each of a person’s → arms and the part of the → body between this and the → neck. Etymology (EN): M.E. schuldre, sholder, shulder, schulder, from O.E. sculdra, sculdor, akin to Du. schouder, Ger. Schulter. Etymology (PE): Duš “shoulder;” Mid.Pers. dôš “shoulder;”
Av. daoš- “shoulder;” cf. Skt. dós- “shoulder.” |
šâné (#), ketf (#) Fr.: omoplate |
ragbâr, tondbâr (#) Fr.: 1) averse; 2) gerbe
Etymology (EN): M.E. shour; O.E. scur “short fall of rain, fall of missiles or blows;” cf. O.N. skur, O.S., O.H.G. scur, Ger. Schauer. Etymology (PE): Ragbâr “cloudburst,” from rag “cloudburst; thunder,”
→ rain + bâr “raining, rain,” from bâridan, |
šahâb-e bârâni, ~ ragbâri Fr.: météore de la pluie, ~ ~ l'averse A → meteor that is part of a group moving in the same orbit around the Sun. → meteor shower. |
bastâr (#) Fr.: obturateur
Etymology (EN): Shutter, from shut (v.), from O.E. scyttan from W.Gmc. *skutjanan + → -er. Etymology (PE): Bastâr, from bast, past tense stem of bastan
|
râžmân-e SI Fr.: système international |
yekâhâ-ye SI Fr.: Système International A coherent and rationalized system of units, in common use in physics since 1969. The seven basic units are the → meter, the → kilogram, the → second, the → ampere, the → kelvin, the → mole, and the → candela. Same as international system of units. See also: SI, from Fr. Système Internationale d’unités; → unit. |
barxâ, hamšir (#) Fr.: enfant de mêmes parents A person’s brother or sister. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. sibling “relative, kinsman,” from sibb “kinship, relationship; love, friendship,” cf. O.Saxon sibba, M.Du. sibbe, O.H.G. sippa, Ger. Sippe “kin, related,” Icelandic sifi “related.” Etymology (PE): Barxâ, from bar- first syllable of barâdar,
→ brother, + xâ-, short for
xâhar (xwâhar), → sister. |
dâs (#) Fr.: faucille
Etymology (EN): M.E. sikel, O.E. sicol; cf. Du. sikkel, Ger. Sichel, ultimately from L. secula “sickle,” from PIE root *sek- “to cut,” → section. Etymology (PE): Das “sickle,” Mid.Pers. dâs “sickle;” variant dahre, → scythe; Wakhi δətr, Parachi dêš “sickle;” ultimately from Proto-Iranian *dāθra-; cf. Skt. dātra- “sickle, scythe.” |
Dâs-e Šir Fr.: Faucille du Lion |
bar (#), pahku (#), kenâr (#) Fr.: côté
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. side “flanks of a person, the long part of anything;” cf. O.S. sida, O.N. sitha, M.Du. side, O.H.G. sita, Ger. Seite. Etymology (PE): Bar “side; breadth; breast,”
variant var; Mid.Pers. var “breast;”
Av. vouru “wide, broad, extended” (vourucašāni- “looking far”),
related to varah- “breast;” cf. Skt. urú- “wide, broad,”
úras- “breast;” Gk. eurus “wide, broad;”
PIE base uer-, ueru-s “wide, broad.” |
lap-e kenâri Fr.: lobe secondaire
|
bând-e kenâri, kenâr-bând Fr.: bande latérale Either of the two bands of frequencies, one just above (upper side) and one just below (lower side) a carrier frequency, that result from modulation of a carrier wave. Etymology (EN): → side; → band. Etymology (PE): Bând, → band; kenâr “side,” variant karân “edge, limit;” Mid.Pers. karân, karânak, kenâr “edge, limit, boundary;” Av. karana- “side, boundary, end.” |
axtari (#) Fr.: sidéral Of, relating to, or determined by or from stars. Etymology (EN): From M.Fr. sidereal, from L. sidereus “starry, astral,” from sidus (genitive sideris) “star, constellation.” Etymology (PE): Axtari, pertaining to axtar “star,” probably a variant of setâré→ star. |
ruz-e axtari (#) Fr.: jour sidéral The period of → Earth’s rotation around its axis, the mean value of which is about 23h 56m 04.092s (23.934 470 hours). In other words, the interval between two successive passages of a star across a given → meridian. The sidereal day is 3 minutes 56 seconds shorter than the → mean solar day. The reason is that Earth moves a little less than a degree around the Sun during the time it takes for one full axial rotation. So, for the Sun to appear on the same meridian in the sky again after one full axial rotation, the Earth has to rotate one extra degree to bring the Sun into the same apparent meridian in the sky. This is also why the stars rise and set about 4 min earlier each day. |
zâviye-ye sâ'ati-ye axtari (#) Fr.: angle horaire The angle on the celestial sphere measured westward from the hour circle of the vernal equinox to that of the celestial body. See also: → sidereal; → hour angle. |
mâh-e axtari (#) Fr.: mois sidéral The time taken by the Moon to complete one → revolution around the Earth with respect to a background, → fixed star. The average time is 27.321 661 days (27d 7h 43m 11.5s). Same as → lunar sidereal orbital period. |
dowre-ye axtari (#) Fr.: période sidérale |
dowre-ye gardeš-e axtari (#) Fr.: période de révolution sidérale The time taken by a planet or satellite to complete one revolution about its primary with respect to stars. For Earth, same as → sidereal year. Sidereal periods of the solar system planets, interms of the sidereal year, are as follows: Mercury 0.240846 (87.9691 days); Venus 0.615 (225 days); Earth 1 (365.25636 solar days); Mars 1.881; Jupiter 11.86; Satrurn 29.46; Uranus 84.01; and Neptune 164.8. That of the Moon is 0.0748 (27.32 days) and for → Sedna 12050. See also: → sidereal; → revolution; → period. |
dowre-ye carxeš-e axtari Fr.: période de rotation sidérale The rotation period of a celestial body with respect to fixed stars. For Earth, same as → sidereal day. |
zamân-e axtari (#) Fr.: temps sidéral The time based upon → Earth’s rotation with respect to the stars, with the → sidereal day as the unit of measurement. At the moment when the → vernal equinox crosses the → meridian in → upper culmination, sidereal time is equal to zero hours for that observing position. The → hour angle of the vernal equinox is equal to sidereal time. |
sâl-e axtari (#) Fr.: année sidérale The interval between two successive passages of the Sun, in its apparent
→ annual motion around the
→ celestial sphere, through a particular point relative to
stars. It is equal to 365.256356 days for the J2000.0 epoch |
siderit (#) Fr.: sidérite
|
âhan-, sidero- Fr.: sidéro A combining form meaning “iron,” used in the formation of compound words; variant sider- before a vowel. Etymology (EN): From Gk. sideros “iron.” Etymology (PE): Âhan-, from âhan, → iron. |
siderolit (#) Fr.: sidérolithe, sidérolite The category of → meteorites commonly referred to as → stony-irons. The three classes of siderolites are → lodranites, → mesosiderites, and → pallasites. See also: From Gk. sidero-, from sideros “iron” + -lite a combining form used in the names of minerals. |
âhandust, siderodust Fr.: sidérophile |
bonpâr-e âhandust Fr.: élément sidérophile In the → Goldschmidt classification,
any → chemical element that has an
→ affinity See also: → siderophile; → element. |
axtardâštâr Fr.: sidérostat A mirror arrangement with clock drive that reflects light from a celestial body to a fixed position. → coelostat; → heliostat. Etymology (EN): From L. sidero-, from sidus (genitive sideris) “star, constellation”
Etymology (PE): Axtardâštâr, from axtar, → star, +
dâštâr “holder, maintainer,” from dâštan
“to hold, maintain; to have; to possess;” Mid.Pers. dâštan;
O.Pers./Av. dar- “to hold, keep back, maintain, keep in mind;” cf. |
siemens (#) Fr.: siemens The SI unit of electrical conductance, equal to the reciprocal of the ohm and replacing the equivalent MKS unit. See also: Named for the German electrical engineer Werner von Siemens (1816-1892). |
qarbâl-e Eratosthenes (#) Fr.: crible d'Eratosthène A classical method of finding all → prime numbers up to
any given number n. Etymology (EN): M.E. sive, O.E. sife “sieve;” cf. M.Du. seve, Du. zeef, O.H.G. sib, Ger. Sieb, of unknown origin. Related to sift. Etymology (PE): Qarbâl (variants qarbil, qarbir, qelber, qalbur, gerbâl), probably related to the PIE base *krei- “to sieve, separate;” cf. Gk. krinein “to separate, decide, judge,” krisis “decision;” L. cribrum “sieve” (Fr. crible), cernere “to sift, separate;” O.E. hriddel “sieve;” O.Ir. criathar; O.Welsh cruitr “sieve.” Pers. qarbâl loaned in Ar. as gharbala “to sift,” itself loaned in It. garbellare; M.Fr. garbeler “to sift;” E. garble “to sift impurities from.” |
sievert (#) Fr.: sievert The SI unit for the dose equivalent of ionizing radiation. One sievert represents a dosage of 1 → joule per kg of tissue, absorbed from the ionizing radiation. The effect of radiation depends on its total amount of energy, the type of radiation, and the energy levels of particular particles. The dose equivalent in sieverts of radiation is the product of the absorbed dose in → gray (Gy)s and a dimensionless numeric factor, called the quality factor or relative biological effectiveness, dependent on the type of radiation. The sievert has replaced the → rem as the unit of dose equivalent. 1 rem = 10-2 Sv. See also: The unit honors the Swedish physicist Rolf Sievert (1898-1966), who worked over many years to measure and standardize the radiation doses used in cancer treatment. |
did (#) Fr.: visée The act or fact of seeing; field of vision. → line of sight. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. gesiht, gesihð “thing seen;” cf. Dan. sigte, Swed. sigt, M.Du. sicht, Du. zicht, O.H.G. siht, Ger. Sicht, Gesicht, related to → sign. Etymology (PE): Did “sight, vision,” past stem of didan
“to see” (Mid.Pers.
ditan “to see, regard, catch sight of, contemplate, experience;” O.Pers.
dī- “to see;” Av. dā(y)- “to see,” didāti “sees;” cf. |
did-xatt Fr.: ligne de visée |
nešân, nešâné (#) Fr.: signe
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. signe “sign, mark, signature,” from L. signum “mark, token, indication, symbol,” from PIE base *sekw- “to see.” Etymology (PE): Nešân “sign, mark,” from Mid.Pers. nišân “sign, mark, omen,” nišitan “to gaze, stare, look into,” niš in marv.niš “taking omen, foretelling, or divining from birds,” nišak “clear, evident,” from Proto-Iranian *niiaš- “to show,” from *ni- “down, below,” → ni- (PIE), + *iaš- “to show, appear;” cf. Armenian loanword niš “sign, mark, spot,” loaned also in Syriac as nyš “sign” (Cheung 2007). |
borj (#) Fr.: signe du zodiaque One of the 12 constellations (in fact 13) making up the → zodiac. Etymology (EN): → sign; → zodiac. Etymology (PE): Borj originally “tower,” most probably |
nešâl Fr.: signal
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. signal, from M.L. signale “a signal,” from L.L. signalis (adj.) “used as a signal, pertaining to a sign,” from L. signum “signal, sign.” Etymology (PE): Nešâl, from neš- base of nešân meaning → sign + -âl, → -al. |
vâbar-e nešâl-bé-nufé Fr.: rapport signal sur bruit |
nešânzad Fr.: signature
Etymology (EN): M.Fr. signature, from M.L. signatura “sign,” in classical L. “the matrix of a seal,” from signatus, p.p. of signare “to mark, sign,” → sign. Etymology (PE): Nešânzad, literally “striking a mark, sign” (cf. angošt zadan “fingerprint”), from nešân, → sign, + zad past stem of zadan “to strike, beat; to do; to play an instrument” (Mid.Pers. zatan, žatan; O.Pers./Av. jan-, gan- “to strike, hit, smite, kill” (jantar- “smiter”); cf. Skt. han- “to strike, beat” (hantar- “smiter, killer”); Gk. theinein “to strike;” L. fendere “to strike, push;” Gmc. *gundjo “war, battle;” PIE *gwhen- “to strike, kill”). |
nešânâri Fr.: significativité
Etymology (EN): From L. significantia “meaning, force, energy,” from significans, present participle of significare, → signify. Etymology (PE): Nešânâri, noun from nešânâr, → significant. |
tarâz-e nešânâri Fr.: niveau de significativité The level of → Type I error which one is willing to risk in a → test of significance. Also called level of significance. See also: → significance; → level. |
âzmun-e nešanâri Fr.: test de significativité Statistics: A procedure that is used to decide whether to accept or reject the → null hypothesis or to determine whether observed samples differ significantly from expected results. Also called → test of significance and → rule of decision. See also: → significance; → test. |
nešânâr Fr.: significatif
Etymology (EN): From L. significant-, stem of significans, from significare, “to → signify.” Etymology (PE): Nešânâr, from nešân, → sign, + âr short form of âvar present stem of âvardan “to bring, adduce, cause, produce.” |
raqam-e nešânâr Fr.: chiffre significatif The number of digits used to express a measured or calculated quantity.
Rules for deciding the number of significant digits: The leftmost digit which is not a zero is the most significant digit. If the number does not have a decimal point, the rightmost digit which is not a zero is
the least significant digit. If the number does have a decimal point, the rightmost significant digit is the
least significant digit, even if it’s a zero. Every digit between the least and most significant digits should be counted as a significant digit. See also: → significant; → digit. |
nešânâreš Fr.: signification
See also: Verbal noun of → signify. |
nešânârdan Fr.: signifier To make known; to be a sign of; to → mean. → significance, → significant, → signification. Etymology (EN): M.E. signifien, from O.Fr. signifier, from L. significare Etymology (PE): Nešânâridan, from nešânâr, → significant,
|
bidengi (#) Fr.: silence
See also: Noun from → silent. |
bideng (#) Fr.: silencieux
Etymology (EN): From L. silentem (nominative silens) “still, calm, quiet,” p.p. of silere “to be quiet or still,” of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Bideng, from Kurd. (Kurmanji) bêdeng, bêdêng, Kurd. (Sorani)
bedang, from bi- “without,” → a-, +
deng “sound, voice,” variants dong, dang, bâng, |
sileks (#), âtašzané (#), caxmâq (#) Fr.: silex |
gerde-ye siyah-rox, disk-e ~ Fr.: disque silhouette A dark disk seen in absorption against the bright nebular background. → proplyd. Etymology (EN): From Fr. silhouette, in allusion to Étienne de Silhouette (1709-67), Fr. controller general of finances in 1759; perhaps from his ephemeral tenure; → disk. Etymology (PE): Gerdé, → disk; siyah-rox, from
siyah, → black, + rox, variant of |
silis (#) Fr.: silice A widely found mineral of silicon dioxide SiO2, which is used as an ore
of → silicon. It is See also: From L. silic- stem of → silex “hard stone, flint, boulder.” |
silikât (#) Fr.: silicate A common rock-forming → mineral belonging to a group formed from → silicon and → oxygen combined with various elements and classified by their crystalline structures. SiO4 in the shape of a tetrahedron is the main component of the group. It has been estimated that about 95% of the Earth’s crust is made up of silicate minerals. A salt of → silicic acid. |
silisik (#) Fr.: silicique |
asid silisik (#) Fr.: acide silicique |
silisiom (#) Fr.: silicium A non-metallic chemical element; symbol Si. Atomic number 14; atomic weight 28.0855; melting point 1,410°C; boiling point 2,355°C; specific gravity 2.33 at 25°C. It occurs in a combined state in minerals and rocks and constituting more than one fourth of the earth’s crust. Etymology (EN): From silic(a), from L. silex (genitive silicis) “flint, pebble” + -on, as in carbon and boron. Etymology (PE): Silisiom, from Fr. silicium, from silic(a), as above,
|
suzeš-e silisiom Fr.: combustion du silicium The → nucleosynthetic process taking place in the interior of → massive stars whereby → silicon is transmuted into iron, nickel, and neighboring nuclei collectively called the → iron peak elements. |
abrišam (#) Fr.: soie The soft, lustrous fiber obtained as a filament from the cocoon of the silkworm (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. seolc, sioluc, from L. sericum “silk garment, silk,” from neuter of sericus “silken,” from Gk. serikos, from Seres, an eastern Asian people, probably the Chinese (cf. Chinese si “silk”, Manchurian sirghe, Mongolian sirkek). Etymology (PE): Abrišam “silk,” from Mid.Pers. abrešom
“silk,” ultimately from Proto-Ir. *au-uris-, from *uris- “to turn, spin;” cf. |
mirâyi-ye Silk Fr.: amortissement de Silk The smoothing of primordial → density fluctuations
at high frequencies caused by photon → diffusion. Before the
→ decoupling era, photons and
→ baryons were tightly coupled to each other by See also: Joseph Silk (1942-); → damping. |
noqré (#) Fr.: argent A metallic → chemical element; Silver is generated in stars through a special rapid process of → neutron captures. This process defers from the main → r-process, the main and weak → s-process, and charged particle freeze-outs. In other words, during a → supernova explosion, silver is formed in a different → fusion process from the one that forms → gold (Hansen et al., 2012, A&A 545, A31). Etymology (EN): M.E. silver(e), selver(e), selfer;
O.E. seolfor “silver;” cf. O.S. silvbar, O.N. silfr,
M.Du. silver, Du. zilver, O.H.G. sillabar, Ger. silber,
Goth. silubr, akin to Serbo-Croatian srebro,
Rus. serebo, Lith. sidabras “silver.” L. argentum “silver, white money,” from PIE *arg-ent-, from PIE *arg- “to be bright, shine;” cf. Av. ərəzata- “silver,” auruša- “white” (Mid.Pers. arus “white, bright”); O.Pers. ardata- “silver;” Mod.Pers. arziz “silvery metal tin;” Skt. arjuna- “white, shining,” rajata- “silver;” Gk. argos “white,” arguron “silver;” Arm. arcat; Hittite harki- “white.” Etymology (PE): Noqré from Sogdian nâkartak “uncoined (silver),” literally
“undone,” from nâ- negation prefix “not, no”
(Mid.Pers. ne, O.Pers. naiy,
Av. na-, (particle of negation noit), Skt. na-, (ned),
Gk. né- “not,” L. ne-, in-, un-, PIE *ne-) + kartak
“done,” p.p. of kardan “to do, to make;” |
SIMBAD Fr.: SIMBAD A large on-line astronomical database, developed at the Centre de Données
astronomiques de Strasbourg, → CDS in See also: SIMBAD, short for Set of Identifications, Measurements, and Bibliography for Astronomical Data. |
hamânand (#) Fr.: similaire
Etymology (EN): From Fr. similaire, from L. similis “like,” → simulate. Etymology (PE): Hamânand, contraction of hammânand, from ham-, → com-, + mânand “resembling, like,” → simulate. |
mâtrishâ-ye hamânand (#) Fr.: matrices similaires Two → square matrices A and B that are related by B = X-1AX, where X is a square → nonsingular matrix. |
candbarhâ-ye hamânand Fr.: polygone similaires |
hamânandi (#) Fr.: similarité |
tarâdiseš-e hamânandi Fr.: transformation de similarité
See also: → similarity; → transformation. |
sâdé (#) Fr.: simple
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. simple, from L. simplus “simple, single,” variant of simplex, from PIE root *sem- “one, together;” cf. Pers. ham “together,” → com-, Skt. sam “together;” + *plac- “-fold,” from PIE *plek- “to plait,” → multiply. Etymology (PE): Sâdé “simple, unmixed, smooth, erased, plain;” cf. Khotanese sāta- “smooth;” |
ruydâd-e sâdé Fr.: événement simple Statistics: An event consisting of a single point of the → sample space. |
barxe-ye sâdé Fr.: fraction simple A fraction in which the → numerator and → denominator are positive → integer numbers. Compare → compound fraction. |
jonbeš-e hamâhang-e sâdé Fr.: mouvement harmonique The motion of a body subjected to a restraining force which is directly proportional to the displacement from a fixed point in the line of motion. The equation of simple harmonic motion is given by x = A sin(ωt + θ0), where x is the body’s displacement from equilibrium position, A is the → amplitude, or the magnitude of harmonic oscillations, ω is the → angular frequency, t is the time elapsed, and θ0 is the → initial phase angle. |
navešgar-e hamâhang-e sâdé Fr.: oscillateur harmonique simple An oscillator whose force is proportional to its extension, according to → Hooke’s law. The way the oscillator moves is called → simple harmonic motion. See also: → simple; → harmonic; → oscillator. |
porineš-e sâdé Fr.: population simple A set of stars resulting from a spatially (≤ few pc) and temporally (≤ Myr) correlated star formation event. See also: → simple; → population. |
riše-ye sâdé Fr.: racine simple A → rootx0 of function f(x), if f(x0) = 0 and df/dx | x0 = 0. See also → double root. |
taktâft Fr.: simplexe A generalization of the simplest closed configuration that can be made from straight line segments. For example, a → triangle is a 2-simplex because it is in two → dimensions, and → tetrahedron is a 3-simplex because it is in three dimensions (Steven Schwartzman, An Etymological Dictionary of Mathematical Terms Used in English, 1994). Etymology (EN): Simplex, literally “uncomplicated, → simple,” from sim-, from PIE root *sem- “one, once, together” + plek- “to fold.” “folded [only] once.” Etymology (PE): Taktâft, literally “folded once,” from tak “→ single, alone,” + tâft, contraction of tâfté “plated, twisted, fold,” as in hamtâft, → complex. |
raveš-e taktâfti Fr.: méthode du simplexe An → algorithm for solving the classical → linear programming problem; developed by George B. Dantzig in 1947. The simplex method is an → iterative method, solving a system of → linear equations in each of its steps, and stopping when either the → optimum is reached, or the solution proves infeasible. The basic method remained pretty much the same over the years, though there were many refinements targeted at improving performance (e.g. using sparse matrix techniques), numerical accuracy and stability, as well as solving special classes of problems, such as mixed-integer programming (Free On-Line Dictionary of Computing, FOLDOC). |
sâde-kard, sâde-šod Fr.: simplification The act of simplifying, or the fact of being simplified. See also: Verbal noun of → simplify. |
sâdé kardan (#) Fr.: simplifier
|
simulâkrâ Fr.: simulacres Minute images or replicas of objects supposed by ancient atomist philosophers to be
shed from any object and used in the explanation of vision. According to
Democritus (c. 460-c. 370 BC) and Epicurus (341-270 BC), these replicas or
effigies, called eidola, were perpetually peeled off See also: L. translation of eidola by Lucretius (1st Century BC), from L. simulacrum “likeness, image,” from simulare “to → simulate.” |
mânandidan, hamânand sâxtan Fr.: simuler To create a likeness or model of something (a situation, system, or the like). Etymology (EN): M.E., from L. simulatus, p.p. of simulare
“to imitate,” from stem of similis “like;” cognate with Pers. ham
“together, with; same, equally, even” (Mid.Pers. ham-, like L. com-
and Gk. syn- with neither of which it is cognate. O.Pers./Av.
ham-, Skt. sam-; also O.Pers./Av. hama-
“one and the same,” Skt. sama-, Gk. homos-; Etymology (PE): Mânadidan verb from mânand “resembling, like,” variant mânestan “to resemble;” Mid.Pers. mânag “like, resembling;” Av. man- “to resemble;” hamânad sâxtan, from hamânand, from ham-, as above, + mânad + sâxtan “to make, build.” |
mânandeš, hamânand sâzi Fr.: simulation The construction of a mathematical model to reproduce the characteristics of a phenomenon, system, or process, often using a computer, in order to infer information or solve problems. See also: Verbal noun of → simulate. |
hamzamâni (#) Fr.: simultanéité The property of events occurring → simultaneously. See also: Noun from → simultaneous; → -ity. |
hamzamân (#) Fr.: simultané
Etymology (EN): From L.L. simultaneus, from L. simul “at the same time” + -taneous, abstracted from → spontaneous. Etymology (PE): Hamzamân, from ham-, → syn- + zamân, → time. |
sinus (#) Fr.: sinus In trigonometry, the function of an acute angle of a right triangle represented by the ratio of the opposite side to the hypotenuse. Etymology (EN): Greek mathematicians were not aware of the advantages of sine and instead used chord.
The invention of this function is a great Indian contribution. It seems that Aryabhata (c. AD 500)
was the first who coined a term in Skt. for this concept: árdha-jiyā-
“half chord,” which was later shortened to
jiyā- “chord.” This Skt. word was subsequently loaned in Ar. and corrupted to
jayb ( Etymology (PE): Sinus loanword from Fr., as above. |
mowj-e sinusi (#) Fr.: onde sinusoïdale |
tak, taktâ Fr.: seul, isolé Only one in number; one only; unique; sole. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. sengle “being one, separate,” from L. singulus “one, individual, separate,” from sim- (stem of simplus) + diminutive suffix, → -ule. Etymology (PE): Tak“single, alone,” related to tâq “odd, single,” |
parâkaneš-e tak Fr.: diffusion unique, ~ simple A type of scattering where photons are scattered only once. Single scattering dominates in → optically thin media, since photons have a high probability of exiting the medium (e.g., a thin cloud) before being scattered again. See also: → single; → scattering. |
nepâhešè-e tak-jâm Fr.: observation avec antenne uinique A radio astronomical observation which uses only one antenna, in contrast to interferometric observations. See also: → single; → dish; → observation. |
dorin-e tak-xatté Fr.: binaire à une seule raie A → spectroscopic binary in which only one set of → spectral lines is detectable. The binary nature of the system is deduced from the fact that the spectral lines exhibit periodic → Doppler shifts due to orbital motions in the system. Same as → SB1 binary. See also: → double-lined binary. |
taktâyé Fr.: singulet A single unit; an unpaired or separate item. → doublet; → octet; → quadruplet. Etymology (EN): From → single + -et diminutive suffix, M.E. from O.F. -et (masc.), -ette (fem.). Etymology (PE): Taktâyé, literally “single-folded,” from tak, → single, + -tâyé, from tâ- “fold, plait, ply; piece, part;” Mid.Pers. tâg “piece, part” + -yé nuance suffix. |
hâlat-e taktâyé Fr.: état singulet In atomic physics, the electronic state of an atom or molecule for which the total → spin angular momentum is zero. |
atom-e yekbâr yonidé Fr.: atome une fois ionisé |
Fr.: carbone une fois ionié A carbon atom → singly ionized by a photon of energy 11.3 eV. The ion C+ emits a → fine-structure line (2P3/2→ 2P1/2) at 157.7 μm when excitation conditions are satisfied (critical density ~ 3 x 103 cm-3). In → photodissociation regions, [C II] 157.7 μm is a major cooling line for regions exposed to significant → far ultraviolet (FUV) photon fluxes. In Galactic → H II regions, as well as in the central regions of external galaxies, the luminosity of the [C II] line is typically ~ 0.05-0.5% of the FUV luminosity and correlates well with → carbon monoxide (CO) line intensities. |
takin (#) Fr.: singulier Math.: 1) Of or pertaining to a linear transformation from a vector space
to itself that is not one-to-one.
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. singuler “single, separate,” from L. singularis “single, solitary,” from singulus “one, individual, separate,” from sim- (stem of simplus) + diminutive suffix. Etymology (PE): Takin, from tak “single, alone,” related to tâq “odd, single,”
|
kore-ye izodamâ-ye takin Fr.: sphère isotherme singulère In models of star formation, an isothermal sphere in which the density distribution in the static or nearly static outer envelope obeys an r-2 power law. In the limit of infinite central concentration, the unstable equilibrium approaches the singular isothermal sphere which has the density and mass distributions ρ(r) = (a2/2πG)r-2 and M(r) = (2a2/G)r, where a is the isothermal → sound speed inside the cloud, G is the → gravitational constant, and r the distance from the center (F. H. Shu, 1977, ApJ 214, 488). See also: → singular; → isothermal; → sphere. |
mâtris-e takin Fr.: matrice singulière A → square matrix that does not have a → matrix inverse. |
noqte-ye takin Fr.: point singulier The point M0(x0,y0) of the curve F(x,y) = 0, where at least one of the → partial derivatives ∂F/∂x and ∂F/∂y vanishes. See also → ordinary point. |
luyeš-e takin Fr.: solution singulière, ~ particulière Of partial differential equations, the solution which cannot be obtained from the general solution by particular choice of arbitrary functions. → general solution; → particular solution. |
takini (#) Fr.: singularité
|
câhak (#) Fr.: puits
Etymology (EN): M.E. sinken, O.E. sincan, from verb; cf. O.S. sinkan, O.N. sökkva, M.Du. sinken, Du. zinken, O.H.G. sinkan, Ger. sinken, Goth. sigqan “to sink.” Etymology (PE): Câhak, from câh “a well” (Mid.Pers. câh “a well;” Av. cāt-
“a well,” from kan- “to dig,” uskən- “to dig out;” |
zarre-ye câhak Fr.: particule puits In hydrodynamics codes, a way of treating a collapsing or accreting region, such as a star, as a simple → point mass. Indeed, in many situations, the scale of interest is much larger than the scale of the → accreting object itself and it would be impossible to perform the calculation otherwise. → Sinks are generally modeled as → Lagrangian particles (see, e.g., Bates et al. 1995, MNRAS 277, 362; Krumholz et al. 2004, ApJ 611, 399; Federrath et al. 2010, ApJ 713, 269). |
Sinopé (#) Fr.: Sinopé The outermost of Jupiter’s known confirmed satellites, also known as Jupiter IX, discovered by Seth B. Nicholson (1891-1963) in 1914. With a visual magnitude of 18.3, it has a diameter of 28 km and orbits Jupiter at a mean distance of 23,848,000 km every 753 days. See also: In Gk. mythology a Naias Nymphe who was abducted by Zeus to a Black Sea
coast where the city of Sinope
was named for her. According to most sources, she tricked Zeus |
sinusi (#) Fr.: sinusoïdal |
1) cašelidan; 2) cašel Fr.: 1) siroter, boire à petite gorgées; 2) gorgée
Etymology (EN): M.E. sippen (v.), akin to Low German sippen “to sip.” Etymology (PE): Cašel, from Pashto cašəl “to drink,” caceq “to drip;” related to cašidan “to taste,” → taste. |
sifon (#) Fr.: siphon A ∩-shaped tube with unequal arms that is used to move a liquid from one level to a lower level via a third level higher than either. Once the short arm is filled, for example, by suction, the liquid flows down in the long arm under the action of gravity due to mass excess in it. See also: From Fr. siphon, from L. sipho (genitive siphonis), from Gk. siphon “pipe, tube,” of unknown origin. |
Tištar (#) Fr.: Sirius The white star in the constellation → Canis Major that is the brightest star of the sky (V = -1.46). Its other designations include HD 48915, HR 2491, and BD-16°1591. Its particular brightness is mostly due to its proximity to the Earth, being a mere 8.6 → light-years away, the fifth closest star system. Sirius is a → dwarf star of → spectral type A0 or A1 V with an → effective temperature of 9,880 K, a mass of 2.063 ± 0.023 Msun (Bond et al., 2017, ApJ 840, 70), and a → luminosity of 26 Lsun. Sirius has a radius of 1.75 solar and a minimum equatorial rotation speed of 16 km s-1. Its → rotation period is less than 5.5 days. This star is a → visual binary (separation 4.6 arcsec, period 50 years), the companion → Sirius B being the first → white dwarf to be discovered. Sirius is a → metal-rich star, its iron content triple that of the Sun, most likely from some sort of → element diffusion. Etymology (EN): From L. Sirius, from Gk. Seirios, literally “scorching,” because of its brightness. Etymology (PE): Tištar, from Mid.Pers. Tištar, from Av. Tištrya- “(name of the deified star) Sirius,” literally “the one who belongs to the three stars,” in reference to the three stars of → Orion’s Belt; ultimately from PIE *tri-str-o-m- “group of three stars,” then *tri-str-iia- and by dissimulation Indo-Iranian *ti-str-iia-, Av. *Tištriia- and Vedic Skt. Tisyà (A. Panaino, in Iranica, under Tištrya). |
Tištar B Fr.: Sirius B Same as → companion of Sirius. See also: → Sirius; B, letter of alphabet by convention. |
Ra's-ol-Mosalsale (#) Fr.: Sirrah Same as → Alpheratz. Etymology (EN): Sirah, contraction of Ar. As-Surrat al-Faras ( Etymology (PE): Ra’s-ol-Mosalsalé, from Ar. Ar-Ra’s al-Mar’ah al-Musalsalah “The head of the chained woman,” from Ra’s “head” + Mar’ah “woman” + Musalsalah “chained”. |
âmizgar-e SIS Fr.: mélangeur SIS In a → superheterodyne receiver, a → mixer which consists of a sandwich structure of two superconducting leads separated by a thin isolator. SIS mixers give a good noise performance especially for → millimeter wavelengths. See also: SIS, acronym for Superconductor-Insulator-Superconductor; → mixer. |
xâhar (#) Fr.: sœur A female person having the same parents as another person. Etymology (EN): M.E. suster, sister, from O.E. sweostor, swuster or Old Norse systir, in either case ultimately from PIE *swesor; cf. Skt. svásar-, Av. xvaηnhar-, Pers. xâhar, xwâhar, as below, Gk. eor, L. soror (Fr. sœur), O.C.S., Rus. sestra, O.Ir. siur, Sw. syster, Dan. soster, O.Sax. swestar, M.Du. suster, Du. zuster, O.H.G. swester, Ger. Schwester. Etymology (PE): Xâhar, xwâhar, from Mid.Pers. xwah(ar) “sister;” Av. xvaηnhar- “sister;” cf. Khotanese hvar- “sister;” cognate with E. sister, as above. |
nešastan (#) Fr.: s'asseoir
Etymology (PE): Nešastan “to sit down; to settle down; to sink;”
Mid.Pers. nišastan “to sit;” O.Pers. nišādayam
[1 sg.impf.caus.act.] “to sit down, to establish,” hadiš- “abode;”
Av. nišasiiā [1 sg.subj.acr.] “I shall sit down,”
from nihad- “to sit down,” from → ni-
“down; into” + had- “to sit;” PIE base *sed- “to sit;”
cf. Skt. sad- “to sit,” sidati “sits;” |
sit Fr.: site The position or location of a building, observatory, etc. especially as to its environment. → astronomical site. Etymology (EN): M.E., from L situs “position, arrangement, site,” from sinere “to let, leave alone, permit,” cognate with Av. šiti- “place, abode, residence,” as below. Etymology (PE): Sit, from Av. šiti- “place, abode, residence,” šitāy- “habitation, dwelling,” from ši- “to live;” cognate with Skt. ksay- “to live, to stay,” kséti “he dwells;” Gk. ktizein “to inhabit, build;” L. situs “position, site; situated.” |
gozineš-e sit Fr.: sélection de site The process of choosing a site for an astronomical observatory based on meteorology, seeing conditions, and access to the site. See also: → site; → selection. |
sitidan Fr.: situer To place in a site or context; to locate. Etymology (EN): From M.L. situatus, p.p. of situare “to place, locate,” from L. situs “place, position.” Etymology (PE): Sitidan, from sit, → site, + -idan infinitive suffix. |
sitidé Fr.: situé Having a site, situation or location. See also: P.p. of → situate. |
siteš Fr.: situation
See also: Verbal noun of → situate. |
šeš (#) Fr.: six A cardinal number, five plus one. Etymology (EN): M.E. six, sex; Etymology (PE): Šeš, from Mid.Pers. šaš; Av. xšuuaš- “six;” cf. Skt. sás- “six;” Gk. hex; L. sex (Fr. six; Sp. seis); O.C.S. sesti; Lith. sesi; O.Ir. se; Welsh chwech; E. six, as above. |
šast (#) Fr.: soixante A cardinal number, ten times six. → sexagesimal. Etymology (EN): M.E.; O.E. sixtig, from → six + -tig a suffix of numerals denoting multiples of ten. Etymology (PE): Šast “sixty;” Mid.Pers. šast “sixty;” Av. xšuuašti- “sixty;” cf. Skt. sasti- “six;” L. sexaginta “sixty.” |
andâzé (#) Fr.: taille The spatial dimensions, extent, proportions, amount, or degree of something. Etymology (EN): M.E. syse originally “control, regulation, limit,” from O.Fr. sise shortened form of assise “session, regulation, manner.” Etymology (PE): 1) Andâzé “measure, size” from Mid.Pers. andâzag, handâcak “measure,”
handâxtan, handâz- “to measure,” |
andâze-ye negâré Fr.: taille de graphe |
pârâmun-e andâzé Fr.: paramètre de taille A quantity that defines the type of → scattering. |
šakâvar, šakmand Fr.: sceptique A person who questions the validity or authenticity of something purporting to be factual. Etymology (EN): From M.Fr. sceptique and directly from L. scepticus “the sect of Skeptics,” from Gk. skeptikos “thoughtful, inquiring” (plural Skeptikoi “the Skeptics, followers of Gk. philosopher Pyrrho,” who lived c. 360-270 B.C.). from skeptesthai “to reflect, look, view,” → spectrum. Etymology (PE): Šakdâvar, šakmand, from šakk, → doubt, + -âr contraction od âvardan “to bring, to cause, to produce,” → cause, or -mand suffix of relation/possession. |
šakâvar, šakmand Fr.: sceptique |
šakâvari Fr.: scepticisme
|
kažâl Fr.: distordu General: Having an oblique direction or position; Etymology (EN): From Old North French eskiuer “to shy away from, avoid,” O.Fr. eschiver (Fr. esquiver “to shirk, dodge”) “to eschew, keep away from;” related to shy. Etymology (PE): Kažâl, from kaž “crooked, bent, being aside” (cf. Skt. kubja- “hump-backed, crooked,” Pali kujja- “bent,” L. gibbus “hump, hunch,” Lith. kupra “hump”)
|
tânsor-e pâdhamâmun Fr.: tenseur antisymétrique A tensor that is the negative of its → transpose.
For example, a second-order covariant tensor
Ajk if its
components satisfy the equality:
Ajk = - Akj. Etymology (EN): → skew; → symmetric; → tensor. Etymology (PE): Tânsor, → tensor; pâd-, → anti-; hamâmun, → symmetric. |
kažâli Fr.: degré d'asymétrie A measure of the degree of asymmetry of a distribution. If the left tail (tail at small end of the distribution) is more pronounced that the right tail (tail at the large end of the distribution), the function is said to have → negative skewness. If the reverse is true, it has → positive skewness. If the two are equal, it has → zero skewness. |
pust (#) Fr.: peau
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.N. skinn “animal hide;” cf. O.H.G. scinten, Ger. schinden “to flay, skin;” Ger. dialect schind “skin of a fruit,” Flemish schinde “bark;” from PIE *sken- “to cut off.” Etymology (PE): Pust “skin;” Mid.Pers. pôst “skin;” O.Pers. pavastā- “thin clay envelope used to protect unbaked clay tablets;” Av. pastô-, in pastô.fraθanhəm “of the breadth of the skin;” Skt. pavásta- “cover,” Proto-Indo-Iranian *pauastā- “cloth.” |
oskar-e pusti Fr.: effet de peau The tendency of an → alternating current to concentrate in the outer layer of a conductor, caused by the → self-induction of the → conductor and resulting in increased → resistance. |
âsmân (#) Fr.: ciel The area high above the ground, buildings, landscape, or horizon. Etymology (EN): M.E. from O.N. sky “cloud;” cf. O.E. sceo, O.S. scio “cloud;” O.H.G. scuwo, O.N. skuggi “shadow;” Goth. skuggwa “mirror;” PIE base *(s)keu- “to cover, conceal.” Etymology (PE): Âsmân “sky;” Mid.Pers. âsmân “sky, heaven;” O.Pers. asman-
“heaven;” Av. asman- “stone, sling-stone; heaven;” cf. Skt. áśman-
“stone, rock, thunderbolt;” Gk. akmon “heaven, meteor, anvil;” Akmon
was the father of Ouranos (Uranus), god of sky; Lith. akmuo “stone;” Rus. kamen;
PIE base *akmon- “stone, sky.” |
paszamine-ye âsmân Fr.: fond du ciel The emission of a part of the night sky that does not contain any
detectable objects. Sky background results from See also: → sky; → background.. |
deraxšandegi-ye âsmân Fr.: brillance du ciel Atmospheric (→ airglow, → auroral emission,
→ artificial light) or extraterrestrial
(→ scattered
→ sunlight from Moon, scattered → starlight,
→ interplanetary dust) See also: → sky; → brightness. |
zirkaršeš-e âsmân Fr.: soustraction de ciel The act or instance of removing the contribution of non-related, intervening foreground light to the object. See also: → sky; → subtraction. |
bardid-e âsmân Fr.: relevé du ciel |
nur-e šahr, foruq-e âsmân Fr.: illumination du ciel The illumination of the night sky in urban areas caused by wasted light shining upward
scattered off dust, humidity, and air.
Skyglow is a type of → light pollution that results Etymology (EN): → sky; → glow. Etymology (PE): Nur, → light; foruq, → glow; šahr, → city; âsmân, → sky. |
nur-e âsmân-e Fr.: lumière du ciel Solar radiation which reaches the observer from the general sky. It is sunlight which has undergone multiple scattering events with the molecules of the Earth’s atmosphere (Rayleigh scattering) or with clouds or other aerosols in the atmosphere. High levels of skylight reduce the contrast of a shadow. Also known as diffuse skylight, diffuse sky radiation. |
tiyât Fr.: dalle A broad, flat, somewhat thick piece of stone, wood, or other solid material (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E sclabbe, slabbe of unknown origin, maybe related to O.Fr. escopel, escalpe “thin fragment of wood.” Etymology (PE): Tiyât, from Kurd. (Ilâm) teyat “slab.” |
eslaš Fr.: barre oblique, slash An oblique line (/) used between alternatives (e.g. and/or), in fractions (e.g. 4/5), or in percent ratios (e.g. kilometer/hour). Etymology (EN): From M.E. slaschen, perhaps from M.Fr. esclachier “to break,” variant of esclater “to break, splinter.” Etymology (PE): Eslaš, loan from E. |
palmé (#) Fr.: ardoise A fine-grained rock formed by the metamorphosis of clay, shale, etc., that tends to split along parallel cleavage planes, usually at an angle to the planes of stratification (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. sclate, from M.Fr. esclate, feminine of esclat “piece split off,” (Fr. éclat) so called because the rock splits easily into thin plates. Etymology (PE): Palmé “slate,” “a board on which children learn to read,” ultimately from Proto-Ir. *parn-, *parm- “feather,” PIE *pernom-, *pornos- “feather,” → tablet. |
tangar Fr.: grésil Precipitation in the form of → transparent or → translucent ice → pellets that are 5 mm or less in diameter, created by the freezing of rain as it falls (distinguished from hail). Etymology (EN): M.E. slete; akin to M.H.G. sloz, M.L.G. sloten (plural) “hail.” Etymology (PE): Tangar, from Gilaki tangar “fine hail.” |
slepton Fr.: slepton In → supersymmetry theories, a hypothetical → boson super-partner of a → lepton. See also → squark See also: s from → supersymmetry; → lepton. |
tond-râneš Fr.: déplacement rapide The action of rapidly moving a telescope in the alpha or delta direction under computer control as it moves to point at a new position in the sky. Etymology (EN): Slew “to turn, swing, twist,” earlier slue a nautical word, of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Tondrâneš, literally “driving fast,” from tond
“swift, rapid, brisk; fierce, severe”
(Mid.Pers. tund “sharp, violent;” Sogdian tund “violent;” cf. Skt. tod-
“to thrust, give a push,” tudáti “he thrusts;” L. tundere
“to thrust, to hit” (Fr. percer, E. pierce, ultimately from
L. pertusus, from p.p. of pertundere “to thrust or bore through,”
from per- + tundere, as explained);
PIE base *(s)teud- “to thrust, to beat”) + râneš,
verbal noun of
rândan “to push, drive, cause to go,” |
motor-e tond-râneš Fr.: moteur de déplacement rapide |
1) qâc (#); 2) qâcidan Fr.: 1) tranche; 2) trancher
Etymology (EN): O.Fr. escliz “splinter, fragment” (Fr. éclisse), a back-formation from esclicier “to splinter, shatter, smash;” cf. O.H.G. slihhan. Etymology (PE): Qâc, contraction of qârc, from karj “slice, a slice of melon; a piece cut out of the collar of a garment;” ultimately from Proto-Ir. *kartaka-, from *kart- “to cut,” cf. Av. karət- “to cut;” Skt. kart- “to cut,” karəta- “knife;” Mid.Pers. kârt, → knife. |
oskar-e falâxan Fr.: effet de fronde gravitationnelle, gravidéviation An important astronautical technique whereby a spacecraft takes up a tiny fraction of the gravitational energy of a planet it is flying by, allowing it to change trajectory and speed. Also known as → gravitational slingshot or → gravitational assist. Etymology (EN): Slingshot, from sling, from M.E. slyngen, from O.N. slyngva “to sling, fling” + shot, from M.E., from O.E. sc(e)ot, (ge)sceot; cf. Ger. Schoss, Geschoss; → effect. Etymology (PE): Oskar, → effect; falâxan “sling;” from Av. fradaxšana- “sling,” fradaxšanya- “sling, sling-stone;” |
šekâf (#) Fr.: fente A long, thin opening in a spectrograph allowing only the light studied to fall on the prism. Etymology (EN): O.E. slitan “to cut or tear up, slit;” cf. O.S. slitan, O.N. slita, M.L.G., M.Du. sliten, Du. slijten, O.H.G. slizan, Ger. schleißen “to slit.” Etymology (PE): Šekâf “slit,” from Mod./Mid.Pers. škâf- škâftan
“to split, burst;” Proto-Iranian *kap-, *kaf- “to split;”
cf. Gk. skaptein “to dig;” L. cabere “to scratch, scrape,”
P.Gmc. skabanan (Goth. skaban; |
binâbnegâr-e šekâfmand Fr.: spectrographe à fente A type of spectrograph that uses a slit to provide resolution. See also: → slit; → spectrograp. |
šekâf-pahnâ Fr.: largeur de fente |
bardid-e adadi-ye âsmân-e Sloan Fr.: relevé numérique du ciel Sloan A major → redshift survey using a dedicated 2.5-m wide angle telescope with different modes in → imaging and → spectroscopy. The telescope, a modified → Ritchey-Chretien→ altitude-azimuth type is located at Apache Point Observatory, south east New Mexico, United States. A large consortium of universities and institutions all over the world participate in the project. catalog contains millions of galaxies up to z = 1, bright → quasars up to z = 6, with images in five major filter bands (u, g, r, i and z). SDSS was divided into multiple surveys/projects: SDSS I (2000-2005); SDSS II (2005-2008), including the Sloan Supernova Survey; SDSS III (2008-2014), including the APO Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE), Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS); SDSS IV (2014-2020), including the Mapping Nearby Galaxies at APO (MaNGA). See also: Named after the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, which contributed significant funding; → digital; → sky; → survey. |
šib (#) Fr.: pente
Etymology (EN): From M.E. aslope (adv.) “on the incline,” from O.E. *aslopen, p.p. of aslupan “to slip away,” from a- “away” + slupan “to slip.” Etymology (PE): Šib “slope, descent, declivity,” contraction of nešib, našib “declivity, descent; lowness of ground, slope of any place;” Mid.Pers. nišēp “declivity, (astrology) dejection,” Av. *nixšvaēpā-, xšvaēpā- “bottom, rear.” |
pârâmun-e šib Fr.: paramètre de pente In a → power-law distribution or → regression, the → exponent that represents the effect of the → independent variable, x, on the → dependent variable, y. X has no association with y if the slope parameter = 0 and x has strong association with y if the slope parameter is large. |
âhesté (#) Fr.: lent Moving or proceeding with little or less than usual speed or velocity. Etymology (EN): O.E. slaw “inactive, sluggish;” cf. O.S. sleu “blunt, dull,” M.Du. slee, Du. sleeuw “sour, blunt,” O.H.G. sleo “blunt, dull,” O.N. sljor, Dan. sløv, Swed. slö “blunt, dull.” Etymology (PE): Âhesté “slow, quiet, tender, soft,” ultimately from Proto-Iranian
*ā-hasta-ka-, literally “at rest, motionless, seated.” |
notron-e âhesté (#) Fr.: neutron lent A neutron whose kinetic energy does not exceed about 10 electron-volts. Also called → thermal neutron. |
now-axtar-e âhesté Fr.: nova lente |
setâre-ye âhesté tapande-ye gune-ye B Fr.: étoile B pulsante à longue période A member of a class of → B stars that
are situated along the → main sequence with
→ spectral types ranging from B2 to B9 and masses from 3 to 7
→ solar masses. In the → H-R diagram
the SPB group lies below → beta Cephei variables,
which are more massive. SPBs show light and line-profile variations that are
multi-periodic with periods of the order of days. This variability is
understood in terms of non-radial → stellar pulsations, and their
→ oscillation modes are high-order
→ g modes. Theoretical models attribute
the pulsational nature of SPBs to the → kappa mechanism, |
lisak (#) Fr.: limace A worm-like gastropod that is related to the → snail family but has no shell. Etymology (EN): M.E. slugge “sluggish,” probably from Scandinavian; cf. dialectal Norwegian sluggje “heavy, slow person.” Etymology (PE): Lisak dialectal Tabari (also see Dehxodâ) |
kucak (#), kam (#) Fr.: petit Of limited size; of comparatively restricted dimensions; not large. → method of small perturbations; → Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). Etymology (EN): M.E. smale; O.E. smæl “slender, narrow, small;” cf. Dan., Swed., M.Du., Du., O.H.G. smal, O.Fris. smel, Ger. schmal “narrow,” Goth. smalista “smallest.” Etymology (PE): Kucak “small;” Mid.Pers. kucak “small,”
related to kutâh “short, small, little,” kudak “child, infant,”
kutulé, → dwarf; Mid.Pers. kôtâh “low,” kôtak
“small, young; baby;” Av. kutaka- “little, small.” |
haft xâharân, camce-ye kucak Fr.: Petite Ourse Same as → Little Dipper. See also: → small; → Little Dipper. |
Abr-e Kucak-e Magellan (#) Fr.: Petit Nuage de Magellan An irregular galaxy, the smaller of the two → Magellanic Clouds that are satellites of our own Galaxy, lying in the southern constellation → Tucana about 20 degrees from the → south celestial pole. The SMC covers an area roughly 3 by 5 degrees in dimension and has an overall → visual magnitude about +2.7. The SMC is about 10,000 → light-years in diameter and some 210,000 light-years (61 → kpc) away. It has a visible mass of about 1/50-th that of our Galaxy and 1/10-th of that of the → Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). Its → heavy element content is about a factor 5 smaller than that of the Galaxy. The SMC is the third-nearest external galaxy after the → Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy and the LMC. See also: → small; → Magellanic; → cloud. |
jesm-e kucak-e râžmân-e xoršidi Fr.: petit corps du système solaire A term introduced by the → International Astronomical Union (August 2006) to name the → solar system bodies other than → planets and → dwarf planets. Small solar system bodies include → asteroids, → comets, and → meteoroids. |
radebandi-ye SMASS Fr.: classification SMASS An asteroid taxonomy built on the → Tholen classification but based on the presence or absence of → absorption features in the visible part of the spectrum. In many cases the two classifications are the same, but the Tholen C and S classes are subdivided in the SMASS classification. See also: SMASS stands for the Small Main-belt Asteroid Spectroscopic Survey, → small; → main belt; → asteroid; → spectroscopic; → survey; → classification. |
abr-e Smith Fr.: nuage de Smith A huge, → high-velocity cloud of hydrogen gas that measures some 9,800 × 3,300 → light-years. It is located between 36,000 and 45,000 light-years away from Earth in the northern constellation of → Aquila. It has a mass of at least 106 → solar masses. It is now moving toward the disk of the → Milky Way at 73 ± 26 km/s and is expected to hit the disk of our Galaxy in about 27 million years, at an angle of approximately 45° at a point in the → Perseus Arm, one of two major → spiral arms of the Galaxy. See also: Named after Gail Bieger, née Smith, who discovered the cloud in 1963, |
dudmeh (#) Fr.: smog |
dud (#) Fr.: fumée A mass of tiny particles in the air that rises up from something burning. Etymology (EN): M.E., O.E. smoca, related to smeocan “give off smoke;” cf. M.Du. smooc, Du. smook, M.H.G. smouch, Ger. Schmauch; PIE base *smeug(h)- “smoke” (cf. Arm. mux “smoke,” Gk. smukho “to burn in a smoldering fire,” O.Ir. much, Welsh mwg “smoke”). Etymology (PE): Dud, from Mid.Pers. dût, dûd “smoke;” Av. dunman- “cloud,” duuan- “to fly;” cf. Skt. dhvan- “to smoke;” Hittite tuhhae- “to prouce smoke;” PIE base *dheu- “to blow, reel; smoke, dark.” |
1) hamvâr (#); 2) hamvâridan, hamvâr kardan (#) Fr.: 1) lisse; 2) lisser
Etymology (EN): O.E. smoð “free from roughness, not harsh,” of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Hamvâr “level, equal, an even place or thing,” from
ham- “same, equally, even; together, with”
(Mid.Pers. ham-, like L. com-
and Gk. syn- with neither of which it is cognate. O.Pers./Av.
ham-, Skt. sam-; also O.Pers./Av. hama-
“one and the same,” Skt. sama-, Gk. homos-; |
xam-e hamvâr Fr.: courbe lisse |
hidrotavânik-e zarrehâ-ye hamvâridé Fr.: hydrodynamique des particules lissées A numerical method for modeling → compressible hydrodynamic flows, which uses particles to simulate a continuous fluid flow. Because the system of hydrodynamical basic equations can be analytically solved only for few exceptional cases, the SPH method provides a numerical algorithm to solve systems of coupled → partial differential equations for continuous field quantities. The main advantage of the method is that it does not require a computational grid to calculate spatial → derivatives and that it is a Lagrangian method, which automatically focuses attention on fluid elements. The equations of motion and continuity are expressed in terms of ordinary differential equations where the body forces become classical forces between particles. This method was first independently developed by Lucy (1977, AJ 82, 1013) and Gingold & Monaghan (1977, MNRAS 181, 375). See also: Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics, first used by Gingold & Monaghan (1977); → smooth; → particle; → hydrodynamics. |
šomâr-e hamvâride-ye hurlakhâ Fr.: nombre de taches solaires lissé An average of 13 monthly → sunspot numbers, centered on the month of concern. The 1st and 13th months are given a weight of 0.5. |
hamvâreš Fr.: lissage The mathematical process that makes a curve smooth. See also: Verbal noun of → smooth. |
narqrâh-e hamvârgar Fr.: circuit atténuateur |
râb (#), halazun (#) Fr.: escargot A general name for a member of the large group of terrestrial and fresh-water gastropod molluscs which have a coiled shell. → slug. Etymology (EN): M.E. snail, snayl(e), O.E. snegel; cognate with M.H.G. snagel, dialectal Ger. Schnegel. Etymology (PE): Râb, dialectal Gilaki and Tabari (also see Dehxodâ). Halazun, from Ar. |
qânun-e Snell (#) Fr.: loi de Snell, loi de Descartes The relationship between angles of incidence and refraction for a wave incident on an interface between two media with different indices of refraction. The law states that the ratio of the sine of the → angle of incidence to the sine of the → angle of refraction is a constant: n1/n2 = sinθ2/sinθ1. See also → refractive index. Also known as Descartes’ law or the law of refraction. See also: Named after Dutch mathematician Willebrord Snellius (1580-1626), one of the discoverers of the law; → law. |
barf (#) Fr.: neige A precipitation in the form of → ice crystals that falls from clouds when the air temperature is below 0 °C. Snow occurs when → water vapor in the → atmosphere forms directly into ice and completely bypasses the liquid stage of → precipitation. Once an ice crystal has formed, it absorbs up even more water vapor and freezes due to the surrounding atmosphere. The ice crystal then falls down to earth’s surface in the form of a → snow crystal, snow → pellet, or more commonly known as the → snowflake. In short, snow formation requires the following conditions: 1) → relative humidity ≥ 100%, 2) → temperature < 0 °C, 3) presence of → condensation nuclei, and 4) → supercooled droplets. Etymology (EN): O.E. snaw “snow;” cf. O.S., O.H.G. sneo,
O.Fris., M.L.G. sne, M.Du. snee, Du. sneeuw, Ger. Schnee,
O.N. snjor, Goth. snaiws “snow;” PIE base *sneigwh-
“to snow, snow;” cf. Mid.Pers. snêx, snêxr “snow;” Etymology (PE): Barf “snow,” dialectal vafr “snow,” var, |
bolur-e barf Fr.: cristal de neige An → ice crystal forming snow in a → cloud. |
marz-e yax, yax-marz Fr.: limite de glace In a → protoplanetary disk, the limit between the
regions where water is gaseous and the region where it is cold enough for water
to become ice. The core accretion theory predicts that
→ giant planets form
just outside the snow line where they can accrete enough rock and ice
to generate a core. Subsequently the core grows into a gas giant like |
barf-gule Fr.: boule de neige |
Zamin-e barf-gule Fr.: Terre boule de neige Any of several episodes in the history of the Earth where our planet was entirely covered by glacial ice from pole to pole. There are at least three such episodes. The first one, called the Huronian glaciation, extended from 2.4 billion years
ago to 2.1 billion years (lasting about 300 million years). Etymology (EN): The term snowball Earth was coined in 1989 by Joe Kirschvink, a biomagnetist and paleomagnetist at the Caifornia Institute of Technology in Pasadena, USA; → earth. |
barf-rând Fr.: congère A mound or bank of snow deposited as sloping surfaces and peaks, often behind obstacles and irregularities, due to eddies in the wind field. Etymology (EN): → snow; → drift. Etymology (PE): Barf-rând “snowdrift, drfited snow” from barf,
→ snow, +
rând “driving, drfit; drifted,” from rândan |
golic-e barf, dâne-ye ~ Fr.: flocon de neige An agglomeration of many → ice crystals that falls as a unit from a cloud. Snowflakes possess a six-fold symmetry that ultimately derives from the six-fold symmetry of the ice crystal lattice. Typical snowflakes fall at a rate of 1-2 m s-1. The shape of snowflakes is influenced by the → temperature and → humidity of the atmosphere. Snowflakes form in the atmosphere when cold water droplets freeze onto dust particles. Depending on the temperature and humidity of the air where the snowflakes form, the resulting ice crystals will grow into a myriad of different shapes. Snowflakes formed in temperatures below -22 °C consist primarily of simple crystal plates and columns whereas snowflakes with extensive branching patterns are formed in warmer temperatures. Snowflakes are not frozen raindrops. Sometimes raindrops do freeze as they fall, but this is called → sleet. Sleet particles do not have any of the elaborate and symmetrical patterning found in snow crystals. Etymology (EN): From → snow + flake, from M.E. akin to O.E. flac- in flacox “flying” (said of arrows), O.N. flakka “to wander,” M.Du. vlac “flat, level,” M.H.G. vlach, Ger. Flocke “flake.” Etymology (PE): Golic “snowflake” in dialectal Lori and Laki (originally *geli-ka),
variants Laki gal “seed (of millet),” gella “grape berry,”
Torbat-Heydariyei gella “grape berry,” golla “ball, reel,”
Kurd. kuli, kilole “snowflake,” Malâyeri gulu “bead,”
Qâyeni golle “bead,” Qasrâni gella, golla “bead,”
Tabari gəlilə “bead,” Gilaki gudé “ball, bowl, tumour,”
literary Pers.
golulé, goruk “ball;”
cf. Skt. guda- “ball, mouthful, lump, tumour;” Pali gula- “ball;” |
barfrub (#) Fr.: chasse-neige |
fâz-e barfrub Fr.: phase de chasse-neige The third phase in the evolution of a → supernova remnant (SNR) occurring after the → Sedov-Taylor phase when the mass of the swept-up material becomes much larger than the amount of the ejected material. The SNR is surrounded by a cool → shell of accumulated material that is being pushed from behind, similar to what occurs for a snowplow. During this phase, → radiative cooling becomes important and the total energy is no longer conserved. Also called the → radiative phase. |
pustey-e bâzmânde-ye abar-now-axtar Fr.: coquille de reste de supernova A ring-like structure of swept-up → gas and → dust around a → supernova remnant. See also: → free expansion phase, → Sedov-Taylor phase, → snowplow phase. See also: → supernova remnant (SNR); → shell. |
nazdineš-e Sobolev Fr.: approximation de Sobolev A method allowing for a simplified solution to the See also: Named after the Russian astronomer Viktor Viktorovich Sobolev, |
derâzâ-ye Sobolev Fr.: longueur de Sobolev In the → Sobolev approximation,
the length over which the conditions of the gas do not change and See also: → Sobolev approximation; → length. |
hazâne-yi Fr.: social |
hazâneš Fr.: socialisation |
hazânidan Fr.: socialiser |
hazâni Fr.: sociétal |
hazâné Fr.: société An organized group of persons associated together for scientific, cultural, Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. societe, from L. societatem (nominative societas), from socius “companion,” → associate. Etymology (PE): Hazâné, from Av. hacenay- “getting together, association,”
from verb hac-, hax- “to associate, follow, accompany” |
hazâne-šenâsi Fr.: sociologie |
Soqrâti Fr.: socratique Of or pertaining to Socrates or his philosophy, followers, etc., Etymology (EN): Socrates (469?-399 B.C.), Athenian philosopher. |
govâže-ye Soqrâti Fr.: ironie socratique |
raveš-e Soqrâti Fr.: méthode socratique |
sodiom (#) Fr.: sodium A metallic chemical element; symbol Na (L. natrium]. Atomic number 11; atomic weight 22.98977; melting point 97.81°C; boiling point 892.9°C; specific gravity 0.971 at 20°C. It was discovered in 1807 by the English chemist Humphry Davy from electrolysis of caustic soda (NaOH). See also: Sodium, from soda (NaOH). |
lake-ye sodiomi-ye Mâng Fr.: tache de sodium de la Lune The → sodium tail of the Moon as it appears in the sky opposite the Sun. The SMS undergoes changes in shape and brightness. It is brighter when the → new moon occurs at → perigee, when the new moon is north of the → ecliptic, and approximately five hours after the new moon. |
dom-e sodiomi Fr.: queue de sodium
|
donbâle-ye sodiomi-ye Mâng Fr.: queue de sodium de la Lune A comet-like tail of the Moon comprised of → sodium (Na) atoms and invisible to the naked eye. The lunar surface is constantly bombarded by the → solar wind, → photons, and → meteoroids, which can liberate Na atoms from the → regolith. These atoms are subsequently accelerated by solar → radiation pressure to form a long comet-like tail opposite the Sun. Near → new moon, this diffuse cloud of Na atoms encounters the Earth’s gravity and is “pinched” into a beam of enhanced density. This beam appears as the ~3° diameter Sodium Moon Spot (SMS) seen in the sky opposite the Sun. The spot is about five times the diameter of the → full moon, and is 50 times fainter than can be seen with the unaided eye. The spot is reflected light from millions of Na atoms that two days earlier were on the surface of the Moon. This spot is visible to sensitive cameras equipped with filters tuned to the orange light emitted by Na atoms near 589.3 nm (Baumgardner et al., 2021 Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets DOI: 10.1029/2020je006671). |
narm (#) Fr.: mou General: Delicate in texture, grain, or fiber. Etymology (EN): M.E. softe “yielding, gentle, mild;” O.E. softe “gentle, easy;” cf. O.S. safti, O.H.G. semfti, Ger. sanft, M.Du. sachte, Du. zacht. Etymology (PE): Narm “soft; smooth; mild,” from Mid.Pers. narm “soft; humble.” |
dorin-e narm Fr.: binaire mou In → stellar dynamics studies of → three-body encounters, a → binary system whose → binding energy is smaller than the typical → kinetic energy of the relative motion of an incoming third body. See also → hard binary. |
bâzgaršgar-e gâmmâ-ye narm Fr.: répéteur gamma mou |
bâzgaršgar-e partowhâ-ye gâmmâ-ye narm Fr.: répéteur des rayons gamma mous Same as → soft gamma repeater (SGR). |
âhan-e narm Fr.: fer doux |
narmkâm (#) Fr.: voile du palais, palais mou, velum |
gozarâ-ye partow-e X-e narm Fr.: An → X-ray binary system that has a long period
of → quiescence
interrupted by → outbursts
of low-energy → soft X-rays.
Alternatively known as X-ray novae, the majority (~ 75%) of SXTs contain a
→ black hole and a
low-mass → main sequence
→ companion star in orbit around one another. |
partowhâ-ye iks-e narm Fr.: rayons X mous X-ray photons with energies between about 0.1 to 10 keV. → hard X-rays. |
narm-afzâr (#) Fr.: logiciel A general term used to describe a collection of computer programs, procedures, and documentation that perform some tasks on a computer system. → hardware. Etymology (EN): → soft + ware, from M.E., from O.E. waru, from P.Gmc. *waro (cf. Swed. vara, Dan. vare, M.Du. were, Du. waar, Ger. Ware “goods”). Etymology (PE): Narm, → soft + afzâr “instrument, means, tool,” from Mid.Pers. afzâr, abzâr, awzâr “instrument, means,” Proto-Iranian *abi-cāra- or *upa-cāra-, from cāra-, cf. Av. cārā- “instrument, device, means” (Mid.Pers. câr, cârag “means, remedy;” loaned into Arm. aucar, aucan “instrument, remedy;” Mod.Pers. câré “remedy, cure, help”), from kar- “to do, make, build;” kərənaoiti “he makes” (Pers. kardan, kard- “to do, to make”); cf. Skt. kr- “to do, to make,” krnoti “he makes, he does,” karoti “he makes, he does,” karma “act, deed;” PIE base kwer- “to do, to make”). |
mehrâzik-e narm-afzâr Fr.: architecture de logiciel The overall structure of a software system consisting of mutually dependent components that create a logical whole. See also: → software; → architecture. |
xâk (#) Fr.: terre, sol All loose, unconsolidated earth and organic materials above bedrock that support plant growth. Etymology (EN): M.E. soile, O.Fr. soil “piece of ground, place,” from L. solium “seat,” meaning confused with that of L. solum “soil, ground.” Etymology (PE): Xâk, from Mid.Pers. xâk “earth, dust,” ultimately from Proto-Ir. *āika-, from *āi- “earth, soil,” cf. Av. āi- “earth, soil,” Gk. aia “earth, land,” + suffix -ka. The initial x- is a prothesis, as in xâya “egg” (Gershevitch 1962). |
sol Fr.: jour solaire martien The solar day on Mars, which has a mean period of 24 hours 39 minutes 35.244 seconds (based on SI units), about 2.7% longer than Earth’s solar day. The Martian sidereal day, as measured with respect to the fixed stars, is 24h 37m 22.663s, as compared with 23h 56m 04.0905s for Earth. See also: Sol, from L. sol “sun,” cognate with Pers. hur, → Sun. |
xoršidi (#) Fr.: solaire Of or pertaining to the Sun. See also: Adjective from L. sol; → Sun. |
farâvâni-ye xoršidi Fr.: abondance solaire |
žirandegi-ye xoršid Fr.: activité solaire The general term for all forms of short-lived phenomena on the Sun, including → solar flares, → sunspots, → prominences, etc., indicating that the Sun is an active star. |
carxe-ye žirandegi-ye xoršid Fr.: cycle d'activité solaire Same as the → solar cycle. See also: → solar activity; → cycle. |
ânâgu-ye xoršid Fr.: analogue du soleil A member of a class of unevolved or slightly evolved → Population I disk stars with an → effective temperature, degree of evolution, → metallicity, and kinematic property not very different from those of the Sun. See also → solar-like star; → solar twin. |
pâdcakâd-e xoršidi Fr.: antiapex solaire The apparent direction (in the constellation → Columbia) away from which the Sun is moving in its orbit around the center of the Galaxy. → solar apex. |
cakâd-e xoršidi Fr.: apex solaire The point on the celestial sphere toward which the Sun is apparently moving relative to the → local standard of rest. Its position, in the constellation → Hercules, is approximately R.A. 18h, Dec. +30°, close to the star → Vega. The velocity of this motion is estimated to be about 19.4 km/sec (about 4. AU/year). As a result of this motion, stars seem to be converging toward a point in the opposite direction, the → solar antapex. |
gerâ-ye âse-ye xoršid Fr.: inclinaison de l'axe du Soleil The angle between the Sun’s → rotation axis and perpendicular to the → ecliptic plane. In other words, the inclination of the Sun’s → equator with respect to the → ecliptic plane. It is 7.25 degrees. |
gâhšomâr-e xoršidi (#) Fr.: calendrier solaire A calendar based on the apparent yearly motion of the Sun on the → celestial sphere. The year is usually reckoned with respect to the → vernal equinox, approximately for example in the case of the → Gregorian calendar and accurately in the case of the → Iranian calendar. |
pâypa-ye xoršidi (#) Fr.: constante solaire The amount of solar radiation in all wavelengths received per unit of time per unit of area on a theoretical surface perpendicular to the Sun’s rays and at Earth’s mean distance from the Sun. Its mean value is 1367.7 W m-2 or 1.37 × 106 erg sec-1 cm-2. In other words, the solar constant is the mean → solar irradiance on the outer atmosphere when the Sun and Earth are spaced at 1 → astronomical unit. See also: → solar luminosity. |
hurtâj, tâj-e xoršid (#) Fr.: couronne solaire The outermost atmosphere of the Sun immediately above the → chromosphere, which can be seen during a total solar eclipse. It consists of hot (1-2 × 106 K), extremely tenuous gas (about 10-16 g cm-3) extending for millions of kilometer from the Sun’s surface. |
carxe-ye xoršidi (#) Fr.: cycle solaire The periodic variation in frequency or number of solar active events (→ sunspots, → prominences, → flares, and other solar activity) occurring with an interval of about 11 years. The solar cycle was discovered in 1843 by Samuel Heinrich Schwabe (1789-1875), a German apothecary and amateur astronomer, who after 17 years of observations noticed a periodic variation in the average number of sunspots seen from year to year on the solar disk. Solar cycle numbering goes back to the 18-th century, when the Cycle 1 peak occurred in 1760. Cycle 23 peaked in 2000, and the following Cycle 24 will reach its maximum in 2013. |
ruz-e xoršidi (#) Fr.: jour solaire |
nešib-e xoršid Fr.: dépression solaire The → angle between the → sea horizon, the → center of → Earth, and the center of the → solar disk. See also: → solar; → depression. |
gerde-ye xoršid Fr.: disque solaire The apparent shape of the → Sun’s → photosphere. |
tavânzâ-ye xoršidi (#) Fr.: dynamo solaire A model for explaining the generation of the → solar magnetic field and the related observational features (mainly → solar cycle, → Sporer’s law, → Hale’s law, → Joy’s law, → polarity reversal). The global frame of this model is the interaction between a → turbulent plasma in the → convective zone (reciprocal generation of magnetic and electric fields) and the solar differential rotation (mutual transformation of meridional magnetic field into azimuthal magnetic field). The idea that a dynamo is responsible for generating the solar magnetic field was first proposed by Larmor (1919) and further developed by Cowling (1933), Parker (1955) and others. |
xor gereft, gereft-e xoršidi (#) Fr.: éclipse de soleil |
hadd-e hurpehi-ye xoršid Fr.: limite écliptique du Soleil The greatest angular distance from a → lunar orbit node |
hamugeš-e xoršidi Fr.: équation solaire |
âlâv-e xoršidi (#) Fr.: éruption solaire A bright eruption form the Sun’s → chromosphere in the vicinity of a → sunspot. Solar flares are caused by tremendous explosions on the surface of the Sun. In a matter of just a few minutes they heat the material to many millions of degrees and release as much energy as a billion → megatons of → T.N.T.. |
sâzâl-e xoršidi Fr.: instrument solaire An instrument especially designed for solar observations. See also: → solar; → instrument. |
tâbešdâri-ye xoršidi Fr.: irradiation solaire The radiative power per unit area in all wavelengths from the Sun received by the Earth at its average distance from the Sun. Its mean value is called the → solar constant. The solar irradiance changes over a year by about 6.6% due to the variation in the Earth/Sun distance. Moreover, solar activity variations cause irradiance changes of up to 1%. See also: → solar; → irradiance. |
labe-ye xoršid Fr.: bord solaire |
derežnâ-ye xoršidi Fr.: longitude du Soleil |
tâbandegi-ye xoršid (#) Fr.: luminosité solaire The total → radiant energy, in all wavelengths, See also: → solar; → luminosity. |
carxe-ye meqnâtisi-ye xoršid Fr.: cycle magnétique solaire The period of time, about 22 years, after which the magnetic → polarity of the Sun returns to its earlier state. It consists of two consecutive → solar cycles. |
meydân-e meqnâtisi-ye xoršid (#) Fr.: champ magnétique solaire The Sun’s magnetic field which is probably created by the → differential rotation of the Sun together with the movement of charged particles in the → convective zone. Understanding how the solar magnetic field comes about is the fundamental problem of Solar Physics. The solar magnetic field is responsible for all solar magnetic phenomena, such as → sunspots, → solar flares, → coronal mass ejections, and the → solar wind. The solar magnetic fields are observed from the → Zeeman broadening of spectral lines, → polarization effects on radio emission, and from the channeling of charged particles into visible → coronal streamers. The strength of Sun’s average magnetic field is 1 → gauss (twice the average field on the surface of Earth, around 0.5 gauss), and can be as strong as 4,000 Gauss in the neighborhood of a large sunspot. |
jerm-e xoršid (#) Fr.: masse solaire |
bišine-ye xoršidi Fr.: maximum solaire The month(s) during the 11 year → solar cycle when the number of → sunspots reaches a maximum. |
felezigi-ye xoršidi Fr.: métallicité solaire The proportion of the solar matter made up of → chemical elements
heavier than → helium. It is denoted by Z, which represents See also: → solar; → metallicity. |
kamine-ye xoršidi Fr.: minimum solaire The month(s) during the 11 year → solar cycle when the number of → sunspots is lowest. |
miq-e xoršidi Fr.: nébuleuse solaire |
hamsâyegi-ye xoršid (#) Fr.: voisinage solaire That part of the Milky Way galaxy lying near the Sun. In fact there is no definition of the exact radius of this region. It is referred to the immediate solar neighborhood (within about 5 pc), the solar neighborhood (within about 25 pc), and the extended solar neighborhood (within a few hundred pc). See also: → solar; → neighborhood. |
notinohâ-ye xoršidi Fr.: flux des neutrinos solaires A neutrino generated in the → Sun. The main source of solar neutrinos is the → proton-proton chain of reactions: 4 × p→ He + 2e+ + 2νe, in which an energy of +28 MeV is shared between the reaction products. These are called → low-energy neutrinos. There are less important reactions in the Sun yielding a smaller flux of higher energy neutrinos. The solar neutrino flux can be estimated from the → solar luminosity (L), as follows Since there are two neutrinos for each 28 MeV of energy, the neutrino flux at the Earth distance (d) is given by: ν flux = 2Lsun/(28 MeV) × (1/4πd2) = 6 × 1010 cm-2 s-1. See also the → solar neutrino problem. |
parâse-ye notrinohâ-ye xoršid Fr.: problème des neutrinos solaires A major discrepancy between the flux of neutrinos detected at Earth from the solar core and that predicted by current models of solar nuclear fusion and our understanding of neutrinos themselves. The problem, lasting from the mid-1960s to about 2002, was a considerably lesser detected number of neutrons compared with theoretical predictions. The discrepancy has since been resolved by new understanding of neutrino physics, requiring a modification of the → standard model of particle physics, in particular → neutrino oscillation. |
yekâ-ye notrinohâ-ye xoršidi Fr.: unité de neutrinos solaires |
madârgard-e xoršidi Fr.: orbiteur solaire A → European Space Agency (ESA) mission with strong → National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) participation aimed at studying the Sun up close and from high latitudes, launched on 10 February 2020. Solar Orbiter is equipped with 10 instruments and will provide the first images of the Sun’s poles. |
didgašt-e xoršidi Fr.: parallaxe solaire The angle subtended (8’’.79) by the → equatorial radius of the Earth at a distance of 1 → astronomical unit. |
farâvâni-ye šidsepehri-ye xoršidi Fr.: abondance photosphérique solaire The abundance of a → chemical element as determined from
the observation of solar → spectral lines.
The solar chemical composition is an important ingredient in our understanding
of the formation, structure and evolution of both the Sun and our solar system.
Furthermore, it is an essential reference standard against which the elemental contents
of other astronomical objects are compared (Asplund et al. 2009, arXiv:0909.0948).
The photospheric abundances relative to hydrogen are not representative of the
→ protosun, or global
→ solar system abundances. See also: → solar; → photospheric; → abundance. |
fizik-e xoršidi Fr.: physique solaire |
tavân-e xoršidi Fr.: puissance solaire |
gomâne-ye xoršidi Fr.: sonde solaire |
zabâne-ye xoršidi Fr.: protubérances solaires A large, arch-shaped filament of hot gas extending outward from the Sun’s surface. See also: → solar; → prominence. |
tâbeš-e xoršidi Fr.: rayonnement solaire |
fešâr-e tâbeš xoršid (#) Fr.: pression du rayonnement solaire The → radiation pressure of solar photons, which pushes a comet’s dust outward to form a → dust tail. |
šo'â'(hây)-e xoršid Fr.: rayons solaires Plural form of → solar radius. |
šo'â'-e xoršid Fr.: rayon solaire A unit of length, representing the radius of the → Sun, used to express the size of stars in astrophysics. It is equivalent to: 695,700 km, 0.00465047 → astronomical units, 7.35355 × 10-8 → light-years, and 2.32061 → light-seconds. |
carxeš-e xoršid (#) Fr.: rotation du Soleil The motion of the Sun around an axis which is roughly perpendicular to the plane of the → ecliptic; the Sun’s rotational axis is tilted by 7.25° from perpendicular to the ecliptic. It rotates in the → counterclockwise direction (when viewed from the north), the same direction that the planets rotate (and orbit around the Sun). The Sun’s rotation is differential, i.e. the period varies with latitude on the Sun (→ differential rotation). Equatorial regions rotate in about 25.6 days. The regions at 60 degrees latitude rotate more slowly, in about 30.9 days. |
bandevâr-e xoršidi Fr.: satellite solaire |
binâb-e xoršid (#), ~ xoršidi (#) Fr.: spectre solaire |
râšmân-e xoršidi Fr.: Système solaire The collective name for the Sun and all objects gravitationally bound to it. These objects
are the eight planets, their 166 known moons, five dwarf planets,
and billions of small bodies. The small bodies include asteroids, icy
Kuiper belt objects, comets, meteoroids, and interplanetary dust.
The solar system is roughly a sphere with a radius greater than 100,000 AU. |
farâvâni-ye râžmân-e xoršidi Fr.: abondance dans le système solaire Same as → protosolar abundance. See also: → solar system; → abundance. |
teleslop-e xoršidi, durbin-e ~ Fr.: télescope solaire |
zamân-e xoršidi (#) Fr.: temps solaire The time based on the rotation of the Earth relative to the Sun. → mean solar time. |
borj-e xoršidi Fr.: tour solaire |
hamzâd-e xoršid Fr.: jumeau du soleil An ideal star possessing fundamental physical parameters (mass, chemical composition, age, effective temperature, luminosity, gravity, magnetic fields, equatorial rotation, etc.) very similar, if not identical, to those of the Sun. See also → solar analog; → solar-like star. See also: → solar; → twins paradox. |
tondâ-ye xoršid, ~ xoršidi Fr.: vitesse solaire The rate of change of the Sun’s position with respect to the local standard of rest toward the → solar apex. |
bâd-e xoršid, ~ xoršidi Fr.: vent solaire A mass outflow, consisting of protons, electrons, and other subatomic
particles, expelled constantly from the solar corona at about 500 km per second. |
sâl-e xoršidi (#) Fr.: année solaire The period of time required for the Earth to make one complete revolution around the Sun. Solar year is a general term for: → tropical year, → vernal equinox year, and → autumnal equinox year, which have different lengths. |
setâre-ye xoršid-mânand Fr.: étoile semblable au soleil A member of a very broad class of stars in which is found a mixture of late F, early, middle, and, sometimes, late G type dwarfs and sub-giants. See also → solar analog; → solar twin. |
padidehâ-ye xoršidi-zamini Fr.: phénomènes solaires-terrestres Any of the various phenomena observable on the Earth that are caused by the influence of the Sun, such as aurora borealis. See also: → solar; → terrestrial; → phenomenon. |
sanjidâr-e Solberg-Høiland Fr.: critère de Solberg-Høiland A criterion for → convective stability in → massive stars. The Solberg-Høiland stability criterion corresponds to the inclusion of the effect of → rotation (variation of → centrifugal force) in the convective stability criterion. It is a combination of → Ledoux’s criterion (or possibly → Schwarzschild’s criterion) and → Rayleigh’s criterion. Both the dynamical shear and Solberg-Høiland instabilities occur in the case of a very large → angular velocity decrease outwards. Therefore, in a → rotating star the Ledoux or Schwarzschild criteria for convective instability should be replaced by the Solberg-Høiland criterion. More specifically, this criterion accounts for the difference of the centrifugal force for an adiabatically displaced fluid element. It is also known as the axisymmetric baroclinic instability. It arises when the net force (gravity + buoyancy + centrifugal force) applied to a fluid parcel in an adiabatical displacement has components only in the direction of the displacement (A. Maeder, Physics, Formation and Evolution of Rotating Stars, 2009, Springer). See also: E. Høiland, 1939, On the Interpretation and Application of the
Circulation Theorems of V. Bjerknes. Archiv for mathematik og
naturvidenskab. B. XLII. Nr. 5. Oslo. H. Solberg, 1936 (reprint), Le mouvement d’inertie de l’atmosphere
stable et son rôle dans la théorie des cyclones. H. Solberg, 1941, On the Stability of the Circular
Vortex. Avhandl. utg. av Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademi i
Oslo. I. Mat-Naturv. Klasse. No. 11. |
kaf-e pâ (#) Fr.: plante |
pâhangande-ye Soleil Fr.: compensateur de Soleil An optical compensator which produces a constant phase change over the entire field, as opposed to the phase change produced by the → Babinet compensator, which occurs progressively across the field. The compensator consists of two wedges of the same wedge angle and a parallel plate. The optic axes of the two wedges has the same orientation. These form a variable thickness plate. One of the wedges is assembled to the fixed parallel plate. The optic axis of the parallel plate is at 90° to that of the wedges. The other wedge is attached to a micrometer and moves to produce a thickness difference between the fixed and variable thickness plates, thus producing a phase delay. See also: Jean-Baptiste Soleil (1798-1849); → compensateur. |
sulvâr Fr.: solénoïde A long coil of insulated copper wire containing a large number of close turns. The strength of magnetic field produced by a current carrying solenoid is directly proportional to the number of turns in the solenoid and to the strength of current in the solenoid. It also depends on the nature of “core material” used in making the solenoid. The use of → soft iron rod as core in a solenoid produces the strongest magnetism. Etymology (EN): From Fr. solénoïde “pipe-shaped,” from Gk. solen “pipe, channel” + combining form of eidos “form, shape,” → -oid. Etymology (PE): Sulvâr, from sul “pipe, gutter,” Lori sil, Sangesari sula, Šahmirzâdi solla, Tabari seltek, may be cognate with Gk. solen, as above, + -vâr, → -oid. |
dafzé Fr.: solide
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. solide “firm, dense, compact,” from L. solidus “firm, whole, entire,” from PIE base *sol- “whole;” cf. Mod.Pers. har “every, all, each, any;” O.Pers. haruva- “whole, all together;” Av. hauruua- “whole, at all, undamaged;” Skt. sárva- “whole, all, every, undivided;” Gk. holos “whole, complete;” L. salvus “whole, safe, healthy,” sollus “whole, entire, unbroken.” Etymology (PE): Dafzé, from dafzak “big, gross, thick, hard” (Dehxodâ), variant dabz “thick, coarse,” → concentrated; cf. Ossetic baezgin “thick, dense;” Shughni divask, Oroshori devaskak “calf of the leg;” Khotanese baysga- “thick, deep, many, large;” Sogd. δβânz “wide, coarse;” Av. bəzuuant- “thick, dense,” bazah- “thickness;” Proto-Ir. *(d)banz- “to be(come) thick, dense;” cf. Gk. pakhos “thickness, coarseness;” Latvian biezs “thick” (Cheung 2007). |
zâviye-ye fazâyi, ~ dafzé Fr.: angle solide The figure formed by three or more planes meeting at a common point or formed at the vertex of a cone. The solid angle completely surrounding a point is 4π steradian. → steradian. Etymology (EN): → solid; → angle. Etymology (PE): Zâviyé, → angle; fazâyi “of or relating to space,” → space; jâmed, → solid. |
estât-e dafzé, hâlat-e jâmed (#) Fr.: état solide |
fizik-e estât-e dafzé, ~ hâlat-e jâmed Fr.: physique de l'état solide The branch of condensed matter physics concerned with the study of rigid matter or solids in terms of their constituent particles (electrons and nuclei). The bulk of solid-state physics theory and research is focused on the electromagnetic, thermodynamic, and structural properties of crystalline solids. See also: → solid state; → physics. |
dafzeš; dafzâneš Fr.: solidification |
dafzidan; dafzândan Fr.: se solidifier; solidifier |
dafzegi Fr.: solidité |
dafzegân Fr.: solidus |
soliton Fr.: soliton Math., Physics: A solution of a certain type of partial differential equation
that represents a solitary wave. See also: From solit(ary) + → -on. |
xoristân (#) Fr.: solstice Either of the two points on the → ecliptic at which the apparent → longitude of the → Sun is 90° or 270°. Also the time at which the Sun is at either point. Solstices occur when the Earth’s axis is oriented directly toward or away from the Sun, causing the Sun to reach its northernmost and southernmost extremes. → summer solstice, → winter solstice. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. solstice, from L. solstitium “point at which the sun seems to stand still,” from sol, → sun, cognate with Pers. xor, xoršid, hur, as below, + p.p. stem of sistere “to come to a stop, make stand still,” akin to Pers. istâdan “to stand,” as below. Etymology (PE): Xoristân, is composed of two components. The first one xor
“sun,” variant hur; Mid.Pers. xwar |
koldom-e xoristâni Fr.: colure de solstice The great circle of the celestial sphere which passes through the poles of the celestial equator and the solstice points. → equinoctial colure. |
noqtehâ-ye xoristâni Fr.: points solsticiaux |
luyidani Fr.: soluble |
luyešt Fr.: soluté |
luyeš Fr.: solution
2a) Math.: The process of determining the answer to a problem. The answer itself. 2b) Math.: Of a differential equation, any function which, when put into the
equation, converts it into an identity.
See also: Verbal noun of → solve. |
luyé Fr.: solvation |
luyidan Fr.: 1) résoudre; 2) dissoudre
Etymology (EN): M.E. solven, from L. solvere “to loosen, dissolve, untie,” from PIE *se-lu-, from reflexive pronoun *swe- + base *leu- “to loosen, divide, cut apart;” cf. Gk. lyein “to loosen, release, untie,” O.E. -leosan “to lose,” leas “loose;” E. lose, loose and Ger. los derive from this root. Etymology (PE): Luyidan, infinitive from stem lu(y)-, from |
luyandé Fr.: solvant Substance having the power of dissolving other substances in it. See also: Agent noun of → solve. |
kahkešân-e Sombrero Fr.: galaxie Sombrero A → spiral galaxy in the constellation → Virgo. It was the first galaxy whose rotation was detected. Also named M104 and NGC 4594. Etymology (EN): Sp. sombrero “broad-brimmed hat,” originally “umbrella or parasol,” Etymology (PE): Kahkešân, → galaxy; sombrero, Sp., as above. |
gomâné Fr.: sonde A rocket or balloon carrying instruments to probe conditions in the upper atmosphere. Etymology (EN): From Fr. sonde “ounding line; plumb line.” Etymology (PE): Gomâné “a shaft sunk in order to ascertain the depth of the water when
making a subterraneous canal,” from Proto-Iranian *vi-mā-, from vi-
“apart, away from, out” (cf. Av. vi-; O.Pers. viy- “apart, away;” Skt. vi-
“apart, asunder, away, out;” L. vitare “to avoid, turn aside”) +
mā- “to measure” (cf. |
sedâyi (#) Fr.: sonique |
qariv-e sedâ (#) Fr.: bang sonique |
noqte-ye sedâyi Fr.: point sonique The point where the → stellar wind makes a transition from → subsonic to → supersonic flow. In the particular case of a spherically symmetric wind (thus with no magnetic field), the distance from star, at which the sonic point occurs, is given by: rs = (GM)/2cs2, where G is the → gravitational constant, M is the stellar mass, and cs the → sound speed at the sonic point. |
šamidan Fr.: To gather on a surface either by absorption, adsorption, or a combination of the two processes. Etymology (EN): Verb, from sorption, extracted from → absorption→ adsorption, from L. sorbere “suck in,” from PIE base *srebh- “to suck, absorb” (cf. Arm. arbi “I drank;” Gk. rhopheo “to gulp down;” Lith. srebiu “to drink greedily”). Etymology (PE): Šamidan, from šam, variant of šâm, as in âšâm, âšâmidan “to drink, to sip;” Av. šam- “to drink, sip, swallow;” Skt. cam, camati “to sip, dirink, lick up, absorb.” |
šameš Fr.: sorption The process of sorbing. The state of being sorbed. → absorption; → adsorption. See also: Verbal noun of → sorb |
dowre-ye Tištari Fr.: période sothique The interval after which the heliacal rising of the star Sirius occurs at the same time of the year. It is a period of 1,460 Sothic years. Etymology (EN): From Fr. sothique, from Gk. Sothis, an Egyptian name of Sirius; → period. Etymology (PE): Tištari, of or pertaining to Tištar→ serius; dowré, → period. |
sâl-e Tištari Fr.: année sothique |
1) sedâ (#); 2) dorvâ Fr.: 1) son; 2) sain
2a) Free from damage, injury, decay, etc. 2b) Describing an → argument→ iff
its → reasoning is → valid and all
its → premises are → true. 2c) Logic: A formal system is sound if all the → inferences Etymology (EN): 1) M.E. soun; O.Fr. son, from L. sonus “sound,” sonare “to sound;”
PIE base *suen- “to sound;” cf.
Av. xvan- “to sound;”
Pers. xvân-, xvândan “to sing, read;”
Etymology (PE): 1) Sedâ “sound,” most probably a Pers. term, since it exists also in Indo-Aryan
|
divâr-e sedâ, varqe-ye ~ Fr.: mur du son |
kâruž-e sedâ Fr.: énergie acoustique The energy which → sound waves impart to a medium. Same as acoustic energy. |
meydân-e sedâ Fr.: champ acoustique The distribution of → sound energy in a defined space. |
ofoq-e sedâ Fr.: horizon sonore The maximum distance a → sound wave could have traveled
through the ionized plasma from the → Big Bang until
the → recombination era. It is 150
→ Mpc, or bout 500 million → light-years.
Sound horizon is the equivalent of the concept of → cosmic horizon,
where one replaces → electromagnetic wave by |
dartanuyi-ye sedâ Fr.: intensité de son The average → sound power passing through a unit area perpendicular to the direction that the sound is traveling. It is usually expressed in watts per square meter. |
tarâz-e dartanuyi-ye sedâ Fr.: niveau de l'intensité de son |
tavân-e sedâ Fr.: puissance de son The → sound energy emitted by a source per unit time, usually expressed in → watts. Sound power causes → sound pressure. |
tarâz-e tavân-e sedâ Fr.: niveau de la puissance de son |
fešâr-e sedâ Fr.: pression de son The periodic fluctuation above and below atmospheric pressure created by an oscillating body which provides the → sound power. Instantaneous sound pressure is the peak value of air pressure. |
cunâ-ye sedâ Fr.: qualité de son |
tondi-ye sedâ Fr.: vitesse du son The velocity of propagation of a → longitudinal wave in a medium under specified conditions. Also known as sonic speed, sonic velocity, acoustic velocity, sound velocity, velocity of sound, speed of sound. The speed of sound is a thermodynamic property that relates to the change in pressure and density of the medium and can be expressed as C = (dP/dρ)1/2, where C is the sound velocity, dP is the change in pressure, and dρ the change in density. It can also be expressed as C = (E/ρ)1/2, where E is the bulk modulus elasticity. This equation is valid for liquids, solids and gases. The sound travels faster through media with higher → elasticity and/or lower density. If a medium is → incompressible the speed of sound is infinite. For → ideal gases, a simple relationship exists between the sound speed and temperature: C = (γR T)1/2, where γ is the → specific heat ratio (CP/CV), and R is the → gas constant. We see that for ideal gases it the speed is independent of pressure. In air at 0°C it is 332 m/sec. The speed of sound in a gas of hydrogen is 1315 m/s. → Mach number. |
mowj-e sedâ (#) Fr.: onde sonore A → longitudinal wave which when striking the ear gives rise to the sensation of sound. Such waves can be propagated in solids, liquids, and gases. The material particles transmitting sound waves oscillate in the direction of propagation of the wave itself. There is a large range of frequencies within which longitudinal waves can stimulate the human ear and brain to the sensation of hearing. This range is from about 20 → Hz to about 20,000 Hz and is called the audible range. → ultrasound; → infrasound. |
gomâné-zani Fr.: sondage, radiosondage
Etymology (EN): From Fr. sonder, → sonde. Etymology (PE): From gomâné, → sonde, + zani verbal noun of
zadan “to do; to strike, beat; to play an instrument”
(Mid.Pers. zatan, žatan; O.Pers./Av.
jan-, gan- “to strike, hit, smite, kill” (jantar- “smiter”); cf. |
bâlon-e gamâne-zani Fr.: ballon-sonde |
dorvâyi Fr.: santé
|
xan Fr.: source General: Any thing or place from which something comes, arises, or is obtained. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. sourse “a rising, beginning, fountainhead of a river or stream,” from p.p. of sourdre “to rise, spring up,” from L. surgere “to rise,” → surge. Etymology (PE): Xan “source,” variant xân (Gilaki xoni, Tabari xoni,Laki kyani, Tâleši xâni, xoni,); Mid.Pers. xân, xânig “source, spring,” Av. xâ-, xan- “source, fountain, spring,” xayana- “belonging to a spring;” cf. Khotanese khâhâ- “spring, fountain;” Skt. khâ’- “spring, source.” |
karyâ-ye xan Fr.: fonction source |
daštar Fr.: Sud The cardinal point which is opposite to north. It is also the direction of the Sun at local noon (in the northern hemisphere). Etymology (EN): M.E. suth(e), south(e), from Etymology (PE): Note:
South is related to right since it is to the right when one faces the rising Sun. PIE base *deks- “right.” The second element -tar direction suffix, as in Mid.Pers. ošastar “east” (Av. ušastara- “eastern”), dôšastar “west” (Av. daôšatara-, daôšastara- “western”), abâxtar “north” (Av. apāxtara- “northern”), Mod.Pers. bâxtar, → west. |
nâsâni-ye Atlas-e daštar Fr.: Anomalie Atlantique Sud A region of the Earth where the inner → Van Allen belt comes closest to the Earth’s surface. It is due to the fact that the → geomagnetic field is offset from the center of the Earth. The region is centered near 25 degrees South 50 degrees West, close to the Atlantic coast of Brazil. The excess of trapped energetic particles in that region presents a problem for satellites in orbit around the Earth. |
qotb-e âsmâni-ye daštar Fr.: pôle sud céleste The point in the → southern hemisphere where the → rotation axis of the Earth touches the → celestial sphere. In contrast to the → north celestial pole, no bright star is visible in that direction. |
noqte-ye daštar Fr.: point Sud The point on → horizon in direction of → geographic south pole. |
Lerdhâ-ye Laye-laye-ye Qotb-e Daštar Fr.: couches de dépôt du pôle sud A large area of the south polar region of → Mars which is covered with layers of → water ice and → dust. The SPLD, like the NPLD, has a maximum relief relative to the surrounding terrain of ~ 3.5 km and ~ 1,000 km across. Above the SPLD lies a very thin temporary (1-10 m) cap of → carbon dioxide ice/frost that snows out in the winter and sublimates over the spring and summer seasons. It is believed that the rhythmic nature of the deposits is related to oscillations in Mars’ → orbital parameters (J. J. Plaut et al., 2007, Science 316, 92). |
qotb-e daštar Fr.: pôle Sud
|
setâre-ye qotb-e daštar Fr.: étoile du pôle sud A star that would mark the south → celestial pole. Presently no bright visible star is situated along the → rotation axis of the Earth in the southern hemisphere. But, because of the Earth’s → axial precession, about 7,000 years from now the star → Delta Velorum in the constellation → Vela, the Sail, will come to within 0.2 degrees of the South Celestial Pole (around the year 9250 B.C.). That is closer to marking the celestial pole than → Polaris or → Sirius ever do during their reigns as pole stars! |
daštari Fr.: du Sud, méridional |
calipâ-ye daštari Fr.: Croix du Sud |
nimsepehr-e daštari Fr.: hémisphère sud The half of the → Earth or another → north pole between the → south pole and the → equator. See also: → southern; → hemisphere. |
gozar-e daštar-su Fr.: |
fazâ (#) Fr.: espace
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. espace, from L. spatium “room, area, distance, stretch of time,” of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Fazâ, loan from Ar. |
bâr-e fazâyi (#) Fr.: charge d'espace Electricity: An electric charge belonging to a cloud of electrons lying between
a cathode and plate within an electric tube. |
tifâl-e fazâyi Fr.: débris spatial Man-made objects in orbit around the Earth that no longer serve any useful purpose. The estimated number of debris include about 22,000 tractable objects larger than 10 cm in all orbits, of which 2,200 are dead satellites and last stages of the rocket that put them in orbit. There are also left-overs from spacecraft and mission operations, such as bolts, lens caps, clamp bands, auxiliary motors, etc. The debris presents a threat because of their high speeds, which ranges between 15 and 20 km/sec. Also called space junk, space waste, orbital debris. |
parvâz-e fazâyi Fr.: vol spatial |
goruh-e fazâyi Fr.: groupe d'espace Set of operations (rotation about an axis, reflection across a plane, translation, or combination of these) which when carried out on a periodic arrangement of points in space brings the system of points to self-coincidence. Etymology (EN): The word group comes from the mathematical notion of a group. |
gosilân-e fazâyi Fr.: mission spatiale A manned or unmanned space flight outside the Earth’s atmosphere. Etymology (EN): → space; mission, from L. missionem (nominative missio) “act of sending,” from mittere “to send,” of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Gosilân, from gosil, variant gosi “sending away, dismission;” Mid.Pers. wisé “to despatch” (Parthian Mid.Pers. wsys- “to despatch;” Buddhist Mid.Pers. wsydy “to despatch;” Sogdian ‘ns’yd- “to exhort”), from Proto-Iranian *vi-sid- “to despatch, send off,” from prefix vi- “apart, away, out,” + *sid- “to call” + -ân nuance suffix; fazâyi adj. of fazâ, → space. |
jonbeš-e fazâyi Fr.: mouvement spatial The velocity and direction of motion of a star or celestial object with respect to the Local Standard of Rest. Same as → peculiar velocity. |
gomâne-ye fazâyi Fr.: sonde spatiale |
nâvak-e fazâyi Fr.: navette spatiale A reusable space vehicle designed to travel between the Earth and an orbiting space station for specific missions (carrying a crew and a cargo deploying and retrieving satellites) and then to return. Etymology (EN): → space; M.E. shotil (n.); O.E. scytel “a dart, arrow;” cf. O.N. skutill “harpoon;” akin to shut, shoot. Etymology (PE): Nâvak “small ship; ship like,” from nâv “ship” (O.Pers./Av. *nāv-, O.Pers. nāviyā- “fleet;” cf. Skt. nau-, nava- “ship, boat;” Gk. naus “ship;” L. nauticus “pertaining to ships or sailors”) + -ak diminutive/similarity suffix. Nâvak also means “a small arrow, an arrow flying swift,” which may have a different origin. |
âgâhi az siteš-e fazâyi Fr.: surveillance de l'environnement spatial A program aimed at monitoring the near-Earth environment for recognizing and The SSA Program was authorized at the November 2008 Ministerial Council and formally launched on 1 January 2009. The mandate was extended at the 2012 and 2016 Ministerial Councils, and the program is funded through to 2020. The program comprises three segments:
|
istgâh-e fazâyi Fr.: station spatiale |
tašnikšenâsi-ye fazâyi, fanâvari-ye ~ Fr.: technologie spatiale The systematic application of science, technology, and engineering to the exploration and utilization of outer space. See also: → space; → technology. |
teleskop-e fazâyi (#) Fr.: télescope spatial A telescope which is placed in an orbit around the → Earth and operates through commands from sent from the control center on Earth, such as → Hubble space telescope, → Herschel satellite, → Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS), → Infrared Space Observatory (ISO), → International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE), → Planck Satellaite , → Spitzer Space Telescope. |
tondâ-ye fazây Fr.: vitesse spatiale |
havâšenâsi-ye fazâ Fr.: météorologie de l'espace The varying conditions in space and specifically in the
near-Earth environment. Space weather is chiefly solar driven, resulting from
solar activities such as → solar flares,
→ solar wind, and
→ coronal mass ejections See also: → space; → weather; → meteorology. |
sâyand-e fazâyi Fr.: altération spatiale The slight erosion of Solar System bodies (planets, moons, asteroids) caused by the → solar wind, → cosmic rays, and → micrometeorite bombardments. Space weathering affects the physical and optical properties of the surfaces of these bodies. Understanding this process is therefore important for the interpretation of remotely obtained spectral data, such as space probe photographs of outer Solar System moons. See also: → space; → weathering. |
fazâ-zamân (#) Fr.: espace-temps A physical entity resulting from the union of space and time concepts. In its most simple version space-time is the four-dimensional continuum, having three spatial coordinates and one temporal coordinate, in which any → event or physical object is located. In → special relativity it is Minkowski’s flat space-time. In → general relativity, it is described by a curved entity characterized by a → metric. Free-fall motion describes the → geodesic of this curved space-time. It may have additional dimensions in the context of speculative theories, such as → string theory. |
xamidegi-ye fazâ-zamân Fr.: courbure de l'espace-temps |
nemudâr-e fazâ-zamân (#) Fr.: diagramme espace-temps A simple way of representing the → space-time continuum, usually including time and only one spatial dimension. The curve of a particle’s equation of motion on a space-time diagram is called a → world line. Same as → Minkowski diagram. |
andarvâr-e fazâ-zamân Fr.: intervalle espace-temps
See also: → space-time; → interval. |
fazânâv (#) Fr.: vaisseau spatial |
fazâsân Fr.: genre espace Of, pertaining to, or describing an → event being outside the → light cone. |
andarvâr-e fazâsân Fr.: intervalle genre espace The → space-time interval
between two → events if it is imaginary, i.e. |
fazâ-zamân Fr.: espace-temps → space-time. |
bil (#) Fr.: pelle A digging tool with a flat blade attached to a shaft so that Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. spadu; cognate with Gk. spathe “blade of a sword or oar.” Etymology (PE): Bil “spade,” variants Kurd. bêr, Baluci bard, Gabri bard(a); Mid.Pers. bêl, bêr; Proto-Iranian *barda- metathesis of *badar-; cf. Av. vadar- “weapon” (Gershevitch 1962). |
1) terišé; 2) terišidan Fr.: 1) éclat; 2) cliver
Etymology (EN): M.E. spalle “a chip,” verb spald “to split,” from M.L.G. spalden, cognate with O.H.G. spaltan “to split.” Etymology (PE): Terišé “a chip,” from
tarâšidan “to cut, hew; scape; shave;”
Mid.Pers. tâšitan “to cut, cleave; create by putting together
different elements;” Av. taš- “to cut off, fashion, shape, create,”
taša- “axe” (Mod.Pers. taš, tišé “axe”), |
tarišeš Fr.: spallation |
bâzé (#) Fr.: envergure
Etymology (EN): M.E. spanne, sponne, spayn; O.E. span(n), spon(n) “distance between the thumb and little finger of an extended hand;” cf. Ger. Spanne, Du. span. Etymology (PE): Bâzé “extension of both arms when streched out,” related to bâzu “arm”
(Mid.Pers. bâzûk “arm;” Av. bāzu- “arm;”
cf. Skt. bāhu- “arm, forearm;” Gk. pechys “forearm, arm, ell;” |
axgar (#), jaraqé (#) Fr.: étincelle Visible disruptive discharge of electricity between two places at opposite high potential. It is preceded by ionization of the path. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. spearca; cf. M.L.G. sparke, M.Du. spranke. Etymology (PE): Laki âger “fire accompanied by flame,”
Lori azgel daaneh-ye aatash-e sorx shodeh va godaaxteh
Kurd. agir “fire”
Gilaki val “prominence, flame”
Tâleši kel “blazing flame”
standard Pers. gorr Laki gorron “flame;” |
gâf-e jaraqé (#) Fr.: éclateur A device consisting of two electrodes separated by a small gap that is filled by a gas, usually air. A high → potential difference applied to the electrodes ionizes the gas and current flows across it for a brief time causing a spark across the gap. Spark gaps have a wide application. As spark plugs, they are used to ignite a mixture of fuel and air in the piston cylinders of an internal combustion engine. The electricity is provided by the battery and ignition coil, and the spark timing is controlled by the distributor. Spark gaps are also used as safety devices on equipment to prevent damage from voltage surges. |
binâb-e axgar, ~ jaraqé Fr.: spectre d'étincelle |
hamdusi-ye fazâyi Fr.: cohérence spatiale |
vâgošud-e fazâyi Fr.: résolution spatiale The smallest detail that can be seen in an image. Same as → angular resolution. See also: → spatial; → resolution. |
soxanidan (#), soxan goften (#) Fr.: parler To utter words with the ordinary voice (not singing) to communicate; to talk. Etymology (EN): From M.E. speken “to speak,” from O.E. specan, alteration of earlier sprecan “to speak;” cf. Low Germ. spreken “to speak,” Du. spreken, Ger. sprechen “to speak;” ultimately from PIE *spreg- “to make a sound, utter, speak.” Etymology (PE): From M.P. saxwanitan “to speak, to talk,” → speech. |
vižé (#) Fr.: spécial, particulier Of a distinct or particular kind or character; having a particular function Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. especial, from L. specialis “individual, particular,” from → species “appearance, kind, sort.” Etymology (PE): Vižé, from Mid.Pers. apēcak “pure, sacred,” from *apa-vēcak “set apart,” from prefix apa- + vēcak, from vēxtan (Mod.Pers. bixtan) “to detach, separate, sift, remove,” Av. vaēk- “to select, sort out, sift,” pr. vaēca-, Skt. vic-, vinakti “to sift, winnow, separate; to inquire.” |
bâzânigimand-e vižé Fr.: de relativité restreinte Of, relating to, or subject to the theory of → special relativity. See also: → special; → relativistic. |
bâzanigi-ye vižé Fr.: relativité restreinte The theory formulated by A. Einstein in 1905, which is based on the following
two → postulates:
The term “special theory of relativity” refers to the restriction in the first postulate to reference systems moving at a constant velocity relative to each other (→ inertial reference frame). See also → general relativity. See also: → special; → relativity. |
âraz Fr.: espèce
Etymology (EN): From L. species “a particular sort, kind, or type,” originally “a sight, look, view, appearance,” from specere “to look at, to see, behold;” PIE root spek- “to look around,” → scope. Etymology (PE): Âraz, from intensive/nuance â- + raz-, from Av. razan “order,
→ rule,” from rāz- “to put in line, direct set,”
cf. Mod.Pers. raj “line, row,” variants raž, rak, râk, rezg (Lori),
radé, râdé “line, rule, row,” |
âbizé Fr.: précis, explicite, spécifique
Etymology (EN): From Fr. spécifique and directly from L.L. specificus “constituting a kind or sort,” from L. species “kind, sort,” → species. Etymology (PE): Âbizé, from Mid.Pers. apēcak “pure, sacred” (older form of vižé, → special), from *apa-vēcak “set apart,” from prefix apa- + vēcak, from vēxtan (Mod.Pers. bixtan) “to detach, separate, sift, remove,” Av. vaēk- “to select, sort out, sift,” pr. vaēca-, Skt. vic-, vinakti “to sift, winnow, separate; to inquire.” |
jonbâk-e zâvie-yi-ye âbizé Fr.: moment angulaire spécifique → Angular momentum per unit mass. |
bâr-e âbizé Fr.: charge spécifique |
cagâli-ye âbizé Fr.: densité spécifique Same as → relative density. |
gerâni-ye âbizé Fr.: gravité spécifique |
garmâ-ye âbizé Fr.: chaleur spécifique
|
nam-e âbizé Fr.: humidité spécifique |
dartanuyi-e âbizé Fr.: intensité spécifique |
nerx-e âbize-ye diseš-e setâregân Fr.: taux de formation d'étoiles spécifique Star formation rate per unit → mass. More specifically, the → star formation rate in a galaxy divided by the → stellar mass of the galaxy. Observations of galaxies over a wide range of → redshifts suggest that the slope of the SFR-M* relation is about unity, which implies that their sSFR does not depend strongly on stellar mass. Specific star formation rates increase out to z ~ 2 and are constant, or perhaps slowly increasing, from z = 2 out to z = 6, though with a large scatter, sSFR ~ 2-10 Gyr-1 (Lehnert et al., 2015, A&A 577, A112, and references therein). |
gonj-e âbizé Fr.: volume spécifique |
âbizeš Fr.: précision, spécification
See also: Verbal noun of → specify. |
âbizegi Fr.: spécifité |
1) parsunidan; 2) âbizidan Fr.: préciser, spécifier |
nemuné (#) Fr.: specimen A part or an individual taken as exemplifying a whole mass or number; a typical animal, plant, mineral, part, etc. → sample. Etymology (EN): From L. specimen “mark, example, indication, sign, evidence,” from speci- stem of specere “to look at,” → -scope,
Etymology (PE): Nemuné, from nemudan “to show;” Mid.Pers. nimūdan, nimây-
“to show,” from O.Pers./Av. ni- “down; in, into,”
→ ni- (PIE), + māy-
“to measure;” cf. Skt. mati “measures,” matra- “measure;” |
pakâl Fr.: tavelure
Etymology (EN): Speckle “a speck or small spot, as a natural dot of color on skin, plumage, or
foliage,” Etymology (PE): Pakâl, from pak “spot” (Lâri, Gerâši), pašy
“mingled, confused” (Tâleši),
probably related to
pisé “dappled, variegated,” pis, pisi “leprosy,”
neveštan “to write,” pišé “profession,”
→ professional astronomer;
Mid.Pers. parš “speckled, spotted,” pēsīdan “to color, adorn,”
pēsit “adorned;” |
andarzaneš-sanji-ye pakâl Fr.: interférométrie des tavelures A technique for generating a clear composite image of a celestial object blurred by See also: → speckle; → interferometry. |
omr-e pakâl Fr.: durée de vie de tavelures The time scale on which a stellar image changes significantly due to → atmospheric turbulence. It is proportional to the ratio r0/Δv, where r0 is the → Fried parameter and Δv the standard deviation of the distribution of wind velocities weighted by the turbulence structure coefficient. Typical lifetimes in the visible range from about 3 to 30 milliseconds. Etymology (EN): → speckle; → life; → time. Etymology (PE): Omr “life-time;” from Ar. ‘umr; pakâl, → speckle. |
nufe-ye pakâl Fr.: bruit de tavelures |
binâbi (#) Fr.: spectral |
radebandi-ye binâbi (#) Fr.: classification spectrale A system that assigns a → spectral type
to a star according to characteristics of its spectrum. The earliest attempt
to divide stars on the basis of their spectra was the
→ Secchi classification in the 1860s. This scheme paved the way
for the → Harvard classification that led to the current
→ Morgan-Keenan classification of spectral types.
In the Harvard system stars were originally thought to follow an evolutionary
sequence from the “early” O and B types to the “late” K and M types.
Although this is now known to be wrong, the terms See also: → spectral; → classification. |
pušeš-e binâbi Fr.: couverture spectrale |
cagâli-ye binâbi Fr.: densité spectrale For a specified → bandwidth of radiation consisting of a continuous → frequency spectrum, the total → power in the bandwidth divided by the bandwidth. Spectral density describes how the power (or variance) of a time series is distributed with frequency. Also called power spectral density. |
pâšeš-e binâbi Fr.: dispersion spectrale → dispersion. See also: → spectral; → dispersion. |
vâbâžeš-e kâruž-e binâbi Fr.: distribution de l'énergie spectrale A plot showing the energy emitted by a source as a function of the radiation
wavelength or frequency. It is used in many branches of astronomy to characterize
astronomical sources, in particular mainly in → near infrared
and → middle infrared to study
→ protostars or
→ young stellar objects. The SED of these objects is
divided in four classes. Class 0 in which the SED
represents a very embedded protostar, where the mass of the central core is small
in comparison to the mass of the → accreting envelope. The SED
is characterized by the → blackbody radiation of the
envelope and peaks at → submillimeter wavelengths. Class I objects possess a SED that peaks in the → far infrared
and is characterized by a weak contribution of the blackbody of the central protostar (detected
in near infrared)
and the emission of a thick disk and dense envelope. These objects
have less mass in the envelope and more massive central cores with respect to
Class 0. Class II objects are the → classical T Tauri stars Finally, Class III objects have pure photospheric spectra. Their SED is peaked in the optical
and is well approximated by a blackbody emission with a faint
→ infrared excess
due to the
presence of a residual optically thin disk that may be the origin of
→ planetesimals. See also: → spectral; → energy; → distribution. |
ârang-e binâb, ~ binâbi Fr.: motif spectral |
dišan-e binâbi Fr.: indice spectral
|
xatt-e binâbi Fr.: raie spectrale |
gostare-ye binâbi Fr.: domain spectral |
nâhiye-ye binâbi Fr.: région spectrale |
vâgošud-e binâb, ~ binâbi Fr.: résolution spectrale The capacity of a spectrograph to separate two adjacent spectral lines. The theoretical spectral resolution depends on the grating dispersion, grating position, pixel size, collimator and camera focal length, and the entrance slit-width. See also: → spectral; → resolution. |
pâsox-e binâbi Fr.: réponse spectrale |
seri-ye binâbi Fr.: série spectrale |
handâyeš-e binâbi Fr.: synthèse spectrale The process of computing line strengths in stellar spectra using an appropriate stellar atmosphere model, atomic and molecular data, and the numerical solution of the → radiative transfer equation at each point in the spectrum. |
gune-ye binâbi Fr.: type spectral A group into which stars may be classified according to the characteristics of
their spectra. Spectral type correlates with the star’s |
vartandegi-ye binâbi Fr.: variabilité spectrale The state of a spectrum from an astronomical object in which the lines change with time as far as their intensity, profile, and wavelength are concerned. See also: → spectral; → variability. |
binâb- (#) Fr.: spectro- A combining form representing → spectrum in compound words. See also: → spectrum |
Fr.: Spectro-Polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet (SPHERE) The → extreme adaptive optics system and → coronagraphic facility at the → European Southern Observatory (ESO) → Very Large Telescope (VLT) (UT3) available from May 2014. Its primary science goal is imaging, low-resolution spectroscopic, and polarimetric characterization of → exoplanetary system at → visible and → near-infrared wavelengths (0.5-2.32 μm). SPHERE is capable of obtaining → diffraction-limited images at 0’’.02 to 0’’.08 resolution depending on the wavelength. Its → spectral resolution is 30 to 350, depending on the mode. See also: → spectro-; → polarimetric; → high; → contrast; → exoplanet. |
binân-negâš (#) Fr.: spectrogramme |
binâb-negâr (#) Fr.: spectrographe |
hur-binâbnegâšt Fr.: spectrohéliogramme |
hur-binâbnegâr Fr.: spectrohéliographe An instrument for recording monochromatic images of the Sun. See also: → spectro-; → heliograph. |
binâb-sanj Fr.: spectromètre |
binâb-nursanj Fr.: spectrophotomètre An instrument designed to measure the intensity of a particular spectral line or a series of spectral lines. See also: → spectro-; → photometer. |
binâb-šidsanjik Fr.: spectrophotométrie Of or relating to → spectrophotometry. See also: → spectrum; → photometry. |
binâb-šidsanji Fr.: spectrophotométrie In astronomy, measurement of the absolute fluxes of the components of different frequencies in the spectrum of a light source. See also: → spectrum; → photometry. |
binâb-qotbešsanji, binâb-qotbešsanjik Fr.: spectropoolarimétrique Of or relating to → spectropolarimetry. See also: → spectropolarimetry; → -ic. |
binâb-qotbešsanji Fr.: spectropolarimétrie A technique of observation in → astrophysics which combines → spectroscopy and → polarization measurements. Spectropolarimetry has a wide range of applications in astrophysics, including → stellar magnetic field studies. → ESPaDOnS, → HARPSpol. See also: → spectro-; → polarimetry. |
binâb-nemâ (#) Fr.: spectroscope An optical instrument for forming and examining the spectrum of a light source. The instrument contains a narrow slit through which the light enters. The slit is placed at the focus of a positive lens called the collimator lens to form a beam of parallel rays. The beam of light falls on a dispersing element (prism, grating, or grism) which separates the light into its colors. This spectrum can be observed with an ocular (in the spectroscope) or recorded on a detector (in the spectrograph). |
binâbnemâyi, binâbnemaayik Fr.: spectroscopique Of or relating to → spectroscopy. |
dorin-e binâbnemâyi Fr.: binaire spectroscopique A binary system that cannot be resolved by a telescope, but can be identified by means of the Doppler shift of the spectral lines. As stars revolve, they alternately approach and recede in the line of sight. This motion is shown up in their spectra as a periodic oscillation or doubling of spectral lines. See also: → spectroscopic; → binary. |
vâgeni-ye binâbnemâyi Fr.: dégénérescence spectroscopique The situation in which spectroscopic features in a certain optical region are not sensitive enough to distinguish adjacent → luminosity classes, for instance → dwarf stars from → giant stars. See also: → spectroscopic; → degeneracy. |
nemudâr-e binâbnemâyik-e Hertzsprung--Russell Fr.: diagramme spectroscopique de Hertzsprung-Russell A spacial → Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (HRD) which is independent of distance and extinction measurements. The sHRD is derived from the classical HRD by replacing the luminosity (L) to the quantity ℒ = T 4eff/g which is the inverse of the flux-weighted gravity introduced by Kudritzki et al. (2003). The value of ℒ can be calculated from stellar atmosphere analyses without prior knowledge of the distance or the extinction. In contrast to the classical Teff-log g diagram (→ Kiel diagram), the sHRD sorts stars according to their proximity to the → Eddington limit, because ℒ is proportional to the Eddington factor Γ = L/LEdd according to the relation ℒ = (1/4πσG)(L/M) = (c/(σκ)Γ, where σ is the → Stefan-Boltzmann constant, κ is the electron → scattering → opacity in the stellar envelope, and the other symbols have their usual meanings (Langer, N., Kudritzki, R. P., 2014, A&A 564, A52, arXive:1403.2212, Castro et al., 2014, A&A 570, L13. See also: → spectroscopic; → H-R diagram. |
jerm binâbnemâyi Fr.: masse spectroscopique The stellar mass derived from → gravity (g) and radius (R), expressed by M = gR2/G, where G is the → gravitational constant. Spectroscopic mass conveys the actual mass of the star, in contrast with its → initial mass. See also: → spectroscopic; → mass. |
didgašt-e binâbnamâyi Fr.: parallaxe spectroscopique The measurement of a stellar distance by the absolute magnitude derived from the luminosity criteria of the spectrum and the apparent magnitude of the star. See also: → spectroscopic; → parallax. |
vartande-ye binâbnemâyi Fr.: variable spectroscopique A → variable star that displays changes in its → spectrum. In such stars line intensities may vary and new lines may appear. Examples include → AG Carinae, HD 108, HD 191612, and HD 148937. See also: → spectroscopic; → variable. |
binânnemâyi Fr.: spectroscopie |
binâb (#) Fr.: spectre The → electromagnetic radiation divided into its constituting wavelengths or frequencies. Etymology (EN): From L. spectrum “appearance, image, apparition,” from specere
“to look at, view;” Gk. skopein “to behold, look, consider,” Etymology (PE): Binâb “a vision;” Mid.Pers. wênâb “vision,” from
wên-, present stem of didan “to see;” |
bâztâb-e âyenevâr (#) Fr.: réflexion spéculaire The reflection of light waves in which the reflected waves travel in a definite direction, and the directions of the incident and reflected waves make equal angles with a line perpendicular to the reflecting surface. Same as → regular reflection; opposite of → diffuse reflection. Etymology (EN): From L. specularis, from speculum “mirror;” Etymology (PE): Bâztâb, → reflection; âyenevâr “mirror-like,” from âyené, → mirror + -vâr similarity suffix. |
gâsidan Fr.: spéculer To guess possible answers to a question when there are not enough information to be certain. Etymology (EN): Back formation from O.Fr. speculation, from L. speculatus, p.p. of speculari “to watch over, observe,” from specula “watch tower,” from specere “to look at, regard,” cognate with Av. spas- “to attend; to serve,” spasiieiti “looks at, perceives;” Pers. sepâs “kindness, thanksgiving;” Skt. spasati “sees;” Gk. skopein “to behold, look, consider,” skeptesthai “to look at;” O.H.G. spehhon “to spy;” Ger. spähen “to spy;” PIE *spek- “to look around, observe.” Etymology (PE): Gâsidan infinitive from gâs, from Av. kas-
“to look at, see,” with extension of the vowel and change of the last phoneme from k
to g, as in and cognate with negâh (Mid.Pers. nikâh),
→ look, âgâh (Mid.Pers. âkâh) “aware”
(→ Space Situational Awareness), |
gâseš Fr.: spéculation The act or an instance of speculating. See also: Verbal noun of → speculate. |
1) soxan (#); 2) soxanrâni (#) Fr.: 1) parole; 2) discours, allocution
Etymology (EN): M.E. speche; O.E. spæc; cf. Dan. sprog, O.S. spraca, O.Fris. spreke, Du. spraak, O.H.G. sprahha, Ger. Sprache “speech.” Etymology (PE): Soxan “speech, utterance, word;” Mid.Pers.
saxwan “word, speech;”
O.Pers. θanh- “to declare, say,” aθaham “I said;” |
tondi (#) Fr.: vitesse The ratio of the distance covered to the time taken by a moving body. Speed in a specified direction is → velocity. Etymology (EN): M.E. spede “good luck, prosperity, rapidity;” Etymology (PE): Tondi “speed,” from tond “swift, rapid, brisk; fierce, severe”
(Mid.Pers. tund “sharp, violent;” Sogdian tund “violent;” cf. Skt. tod-
“to thrust, give a push,” tudáti “he thrusts;” L. tundere
“to thrust, to hit” (Fr. percer, E. pierce, ultimately from
L. pertusus, from p.p. of pertundere “to thrust or bore through;” |
tondi-ye nur Fr.: vitesse de la lumière Same as → velocity of light. |
vâbidan Fr.: orthographier, écrire, épeler To name or write in order the letters constituting a word Etymology (EN): M.E. spellen, from O.Fr. espeller, from Proto-Germanic spellan “to tell,” which also gave rise to the O.E. spellian; ultimately from PIE *spel- “to say aloud, recite.” Etymology (PE): Vâbidan, from vâb, from vab- ultimately from Proto-Ir. *uab/f- “to call,” which has given rise to several words in Iranian languages, mainly Pers. gap “word, talk,” gapidan “to talk,” buf “owl,” zand-vâf “nightingale,” literally “song teller, ode singer;” Baluchi gwâp-/gwâpt “to summon, call together;” Sogd. waβ-/wab- “to speak, to talk;” Pash. wây-/wayəl “to speak;” Yaghnobi wov-/wovta “to speak, call.” |
vâbande Fr.: correcteur orthographique |
1) vâbe; 2) vâbeš Fr.: orthographe |
ziyâmidan Fr.: dépenser
Etymology (EN): M.E. spenden, from O.En. -spendan (in forspendan “use up”), from M.L. spendere, from expendere “to pay out, weigh out money,” from → ex- “out” + pendere “to pay, weigh.” Etymology (PE): Ziyâmidan, from Sogd. zyâm “to consume, spend,” ultimately from Proto-Ir. *uz-iam-, from *uz- “out, away,” → ex-,
|
koré (#), sepehr (#) Fr.: sphère A solid geometric figure generated by the revolution of a semicircle about its diameter; equation: x2 + y2 + z2 = r2. Etymology (EN): M.E. spere, from O.Fr. espere, from L. sphæra “globe, ball, celestial sphere,” from Gk. sphaira “globe, ball,” of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Koré, loan from Ar. kurat. |
sepehr-e hanâyeš Fr.: sphère d'influence The region of space around one of the bodies in a system of two celestial bodies where a third body of much smaller mass is influenced by the gravitational field of that body. The sphere of influence of a planet with respect to the Sun has a radius given by: R = RP(MP/MS)2/3, where RP is the radius of the planet’s orbit around the Sun, MP is the mass of the planet, and MS is the solar mass. The sphere of influence of the Earth has a radius of about 927,000 km or slightly under 150 Earth radii. Beyond this limit, a space probe will come under the influence of the Sun. |
sepehrhâ-ye Eudoxus Fr.: sphères d'Eudoxe A series of spheres with varying radii centred on the Earth, each rotating
uniformly about an axis fixed with respect to the surface of the next
larger sphere, all comprising a model in Greek astronomy to
describe the motions of the heavenly bodies. The spheres turned with different
speeds about axes with different orientations. See also: → sphere; Eudoxus (Ευδοξοσ) of Cnidus (c 408 BC - c 355 BC), Greek astronomer and mathematician. |
kore-yi Fr.: sphérique |
birâheš-e koreyi Fr.: aberration sphérique, ~ de sphéricité An aberration of a spherical lens or spherical mirror in which light rays converge not to a single point but to a series of points with different distances from the lens or mirror. Spherical aberration is corrected by using parabolic reflecting and refracting surface. See also: → spherical; → aberration. |
zâviye-ye koreyi Fr.: angle sphérique |
ostorlâb-e sepehri, ~ kore-yi Fr.: astrolabe sphérique A type of → astrolabe in which the observer’s horizon is drawn on the surface of a globe, mounted with a freely rotating spherical lattice work or ‘spider’ representing the celestial sphere. The earliest description of the spherical astrolabe dates back to the Iranian astronomer Nayrizi (865-922). |
axtaršenâsi-ye kore-yi Fr.: astronomie sphérique The branch of astronomy that is concerned with determining the apparent positions and motions of celestial bodies on the celestial sphere. Same as → positional astronomy. |
hamârâhâ-ye kore-yi Fr.: coordonnées sphériques A coordinate system using an origin (O) and three perpendicular axes (Ox, Oy, Oz), in which the position of a point (P) is given by three numbers (r, θ, φ). The coordinate r is the distance from the origin, θ the angle between the z-axis and the r direction, and φ the angle between the projection of r on the xy-plane and the Ox-axis. The coordinate φ is also called the → azimuthal angle. See also: → spherical; → coordinate. |
fozuni-ye sepehri, ~ kore-yi Fr.: excès sphérique The difference between the sum of the three angles of a → spherical triangle and 180° (π radians). |
hendese-ye kore-yi Fr.: géométrie sphérique |
hamâhang-e kore-yi Fr.: fonction harmonique sphérique A solution of some mathematical equations when → spherical polar coordinates are used in investigating physical problems in three dimensions. For example, solutions of → Laplace’s equation treated in spherical polar coordinates. Spherical harmonics are ubiquitous in atomic and molecular physics and appear in quantum mechanics as → eigenfunctions of → orbital angular momentum. They are also important in the representation of the gravitational and magnetic fields of planetary bodies, the characterization of the → cosmic microwave background anisotropy, the description of electrical potentials due to charge distributions, and in certain types of fluid motion. See also: The term spherical harmonics was first used by William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) and Peter Guthrie Tait in their 1867 Treatise on Natural Philosophy; → spherical; → harmonic. |
varunâ-ye kore-yi, ~ sepehri Fr.: latitude sphérique The angle between the → normal to a spherical reference surface and the → equatorial plane. |
adasi-ye kore-yi Fr.: lentille sphérique A lens with a refractng surface which is a portion of a sphere. Spherical lenses can be of various types: → biconvex, → biconcave, → plano-convex, → plano-concave, → concavo-convex, and → convexo-concave. |
âyene-ye kore-yi Fr.: miroir sphérique A mirror whose reflecting surface is a portion of a sphere. Spherical mirrors can be of two types: → concave mirror and → convex mirror. |
hamârâhâ-ye kore-yi-ye qotbi Fr.: coordonnées sphériques polaires Same as → spherical coordinates. See also: → spherical; → polar; → coordinate |
hamâmuni-ye kore-yi Fr.: symétrie sphérique |
sebar-e kore-yi Fr.: triangle sphérique A triangle drawn on the → surface of a → sphere. A spherical triangle, like a plane triangle, may be right, obtuse, acute, equilateral, isosceles, or scalene. The sum of the angles of a spherical triangle is greater than 180° (π) and less than 540° (3π). See also → spherical excess. |
korevâr Fr.: sphéroïde |
korevâr (#) Fr.: sphéroïdal |
guyel Fr.: sphérule Any of many vitrified droplets of rock formed by the solidification of molten meteoritic material that flows off a meteorite during its passage through the Earth’s atmosphere. Sizes range typically from 10 to 200 microns. Etymology (EN): “Small sphere,” from → sphere + diminutive suffix → -ule. Etymology (PE): Guyel “small globe,” from guy “ball, sphere” (variants
golulé, gullé, goruk, gulu, gudé;
cf. Skt. guda- “ball, mouthful, lump, tumour,” Pali gula- “ball,” |
Sonbolé (#) Fr.: Spica The brightest star in the constellation → Virgo, and the
15th brightest star in the night sky. Also known as HD 116658.
It is 260 → light-years
distant from Earth. A → blue giant, it is a variable Etymology (EN): From L. spica “ear of grain,” related to spina “thorn,” corresponding to Gk. stakhys “grapes.” Etymology (PE): Sonbolé, from sonbol “an ear of corn; a hyacinth,” from Ar. sumbul. |
sixak Fr.: spicule Any of numerous vertical → spikes of → gas visible in the → monochromatic light of certain strong → spectral lines beyond the → Sun’s limb. Spicules are short-lived phenomena, corresponding to rising → jets of gas that move upward at about 30km/sec up to 10,000 km and last only about 10 minutes. Etymology (EN): From L. spiculum “spearhead, arrowhead, bee stinger,” from spica “ear of grain” + -ulum, → -ule. Etymology (PE): Sixak, from six “spur, spit; thorn; any pointed thing.” |
parre-ye târtan Fr.: araignée One of, usually three or four, diagonal supports that hold the → secondary mirror in a → reflecting telescope. Also called support vane. Etymology (EN): M.E. spithre, O.E. M.E. spithra, akin to spinnan “to spin;” Etymology (PE): Parré, → vane;
târtan “spider,” literally “weaver,” composite word of with two cognate elements,
the first one târ |
sixak (#) Fr.: pointe
Etymology (EN): M.E. spik(e) from O.N. spikr “nail;” akin to M.L.G. spiker “nail.” Etymology (PE): Sixak, from six “spur, spit; thorn; any pointed thing,” + -ak a suffix of similarity and nuance. |
espin Fr.: spin
Etymology (EN): M.E. spinnen; O.E. spinnan “to draw out and twist fibers into thread”
(cf. O.N., O.Fris. spinna, Dan. spinde, Du. spinnen,
O.H.G. spinnan, Ger. spinnen); cognate with Pers. tan-, tanidan Etymology (PE): Espin, loan from E., as above. |
jonbâk-e zâviyeyi-ye espin Fr.: moment angulaire de spin An intrinsic quantum mechanical characteristic of a particle that has no classical counterpart but may loosely be likened to the classical → angular momentum of a particle arising from rotation about its own axis. The magnitude of spin angular momentum is given by the expression S = ħ √ s(s + 1), where s is the → spin quantum number. As an example, the spin of an electron is s = 1/2; this means that its spin angular momentum is (ħ /2) √ 3 or 0.91 x 10-34 J.s. In addition, the projection of an angular momentum onto some defined axis is also quantized, with a z-component Sz = msħ. The only values of ms (magnetic quantum number) are ± 1/2. See also → Stern-Gerlach experiment. |
gaštâvar-e meqnâtisi-ye espin (#) Fr.: moment magnétique de spin The magnetic moment associated with the → spin angular momentum of a charged particle. The direction of the magnetic moment is opposite to the direction of the angular momentum. The magnitude of the magnetic moment is given by: μ = -g(q / 2m)J, where q is the charge, m is the mass, and J the angular momentum. The parameter g is a characteristic of the state of the atom. It would be 1 for a pure orbital moment, or 2 for a spin moment, or some other number in between for a complicated system like an atom. The quantity in the parenthesis for the electron is the → Bohr magneton. The electron spin magnetic moment is important in the → spin-orbit interaction which splits atomic energy levels and gives rise to → fine structure in the spectra of atoms. It is also a factor in the interaction of atom with external fields, → Zeeman effect. See also: → spin; → magnetic moment. |
adad-e kuântomi-ye espin Fr.: nombre quantique de spin An integer or half-integer on which the magnitude of a particle’s → spin angular momentum depends. It is expressed in units of → Planck’s constant divided by 2π. Called also spin, denoted s. The spin of a particle can only have a value that is zero or a multiple of 1/2. Particles with half-integer spins, 1/2, 3/2, 5/2, …, are → fermions. Particles with integer spin (0, 1, 2, …) are called → bosons. |
damâ-ye espin Fr.: température de spin The → excitation temperature of the → hyperfine structure levels of the → neutral hydrogen→ 21-centimeter line. See also: → spin; → temperature. |
kond-carxi Fr.: ralentissement A phenomenon in which the rotation period of a pulsar steadily decreases with the pulsar age. The cause of the spin-down is magnetic torque due to the strong fields threading out from the pulsar. The magnetic energy is being converted to high-energy particles and radiation from the nebula. Observed spin-down rates range from about 10-5 seconds/year for the youngest pulsars to about 10-12 seconds/year for recycled pulsars. The Crab pulsar is slowing down at a rate of about 10-5 seconds/year. Knowing the rotation period and the lengthening rate of a pulsar leads to its age. Etymology (EN): → spin; down, M.E.; O.E. ofdune “downward,” from dune “from the hill.” Etymology (PE): Kond-carxi, from kond “slow; dull” + carx→ rotate + -i noun suffix. |
parâkaneš bâ vâruni-ye espin Fr.: diffusion avec renversement du spin Quantum mechanics: The scattering of a particle that reverses the spin direction. Etymology (EN): → spin; flip, from flip-flap; Etymology (PE): Parâkaneš, → scattering; bâ “with;” vâruni, noun from vârun, → inverse; espin, → spin. |
jafsari-ye espin-madâr, jofteš-e ~ Fr.: couplage spin-orbite
|
duk (#) Fr.: fuseau
Etymology (EN): M.E. spindel, O.E. spin(e)l, from spinnan, → spin. Etymology (PE): Duk “spindle,” variants dêk, dik, ultimately from Proto-Ir. *dau- “to run;” cf. Pers. dow-, davidan “to run” (Cheung 2007). |
kahkešân-e duk Fr.: galaxie du Fuseau |
xâr (#) Fr.: épine
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. espine, from L. spina “backbone,” originally “thorn, prickle,” cf. L. spica “ear of corn,” O.N. spikr “nail;” from PIE *spei- “sharp point.” Etymology (PE): Xâr “spine, thorn,” related to xal-, xalidan “to prick, to pierce,” xâridan “to scratch, itch;” Av. xvara- “wound, sore.” |
lâl, la'l (#) Fr.: spinelle A mineral, MgAl2O4, occurring in various colors, used as a gem, the most valuable being red. The famous “Black Prince’s Ruby” which forms part of the Crown Jewels of England, is, in fact, a red spinel. Spinel has often been confounded with → ruby. The most famous source of spinel is the historic region of Badakhshan (today northeastern Afghanistan and southeastern Tajikistan). The Badakhshan mines were mentioned by Persian writers as early as the 10th century. According to a Persian tradition, these mines were first disclosed when the mountain was broken open by an earthquake. Etymology (EN): From Fr. spinelle, from It. spinella of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Lâl, la’l “spinel; red,” originally “red” (cf. Tabari âl “red”); cf. Av. raoidita- “red, reddish;” Skt. rudhirá- “red, bloody;” L. ruber “red;” Gk. erythros “red;” akin to E. → red. |
farmuk (#), ferferé (#) Fr.: toupie A toy that with a quick or vigorous twist
spins around its symmetry axis and balances on a point. Suppose a top is
perfectly fashioned so that its → rotation axis
passes through its Tp = (4π2I)/(mgrTs), where I is the → moment of inertia,
m the mass of the top, g
gravity, r the distance between the center of mass and the contact point, and
Ts is the spinning period of the top.
Precession is accompanied by another oscillatory phenomenon, called
→ nutation.
Nutation is less influenced by the gravity torque and is determined by the inertia forces Etymology (EN): → spin; → -ing; top M.E., from O.E. top, maybe related to Fr. toupie. Etymology (PE): Farmuk, ferferé “spinning top” (Dehxodâ), two words of unknown etymology. |
carxâsetâré Fr.: spinstar A hypothetical, very rapidly → rotating star formed in the → metal-deficient conditions of the primordial → interstellar medium. The → first stars were probably spinstars, because the lack of metals leads to faster rotation velocities. Indeed → metal-poor stars are more compact than → metal-rich ones. Stars formed from a gas whose → metallicity is below 1/2000 of the → solar metallicity could attain rotation velocities of 500-800 km s-1 (see also → Population III star). Rotation triggers → mixing processes inside the star, leading to the production of important quantities of 14N, 13C, and 22Ne (Maeder & Meynet 2012, and references therein). The production of primary 22Ne has an important impact on the → s-process → nucleosynthesis in spinstars compared to non-rotating stars. This increases by orders of magnitude the s-process → yields of → heavy elements. Spinstars would therefore have strongly influenced the properties and appearance of the first galaxies that formed in the → Universe (See G. Meynet et al. 2009, arXiv:0709.2275; C. Chiappini, 2013, Astron. Nachr. /AN 334, No. 6, 595 and references therein). |
espintronik Fr.: spintronique A new area of science and technology which exploits the intrinsic → spin of electrons and its associated → magnetic moment, in addition to its fundamental electronic charge, in solid-state devices. In brief, spin-based electronics. For example, information could be transported or stored through the spin-up or spin-down states of electrons. Spintronics techniques are capable of much higher speed while requiring less power than the conventional method of using electron charges to represent data. The first use of spintronics was in the late 1980s with the development of → giant magnetoresistance (GMR) read heads for disk drives See also: Short for → spin + → electronics. |
marpic (#) Fr.: spiral Running continuously around a fixed point or center while constantly receding from or approaching it. Etymology (EN): From M.Fr. spiral, from M.L. spiralis “winding, coiling,” from L. spira “coil,” from Gk. speira “coil, twist, wreath.” Etymology (PE): Mârpic, literally “snake coil,” from mâr “snake, serpent,” → Serpens, + pic, present stem of picidan “to twist, entwine, coil,” ultimately Proto-Iranian *paticā-citanai- “to coil;” cf. Av. paitica “inversely; back” and ci- (caē-, caii-) “to heap up, gather” (Nyberg 1974). |
bâzu-ye mârpic Fr.: bras spiral The region in a → spiral galaxy that contains
concentrations of → gas, → dust,
and → massive stars. |
kahkešân-e mârpic Fr.: galaxie spirale A galaxy with a prominent nuclear → bulge and luminous → spiral arms of gas, dust, and young stars that wind out from the nucleus. Masses span the range from 1010 to 1012→ solar masses. |
miq-e mârpic Fr.: nébuleuse spirale An obsolete term used to describe nebular objects with spiral shape before it was understood that they are independent galaxies lying outside our → Milky Way galaxy. Now called → spiral galaxy. |
sâxtâr-e mârpic Fr.: structure spirale The morphology of a galaxy which displays → spiral arms. |
minu (#) Fr.: esprit The principle of conscious life; the vital principle in humans, animating the body or mediating between body and soul (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E., from L. spiritus “a breathing, breath; breath of life,” related to spirare “to blow, breathe.” Etymology (PE): Minu “spirit;” Mid.Pers. mênôg “spirit;” Av. mainyu- “mind, mentality, mental force, inspiration,” from mān- “to think,” → mind. |
minuyi, minuyig Fr.: spirituel |
minuyigi Fr.: spiritualité |
taxtâl-e Spite Fr.: plateau des Spite The observation that the abundance of → lithium (7Li) in metal-poor stars is constant regardless of the → effective temperature (> 5500 K) and the → metallicity ([Fe/H] < -2). The Spite plateau is currently interpreted as evidence that the Li observed in → halo population stars is → primordial. Since its discovery, the Spite plateau has been subject to numerous investigations, increasing the number of stars with Li measurements and extending the sample to include ever lower metallicities. Important issues are the existence or not of a significant scatter along the plateau, and the existence or not of atomic diffusion and mixing with deeper stellar zones where Li can be burnt, producing an offset with respect to the → Big Bang → nucleosynthesis abundance. Several recent studies have shown that the Spite plateau exhibits very little, if any, dispersion. There is, however, a discrepancy between recent results and that derived from Big Bang nucleosynthesis, based on the cosmological parameters constrained by the → WMAP measurements. See also: Named after François and Monique Spite, French astronomers, Paris Observatory, who first discovered this relation (1982, A&A 115, 357); → plateau. |
durbin-e fazâyi-ye Spitzer, teleskop-e ~ ~ Fr.: Télescope spatial Spitzer An infrared telescope launched by NASA on 25 August 2003, the last in
the series of Great Observatories. It was placed into a heliocentric
orbit with a period of revolution that causes it to drift away from
Earth at a rate of 0.1 → astronomical unit See also: Named in honor of Lyman Spitzer (1914-1997), an American theoretical physicist and astronomer best known for his research in star formation and plasma physics, who first suggested (1940s) placing telescopes in orbit to escape interference from the Earth’s atmosphere; → space; → telescope. |
karyâ-ye splin Fr.: fonction spline A function consisting of several segments, usually → polynomials, joined smoothly together at specific points with an explicitly stated degree of accuracy. Spline functions are used to approximate a given function on an interval. See also: From East Anglian dialect, maybe related to O.E. splin and to modern splint. A spline was originally a slat or a thin strip of wood. A later meaning was “a long, thin, flexible strip used as a guide for drawing arcs of curves;” → function. |
nâzok-ney (#) Fr.: péroné |
1) fâq (#); 2) fâqidan Fr.: 1) fente; 2) fendre
Etymology (EN): From M.Du. splitten, from P.Gmc. *spl(e)it- (cf. Dan., Fris. splitte, O.Fris. splita, Ger. spleißen “to split”). Etymology (PE): 1) Fâq “a part of something separated in two sections, such as a beard, a
quill pen, etc.”
|
fâqeš Fr.: clivage, fissure, rupture The act or instance of being split or causing something to split. → splitting of energy level. See also: Verbal noun of → split. |
fâqeš-e tarâz-e kâruž Fr.: dédoublement d'un niveau d'énergie The splitting of a single atomic level into a group of closely spaced levels when the substance producing the single line is subjected to a uniform magnetic field. → Zeeman effect; → Stark effect. See also: → spliting; → energy level. |
parré Fr.: In Saturn’s rings, changing structures in the radial direction. It is thought that gravitational forces alone cannot account for the spoke structure, and it has been proposed that electrostatic repulsion between ring particles may play a role. Etymology (EN): M.E.; O.E. spaca “spoke,” related to spicing “large nail,” from P.Gmc. *spaikon (cf. O.S. speca, O.Fris. spake, Du. spaak, O.H.G. speicha, Ger. speiche “spoke”). Etymology (PE): Parré “a rod that extends from the hub of a wheel to support or brace the rim.” |
sarxod (#) Fr.: spontané Arising from internal forces or causes; independent of external agencies; self-acting. Etymology (EN): From L.L. spontaneus “willing, of one’s free will,” from L. (sua) sponte “of one’s own accord, willingly,” of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Sarxod, literally “by himself/herself,” from sar “head”
(soru, sorun “horn;” |
suzeš-e sarxod Fr.: combustion spontanée The self-ignition of a substance that produces sufficient heat within itself, by a slow oxidation process, for ignition to take place without the need for an external high-temperature source. The produced heat energy is absorbed by the substance raising its temperature slowly until the → ignition temperature is reached. Same as spontaneous ignition. See also: → spontaneous; → combustion. |
gosil-e sarxod Fr.: émission spontanée The emission of electromagnetic radiation from an atom or molecule that does not depend on the presence of external fields. See also: → spontaneous; → emission. |
šekast-e sarxod-e hamâmuni Fr.: brisure spontanée de symétrie A physical phenomenon whereby a symmetric system becomes permanently asymmetric.
A simple example is a ball lying on top of a hill in equilibrium. The hill-ball
system is symmetric about the vertical axis through the top of the hill.
Moreover, there is no preferred horizontal direction to the system. See also: → spontaneous; → symmetry; → break. |
gozareš-e sarxod Fr.: transition spontanée An → atomic transition that gives rise to a → spontaneous emission. See also: → spontaneous; → transition. |
šahâb-e gahgâhi Fr.: météore sporadique A meteor occurring occasionally, and not associated with any known meteor shower. Etymology (EN): Sporadic, from M.L. sporadicus “scattered,” from Gk. sporadikos “scattered,” from sporas (genitive sporados) “scattered,” from spora “seed, a sowing;” related to sporos “sowing,” and speirein “to sow,” from PIE *sper- “to strew;” → meteor. Etymology (PE): Šahâb, → meteor; gahgâhi “from time to
time,” from gah, gâh “time; place” |
hâg (#) Fr.: spore A reproductive body in flowerless plants corresponding to the seeds of flowering ones. Etymology (EN): From Modern L. spora, from Gk. spora “a seed, a sowing, seed-time,” related to speirein “to sow, scatter.” Etymology (PE): Hâg, variant of xâg, → egg. |
kamine-ye Spörer Fr.: minimum de Spörer A period of low → solar activity that lasted from about A.D. 1420 to 1570. It occurred before → sunspots had been studied, and was discovered by analysis of the proportion of carbon-14 in tree rings, which is strongly correlated with solar activity. See also: Named for the German astronomer Gustav Spörer (1822-1895); |
kamine-ye Spörer Fr.: minimum de Spörer A period of low → solar activity that lasted from about A.D. 1420 to 1570. It occurred before → sunspots had been studied, and was discovered by analysis of the proportion of carbon-14 in tree rings, which is strongly correlated with solar activity. See also: Named for the German astronomer Gustav Spörer (1822-1895); |
qânun-e Spörer Fr.: loi de Spörer The empirical law that predicts the variation of → sunspot latitudes during a → solar cycle. At the start of a sunspot cycle, sunspots tend to appear around 30° to 45° latitude on the Sun’s surface. As the cycle progresses, they appear at lower and lower latitudes, until 5° to 10°, at the end of the cycle. This tendency is revealed on a → butterfly diagram. Although named after Gustav Spörer, the “law” was first discovered by Richard Carrington. See also: → Sporer minimum; → law. |
qânun-e Spörer Fr.: loi de Spörer The empirical law that predicts the variation of → sunspot latitudes during a → solar cycle. At the start of a sunspot cycle, sunspots tend to appear around 30° to 45° latitude on the Sun’s surface. As the cycle progresses, they appear at lower and lower latitudes, until 5° to 10°, at the end of the cycle. This tendency is revealed on a → butterfly diagram. Although named after Gustav Spörer, the “law” was first discovered by Richard Carrington. See also: → Sporer minimum; → law. |
lak (#), laké (#) Fr.: tache A mark on a surface differing sharply in color from its surroundings. → sunspot; → Great Red Spot. Etymology (EN): M.E. spotte “a spot, blot, patch;” M.Du. spotte “spot, speck.” Etymology (PE): Lak(k), lak(k)é “spot, stain.” |
1) gostardan (#); 2) gostareš Fr.: 1) déployer, répandre; 2) propagation, portée, envergure 1a) To draw, stretch, or open out, especially over a flat surface,
as something rolled or folded (often followed by out). 1b) To stretch out or unfurl in the air, as folded wings, a flag, etc.
Etymology (EN): M.E. spreden, from O.E. sprædan “to spread, extend,” cf. Dan. sprede, O.Swed. spreda, M.Du. spreiden, O.H.G. and Ger. spreiten “to spread,” from PIE root *sper- “to strew.” Etymology (PE): Gostardan “to spread; to diffuse, to expand,” from Mid.Pers.
wistardan “to extend; to spread;” Proto-Iranian *ui.star-;
Av. vi- “apart, away from, out” (O.Pers. viy- “apart, away;” cf.
Skt. vi-
“apart, asunder, away, out;” L. vitare “to avoid, turn aside”) +
Av. star- “to spread,” starati
“spreads” (cf. Skt. star- “to spread out, extend, strew,” |
1) bahâr (#); 2) cešmé (#); 3) fanar (#) Fr.: 1) printemps; 2) source; 3) ressort
Etymology (EN): 1) From the verb M.E. springen; O.E. springan “to leap, burst forth,
fly up;” the notion is of the “spring of the year,” when plants “spring up” cf. Du., Ger.
springen.
Etymology (PE): 1) Bahâr, from Mid.Pers. wahâr “spring;” O.Pers. vāhara-
“spring time,” θūra-vāhara-
“name of a spring month;” Av. vaηhar “spring;”
cf. Skt. vasara- “relating or appearing in the morning;”
|
pâpâ-ye fanar Fr.: constante de rappel du ressort A characteristic of a spring which is defined as the ratio of the force affecting the spring to the displacement caused by the force. In other words, the spring constant is the force applied if the displacement in the spring is unity. It is expressed by the equation k = -F/x (from → Hooke’s law), where F = force applied, x = displacement by the spring. The spring constant is usually expressed in Newton per meter (N/m). |
hamugân-e bahâri Fr.: équinoxe de printemps |
mehkešand (#) Fr.: grande marée Tide that occurs when the → Earth, the → Sun, and the → Moon are in a line. This happens approximately twice a month, around → new moon and → full moon. In such a condition, known as → syzygy, the tidal force due to the Sun reinforces that due to the Moon. Spring tides have nothing to do with the season spring. The name derives from the meaning “a leap, jump, bound, rise.” Etymology (EN): Spring “a leap, jump, or bound;” M.E. springen, from spring O.E. springan “to leap, fly up; spread, grow;” cognates: O.N., O.Fris. springa, M.Du. springhen, O.H.G. springan, Ger. springen, from PIE *sprengh-, form *spergh- “to move, hasten, spring” (Skt. sprhayati “desires eagerly,” Gk. sperkhesthai “to hurry.” Etymology (PE): Mehkešandak “high tide,” from meh-, → high,
|
1) peškidan, peškândan; 2) pešké Fr.: 1) asperger; 2) aspersion
Etymology (EN): M.E. sprenklen (v.); cognate with Du. sprenkelen, Ger. sprenkeln; O.E. sprengan “to sprinkle, make (something) spring, scatter.” Etymology (PE): Peškidan, from (Malâyeri, Hamedâni) peška “sprinkle, water drop,” variant of (Dehxodâ) pašang “sprinkle,” pešanjidan “to sprinkle, spray;” (dialects of Khorâsân, Bandar Abbâs, Kermân, Dari Kermân, Lâ) pešang “spraying;” ultimately from Proto-Ir. *pati-haic- from *haic- “to pour (out), moisten);” cf. Av. patihaēc- “to sprinkle all over, pour on;” Mid.Pers. pšnc-/paššinj- “to sprinkle;” related to Pers. xēs, xis, hēs “wet;” O.H.G. sīhan “to sift;” O.E. sēon “to flow away, to sift;” PIE root *seikw- “to pour” (Cheung 2007). |
farfadé Fr.: farfadet A very brief, predominantly red, luminous glow, that occurs in the
→ mesosphere. Sprites occur high above large Etymology (EN): Sprite “elf, fairy, eerie, ghost-like quality,” so named by D. Sentman
et al. (1995, Geophys. Res. Let, 22, 1205) because of the fleeting nature of sprites; Etymology (PE): Farfadé, from Fr. farfadet, of dialectal origin, derived from fado “fairy.” |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5) šaxâk, 1) mehmiz Fr.: éperon
Etymology (EN): M.E. spur, from O.E. spura, spora “metal implement worn on the heel to goad a horse,” akin to M.Du. spore, Du. spoor, O.H.G. sporo, Ger. Sporn “spur.” Etymology (PE): Šaxâk, from šax
“hard ground, especially on the summit or at the skirt of a mountain;
anything hard; a mountain,” + noun/nuance suffix -âk. |
osparândan Fr.: To emit particles, sparks, etc., forcibly or explosively, especially accompanied by sputtering sounds. Etymology (EN): Originally “to spit with explosive sounds,” cognate with Du. sputteren, W.Fris. sputterje. Etymology (PE): Osparândan, literally “to throw out,” from os- “out,”
→ ex-, + parândan “to eject,” transitive verb of |
osparâni Fr.: éjection par collision ionique The ejection of charged particles or atoms by a solid or liquid surface which undergoes collision with high-energy ions. See also: Verbal noun of → sputter. |
bâdzad (#) Fr.: rafale A sudden, violent gust of wind, often accompanied by rain, snow, or sleet. A sudden increase of the mean wind speed which lasts for several minutes at least before the mean wind returns to near its previous value. It is often accompanied by rain or snow. Etymology (EN): Probably from a Scand. source (cf. Norw. skval “sudden rush of water,” Sw. skvala “to gush, pour down”). Etymology (PE): Bâdzad, from bâd, → wind +
zad past stem of zadan
“to strike, beat; to do; to play an instrument” (Mid.Pers. zatan, žatan; O.Pers./Av.
jan-, gan- “to strike, hit, smite, kill” (jantar- “smiter”); cf. |
câruš, cahârguš Fr.: carré
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. esquire “a square, squareness,” from V.L. *exquadra, from *exquadrare “to square,” from L. → ex- “out” + quadrare “make square,” from quadrus “a square,” from quattuor→ four. Etymology (PE): Câruš, from Av. caθruša- “four sides (of a four-sided figure)”, from caθru- “four,” Mod.Pers. cahâr, câr “four”
|
daraje-ye câruš Fr.: degré carré |
SKA Fr.: SKA An international project to construct a highly sensitive radio interferometer array operating
between 0.15 and 20 GHz with an effective collecting area of one square kilometer.
The number of individual telescopes will be 2000 to 3000. SKA
will have a sensitivity 100 times higher than that of today’s best radio telescopes
and an angular resolution < 0.1 arcsec at 1.4 GHz. |
matris-e câruš Fr.: matrice carée |
Chahârguš-e Pegasus Fr.: Carrée de Pégase A large → asterism of four stars, approximately square in |
riše-ye câruš Fr.: racine carée |
mowj-e câruš Fr.: onde carrée |
cârušeš-e parhun, ~ dâyeré Fr.: quadrature du cercle Same as → quadrature of the circle |
cârušeš-e câruš Fr.: quadrature du carré |
skuârk Fr.: squark In → supersymmetry theories, a hypothetical → boson super-partner of a → quark. See also → slepton. See also: s from → supersymmetry; → quark. |
SS 433 Fr.: SS 433 A → close binary star lying at the center of the
→ supernova remnant W50, in → Aquila,
about 18,000 → light-years away. See also: Such called because this object carries number 433 in the |
pâydâri (#) Fr.: stabilité A condition in which a dynamical system slightly displaced from its equilibrium configuration always tends to return to this configuration. → instability, → instability strip. See also: Noun from adj. → stable. |
pâydâr (#) Fr.: stable Physics: 1) Having the ability to react to a disturbing force by maintaining
or regaining position or condition. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. estable, from L. stabilis “firm, steadfast,” literally “able to stand,” from stem of stare “to stand;” cognate with Pers. istâdan “to stand” (Mid.Pers. êstâtan; O.Pers./Av. sta- “to stand, stand still; set;” Av. hištaiti; cf. Skt. sthâ- “to stand;” Gk. histemi “put, place, weigh,” stasis “a standing still;” L. stare “to stand;” Lith. statau “place;” Goth. standan; PIE base *sta- “to stand”). Etymology (PE): Pâydâr “stable, firm” literally “having feet,”
from pâ(y) “foot; step”
(Mid.Pers. pâd, pây; Av. pad- “foot;” cf. Skt. pat;
Gk. pos, genitive podos; L. pes, genitive pedis;
P.Gmc. *fot; E. foot; Ger. Fuss; Fr. pied;
PIE *pod-/*ped-) +
dâr present stem of dâštan “to have, hold, maintain,
possess” (Mid.Pers. dâštan;
O.Pers./Av. root dar- “to hold, keep back, maintain, keep in mind;” cf. |
tarâzmandi-ye pâydâr (#) Fr.: équilibre stable An equilibrium state of a system in which if a small perturbation away from equilibrium is applied, the system will return to its equilibrium state. An example is a pendulum hanging straight down. If it is pushed slightly, it will experience a force back toward the equilibrium position. It may oscillate around the equilibrium position for a while, but it will finally regain its equilibrium position. → unstable equilibrium. See also: → stable; → equilibrium. |
hastevâr-e pâydâr Fr.: nucléide stable A nuclide that is not → radioactive and therefore does not spontaneously undergo → radioactive decay. |
1) cubadt; 2) estab Fr.: 1) bâton; 2) personnel
Etymology (EN): M.E. staf; O.E. stæf “walking stick, rod used as a
weapon, pastoral staff;” sense of “group of military officers that
assists a commander” attested from 1702; cf. Etymology (PE): 1) Cubdast “hand stick,” from cub “staff, stick,” Mid.Pers.
côp “wood, stick” + dast, → hand.
|
axtaršenâs-e estab Fr.: astronome résident A professional astronomer who works within a specified observatory or research group. See also: → staff; → astronomer. |
gâmé (#) Fr.: étape A single step or phase in an ongoing process. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. estage “a story or floor of a building, stage for performance,” from V.L. *staticum “a place for standing,” from L. statum, p.p. of stare “to stand.” Etymology (PE): Gâmé, from gâm “step, pace” (related to âmadan “to come”);
Mid.Pers. gâm “step, stride, pace;” |
nâravâni Fr.: stagnation The state or condition of not flowing or running. Etymology (EN): L. stagnatum, stagnatus, p.p. of stagnare “to stagnate,” from stagnatum “standing water,” from PIE root *stag- “to seep drip.” Etymology (PE): Nâravâni, literally “not flowing,” from nâ- negation prefix, → un-, + ravân “flowing, running,” pr.p. of raftan “to go, walk; to flow;” (Mid.Pers. raftan, raw-, Proto-Iranian *rab/f- “to go; to attack”). |
noqte-ye nâravâni Fr.: point de stagnation |
fešâr-e nâravâni Fr.: pression de stagnation The sum of → static pressure and → dynamic pressure in the → Bernoulli equation. See also: → stagnation; → pressure. |
naryân (#) Fr.: étalon An uncastrated adult male horse, especially one used for breeding. Etymology (EN): M.E. stalon, from O.Fr. estalon, “uncastrated male horse,” cognate with O.H.G. stal “stable,” cf. O.H.G. stall “stand, place, stable, stall,” Ger. Stall “stable,” Stelle “place”), from PIE root *stel- “to put, stand,” with derivatives referring to a standing object or place; akin to Pers. istâdan “to stand,” → station. Etymology (PE): Nariyân, from nar “male,” → masculine. |
istâdan (#) Fr.: être ou se tenir debout To have or maintain an upright position, supported by one’s feet; rise to one’s feet (OxfordDictionaries.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. standen, from O.En. standan “occupy a place; stand firm; stay, be, exist; oppose, resist attack; stand up, be on one’s feet;” cognate with O.Norse standa, O.Saxon and Gothic standan, O.H.G. stantan, Du. staan, Ger. stehen, cognate with Pers. istâdan, as below. Etymology (PE): Istâdan “to stand,” from Mid.Pers. êstâtan;
O.Pers./Av. sta- “to stand, stand still; set;” |
estândé (#) Fr.: standard Any set of conditions that describe the normal, desired, or ideal state of something, and that serves a basis for representing or evaluating actual examples of this thing. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. estandart “banner, standard,” probably from Frankish *standord; cf. Ger. Standort “standing-point,” from standan “to stand,” cognate with Pers. istâdan, as below, with the second component conformed to -ard. Etymology (PE): Estândé, literally “made stand, fixed,” p.p. istândan transitive verb of istâdan, “to → stand.” |
havâsepehr-e estândé (#), javv-e ~ (#) Fr.: atmosphère standard A hypothetical vertical distribution of atmospheric temperature, pressure, and density that, by international agreement, is taken to be representative of the atmosphere for purposes of pressure altimeter calibrations, aircraft performance calculations, aircraft and missile design, ballistic tables, etc. See also: → standard; → atmosphere. |
šam'-e estândé Fr.: chandelle standard An astronomical object, belonging to some class, that has a known luminosity. In principle, by comparing the known luminosity to the observed brightness, the distance to the object can be derived. The four major primary distance indicators are Cepheids, supernovae, novae, and RR Lyrae variables. The secondary distance indicators include H II regions, globular clusters, brightest red and blue stars. → primary calibrator; → secondary calibrator. |
keyhânšenâsi-ye estândé Fr.: cosmologie standard The conventional → Big Bang model, which is based on two assumptions: the → cosmological principle of homogeneity and isotropy leading to the → Robertson-Walker metric, and → Einstein’s field equations of general relativity along with familiar properties of matter. This model is a remarkably successful operating hypothesis describing the evolution of the Universe from 1/100 second after the initial event through to the present day. It provides explanations for several basic problems such as: → Hubble’s law of recession of galaxies, interpreted in terms of the expansion of the Universe; the abundances of the → light elements, in excellent agreement with the predictions of → primordial nucleosynthesis; and the thermal spectrum and angular isotropy of the → cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation, as expected from a hot, dense early phase of expansion. For a non-standard model, see → ekpyrotic Universe. |
kažraft-e estândé Fr.: écart-type The most widely used measure of dispersion of a frequency distribution.
It is equal to the positive square root of the
→ variance.
Same as → standard error. Not to be confused with the |
zime-ye estândé Fr.: époque de référence A particular date and time that specifies the reference system to which celestial coordinates are referred. From 1984 the → Julian year is used, as denoted by the prefix J, e.g. J2000.0. |
irang-e estândé Fr.: erreur type Same as → standard deviation. |
model-e estândé, tarzâl-e ~ Fr.: modèle standard |
model-e estânde-ye fizik-e zarre-yi Fr.: modèle standard de la physique des particules The theory developed since the 1970s, which is based on the theories and discoveries since the 1930s, and aims at explaining the fundamental structure of matter. According to the standard model, everything in the universe is made from a few basic building blocks called fundamental particles, governed by four fundamental forces. The particles occur in two basic types, called quarks and leptons. Three of the four fundamental forces (except gravity) and their carrier particles are included in the Standard Model. The Standard Model has successfully explained almost all experimental results and precisely predicted a wide variety of phenomena. Over time and through many experiments, the Standard Model has become established as a well-tested physics theory. |
setâregân-e estândé Fr.: étoiles standard |
râžmân-e estândé Fr.: système standard |
damâ o fešâr-e estândé Fr.: conditions normales de température et de pression
See also: → standard; → temperature; → pressure. |
zamân-e estândé Fr.: temps standard |
arzešhâ-ye estândé Fr.: valeurs standard |
mowj-e istân Fr.: onde stationnaire A wave produced by the simultaneous transmission of two similar wave motions in opposite directions. Same as stationary wave. Etymology (EN): Standing verbal adjective from stand, cognate with Pers. istâdan, as below; → wave. Etymology (PE): Istân pr.p. of istâdan “to stand;” Mid.Pers. êstâtan; O.Pers./Av. sta- “to stand, stand still; set;” Av. hištaiti; cf. Skt. sthâ- “to stand;” Gk. histemi “put, place, weigh,” stasis “a standing still;” L. stare “to stand;” Lith. statau “place;” O.N. standa, Goth. standan, O.H.G. stantan, Swed. stå, Du. staan, Ger. stehen; O.E. standan; PIE base *sta- “to stand;” mowj, → wave. |
setâré (#) Fr.: étoile A huge mass of hot gas whose radiation is provided by
its internal → thermonuclear reactions. Etymology (EN): M.E. sterre, O.E. steorra;
cf. O.S. sterro, O.N. stjarna, O.Fris. stera,
Du. ster, O.H.G. sterro, Ger. Stern, Goth. stairno; Etymology (PE): Setâré, variants star, estâr, estâré, and probably axtar, → astro-, (Lori, Laki) âsâra, (Laki) hasâra, (Tabari) essâra, (Baluci) istâr, (Ossetic) st’aly, (i)sthalu, (Tâti) usdurâ; Mid.Pers. stârag, stâr; Av. star-; cf. Skt. stár-, tāra-, tārakā- “star;” akin to Gk. and L., as above; PIE base *ster- “star.” |
kâtâlog-e setâregân Fr.: catalogue stellaire |
negâre-ye setâregân Fr.: carte du ciel A chart or map showing the relative apparent positions of the stars as viewed from the Earth. Etymology (EN): → star; chart, from M.Fr. charte “card, map,” from L. charta “leaf of paper, tablet,” from Gk. khartes “layer of papyrus.” Etymology (PE): Negâré, from negâr “picture, figure,” from negâštan→ Pictor; setâregân plural of setâré→ star. |
xuše-ye setâre-yi (#) Fr.: amas stellaire
|
šomâreš-e setâré, ~ setâregân Fr.: comptage d'étoiles |
delek-e setâregân Fr.: dérive stellaire |
diseš-e setâré Fr.: formation d'étoiles The process by which dense parts of molecular clouds collapse into a
ball of plasma to form a star. As a branch of astronomy, star
formation includes the study of the interstellar medium and |
kârâyi-ye diseš-e setâré Fr.: efficacité de formation d'étoiles The degree to which stars form in a system, such as a → molecular cloud or a → galaxy. It is given by the ratio of the total mass of stars to the initial gas mass: εSFE = Mstars / (Mstars + Mgas). See also: → star formation; → efficiency. |
târix-e diseš-e setâré Fr.: histoire de formation d'étoiles The → star formation rate as a function of time. |
osereš-e diseš-e setâregân Fr.: assèchement de formation d'étoiles The premature termination of star formation process in some galaxies. |
nerx-e diseš-e setâré Fr.: taux de formation d'étoiles The rate at which a molecular cloud or a galaxy is currently converting gas into stars. It is given by the ratio of the number of stars to the star formation time-scale. See also: → star formation; → rate. |
nâhiye-ye diseš-e setâré Fr.: région de formation d'étoiles A region in the → interstellar medium where processes of → star formation are going on or have occurred in the past. |
marpel-e zamâni-ye diseš-e setâre Fr.: échelle de temps de formation d'étoiles The time necessary for a star to form. It depends inversely on the stellar mass. See also: → star formation; → time scale. |
setâré S2 Fr.: étoile S2 A → main sequence→ B-type star that orbits the → supermassive black hole candidate → Sgr A* in the → Galactic center. The star S2, which is bright enough for making detailed measurements, has a highly elliptical, 16-year-period orbit around Sgr A*. Near → pericenter at 120 → astronomical units, ~ 1400 → Schwarzschild radii, the star has an orbital speed of ~ 7650 km s-1, such that the first-order effects of → special relativity and → general relativity have become detectable with current capabilities (Auber et al., 2018, A&A 615, L15). See also: → star. |
râžmân-e setâre-yi Fr.: système stellaire Same as → stellar system. |
radd-e setâré Fr.: traînées stellaires |
kahkešân-e disnade-ye setâré Fr.: galaxie de formation d'étoiles A galaxy that is located on the → galaxy main sequence in the plane relating → star formation rates to total stellar masses. |
nâhiye-ye diseš-e setâré Fr.: région de formation d'étoiles A region in which → star formation is going on. |
setâre-belk, belk-e setâré Fr.: flambée d'étoiles |
kahkešân-e setâre-belk Fr.: galaxie à flambée d'étoiles A galaxy showing a short-lived intense period of star formation that is unsustainable over the → Hubble time due to the limited supply of gas within a galaxy. Starburst galaxies were first classified by Searle & Sargent (1972) and Searle et al. (1973), based on the blue colors produced by the → massive stars formed during the burst. In the local Universe, starbursts create approximately 10% of the radiant energy and 20% of the massive stars. At z = 1, starburst characteristics are found in 15% of galaxies, presumably attributable to the greater amounts of gas typically present in young galaxies and increased galactic interactions. The starburst’s impact on a galaxy and the surrounding → intergalactic medium is primarily due to the consumption of gas that fuels the burst and the feedback from massive stars formed in the burst (McQuinn et al. 2010, astro-ph/1008.1589). |
oskar-e Stark Fr.: effet Stark The → splitting of spectral lines of atoms and molecules See also: Named after Johannes Stark (1874-1957), a German physicist, and Physics Nobel Prize laureate (1919); → effect. |
setâre-larze Fr.: tremblement d'étoile An astrophysical phenomenon that occurs when the → crust of a → neutron star undergoes a sudden adjustment, analogous to an → earthquake on Earth. Starquakes are thought to be caused by huge → stresses exerted on the surface of the neutron star produced by twists in the ultra-strong interior → magnetic fields. They are thought to be the source of the intense → gamma-ray bursts that come from → soft gamma repeaters. |
setâre-lak Fr.: tache stellaire A phenomenon similar to a → sunspot but
occurring on the surface of a star |
estât- (#) Fr.: stat- A prefix attached to the name of a practical electrical unit indicating that it is part of the → CGS electrostatic system, e.g. statcoulomb, statvolt. These units are also indicated by the notation → esu (as in “volt esu”). See also: Combining form representing → electrostatic, → -stat |
estât-coulomb Fr.: stat-coulomb A unit of → electric charge in the electrostatic → cgs system of units; equal to the charge that exerts a force of 1 → dyne on an equal charge at a distance of 1 cm under vacuum; equal to 3.3356 x 10-10 → coulombs. Same as → electrostatic unit (esu). |
1) estât, hâlat (#); 2) estâtidan, estât kardan Fr.: 1) état; 2) déclarer, affirmer 1a) The → condition of a → system
characterized by a particular set of values for its
properties. 2a) To declare definitely or specifically. 2b) To set forth formally in speech or writing (to state a hypothesis). 2c) To set forth in proper or definite form (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. stat, partly from M.Fr. estat, partly from The sense of “declare in words” (1640s) comes from the notion of “placing Etymology (PE): Estât, from istâdan “to stand;”
Mid.Pers. êstâtan; O.Pers./Av. sta- “to stand, stand still;
to set” (Sogd. ôštât “to stand”); hâlat, from Ar. Hâlat “state, quality.” |
estâtmân Fr.: déclaration, affirmation
See also: Verbal noun of → state (v.) |
estâtmard Fr.: homme d'Etat |
istâ (#) Fr.: statique
Etymology (EN): From Mod.L. statica, from Gk. statikos “causing to stand,” Etymology (PE): Istâ “standing, static,”
from istâdan “to stand” (Mid.Pers. êstâtan; |
tarâzmandi-ye istâ Fr.: équilibre statique The state of a rigid body which is not moving at all. See also: → static; → equilibrium. |
hadd-e istâ Fr.: limite stationnaire Same as → stationary limit. |
fešâr-e istâ Fr.: pression statique In → fluid mechanics, the → pressure felt by an object suspended in a → fluid and moving with it. This pressure is called static because the object is not moving relative to the fluid. See also → dynamic pressure. |
giti-ye istâ Fr.: Univers stationnaire |
istâyik Fr.: statique |
istgâh (#) Fr.: station A stopping place for trains or other land vehicles, for the transfer of freight or passengers. → space station. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. station, from L. stationem (nominative statio) “a standing, job, position,” related to stare “to stand,” cognate with Pers. istâdan “to stand,” as below. Etymology (PE): Istgâh “standing place,” from ist present stem of istâdan “to stand” (Mid.Pers. êstâtan; O.Pers./Av. sta- “to stand, stand still; set;” Av. hištaiti; cf. Skt. sthâ- “to stand;” Gk. histemi “put, place, weigh,” stasis “a standing still;” L. stare “to stand;” Lith. statau “place;” Goth. standan; PIE base *sta- “to stand”) + gâh “place; time” (Mid.Pers. gâh, gâs “time;” O.Pers. gāθu-; Av. gātav-, gātu- “place, throne, spot;” cf. Skt. gâtu- “going, motion; free space for moving; place of abode;” PIE *gwem- “to go, come”). |
istvar (#) Fr.: stationnaire Having a fixed, unchanging position; motionless. geostationary orbit Etymology (EN): M.E. from L. stationarius, in classical L., “of a military station,” from statio, → station. Etymology (PE): Isatvar, from ist present stem of istâdan “to stand”
(Mid.Pers. êstâtan; O.Pers./Av. sta- “to stand, stand still; set;”
Av. hištaiti; cf. Skt. sthâ- “to stand;”
Gk. histemi “put, place, weigh,” stasis “a standing still;”
L. stare “to stand;” Lith. statau “place;” Goth. standan;
PIE base *sta- “to stand”) + -var suffix of possession, variant |
siyah-câl-e istvar Fr.: trou noir stationnaire A → black hole with zero → angular momentum, that does not rotate. See also: → stationary; → black hole. |
ruye-ye hadd-e istvar Fr.: surface limite stationnaire A property of → space-time outside a
→ rotating black hole, which consists See also: → stationary; → limit; → surface. |
nufe-ye istvar Fr.: bruit stationnaire Electronics: A random noise whose intensity remains constant with time. See also: → stationary; → noise. |
madâr-e istvar Fr.: orbite stationnaire An orbit in which the satellite revolves about the primary at the angular rate at which the primary rotates on its axis. From the primary, the satellite thus appears to be stationary over a point on the primary. See also: → stationary; → orbit. |
fâz-e istvar Fr.: phase stationnaire Mechanics: The condition of a body or system at rest. See also: → stationary; → phase. |
noqte-ye istvar Fr.: point critique, ~ stationnaire
See also: → stationary; → point. |
mâhvâre-ye istvar Fr.: satellite stationnaire An artificial satellite in a synchronous orbit. → geostationary orbit See also: → stationary; → satellite. |
seri-ye zamâni-ye istvar Fr.: série temporelle stationnaire A → time series if it obeys the following criteria: 1) Constant → mean over time (t). 2) Constant → variance for all t, and 3) The → autocovariance function between Xt1 and Xt2 only depends on the interval t1 and t2. See also: → stationary; → time; → series. |
mowj-e istvar Fr.: onde stationnaire Same as → standing wave. See also: → stationary; → wave. |
âmâri (#) Fr.: statistique Of, pertaining to, consisting of, or based on → statistics. See also: Statistic, from → statistics + → -al. |
ânâlas-e âmâri Fr.: analyse statistique The process of collecting, manipulating, analyzing, and interpreting quantitative data to uncover underlying causes, patterns, and relationships between variables. See also: → statistical; → analysis. |
tarâzmandi-ye âmâri Fr.: équilibre statistique A state in which the average density of atoms per cubic centimeter in any atomic state does not change with time and in which, statistically, energy is equally divided among all degrees of freedom if classical concepts prevail. See also: → statistical; → equilibrium. |
engâre-ye âmâri Fr.: hypothèse statistique An assumed statement about the way a → random variable is distributed. A statistical hypothesis generally specifies the form of the → probability distribution or the values of the parameters of the distribution. The statement may be true or false. See also → null hypothesis. See also: → statistical; → hypothesis. |
âzmun-e engâre-ye âmâri Fr.: test d'hypothèse statistique A method of making decision between rejecting or not rejecting a → null hypothesis on the basis of a set of observations. See also: → statistical; → hypothesis; → test. |
darbord-e âmâri Fr.: inférence statistique The process of inferring certain facts about a → statistical population from results found in a → sample. See also: → statistical; → inference. |
qânun-e âmâri (#) Fr.: loi statistique A law that governs the behavior of a system consisting of a large number of particles and which differs from the laws obeyed by each of the particles making up the macroscopic system. See also → dynamical law. See also: → statistical; → law. |
mekânik-e âmâri (#) Fr.: mécanique statistique See also: → statistical; → mechanics. |
didgašt-e âmâri Fr.: parallaxe statistique The mean parallax of a group of stars that are all at approximately the same distance, as determined from their radial velocities and proper motions. See also: → statistical; → parallax. |
fizik-e âmâri (#) Fr.: physique statistique The branch of physics that applies methods of → probability theory
and → statistics to the See also: → statistical; → physics. |
porineš-e âmâri Fr.: population statistique Any collection of individuals or items from which → samples are drawn. See also → finite population, → infinite population. See also: → statistical; → population. |
garmâtavânik-e âmâri Fr.: thermodynamique statistique Same as → statistical mechanics. See also: → statistical; → thermodynamics. |
vazn-e âmâri Fr.: poids statistique
See also: → statistical; → weight. |
âmâr (#) Fr.: statistique A branch of applied mathematics that deals with the collection and interpretation of quantitative data and the use of probability theory to estimate population parameters. Etymology (EN): From Ger. Statistik “political science,” from Mod.L. statisticus (collegium) “state affairs,” from It. statista “person skilled in statecraft,” from stato “state,” ultimately from L. status “position, form of government;” cognate with Pers. ist-, istâdan “to stand” (Mid.Pers. êstâtan; O.Pers./Av. sta- “to stand, stand still; set;” Av. hištaiti; cf. Skt. sthâ- “to stand;” Gk. histemi “put, place, weigh,” stasis “a standing still;” L. stare “to stand;” Lith. statau “place;” Goth. standan; PIE base *sta- “to stand”). Etymology (PE): Âmâr “computation, arithmetic; statistics,” from
âmârdan “to reckon, to calculate,” related to
ošmârdan, šomârdan, šomordan
“to count, to calculate,” |
bašn (#), qad (#) Fr.: stature
Etymology (EN): M.E., from from O.Fr. stature, estature “build, structure,” from L. statura “height, size of body, size,” from PIE root *sta- “to stand, make or be firm,” cf. Pers. ist-, istâdan “to stand,” → opposition. Etymology (PE): Bašn “stature, height; the body;” Mid.Pers. bašn
“the top;” O.Pers. baršan- “height,” variant borz
“height, magnitude” (it occurs also in the name of the mountain chain
Alborz), related to
boland “high,” bâlâ “up, above, high, elevated, height,”
berg “mountain, hill;” Mid.Pers. buland “high;” |
estâté Fr.: status
Etymology (EN): From L. status “condition, position, state, attitude” from p.p. stem of stare “to stand,” from PIE *ste-tu-, from root *sta- “to stand,” → state., + -tus suffix of action. Etymology (PE): Estâté, from estat, → state, + nuance suffix -é. |
tacân-e pâyâ Fr.: écoulement constant, ~ stationnaire A flow in which the characterizing conditions, such as → streamlines or velocity at any given point, do not change with time. Etymology (EN): → steady; → flow. Etymology (PE): Tacân, → flow; pâyâ “steady, constant,” from |
negare-ye hâlat-e pâyâ Fr.: théorie de l'état stationnaire A → cosmological model according to which |
boxâr (#) Fr.: vapeur The vapor into which water is changed when boiled. Etymology (EN): From M.E. steme, O.E. steam; cognate with Du. stoom, of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Boxâr, → vapor. |
mâšin-e boxâr (#) Fr.: machine à vapeur An engine in which the energy of hot → steam is converted into → mechanical power, especially an engine in which the force of expanding steam is used to drive one or more → pistons. The source of the steam is typically external to the part of the machine that converts the steam energy into → mechanical energy (Dictionary.com). |
pulâd (#) Fr.: acier A strong → alloy of → iron containing up to 1.5 percent → carbon along with small amounts of other → chemical elements such as → manganese, → chromium, → nickel, and so forth. Etymology (EN): O.E. style; cf. O.S. stehli, O.N., M.L.G. stal, Dan. staal, Swed. stål, M.Du. stael, Du. staal, O.H.G. stahal, Ger. Stahl. Etymology (PE): Pulâd, variant fulâd, from Mid.Pers. pôlâwad, pôlâvat, loaned in Arm. polopat, polovat, maybe related to Skt. pavīra- “a weapon with metallic point, a spear, a lance.” |
qapân (#) Fr.: balance romaine A balance used for weighing loads that has a two beams of different lengths. Etymology (EN): → steel; yard, from M.E. yard(e), O.E. gerd “straight twig;” cognate with Du. gard, Ger. Gerte “rod.” Etymology (PE): Qapân, from kapân “a large balance with one scale, being kept in equilibrium by a weight on the other end of the beam, a lever balance” (Steingass). |
pâyâ-ye Stefan-Boltzmann Fr.: constante de Stefan-Boltzmann The constant of proportionality present in the → Stefan-Boltzmann law. It is equal to σ = 5.670 × 10-8 W m-2 K-4 or 5.670 × 10-5 erg cm-2 s-1 K-4. See also: → Stefan-Boltzmann law; → constant. |
qânun-e Stefan-Boltzmann Fr.: loi de Stefan-Boltzmann The flux of radiation from a blackbody is proportional to the fourth power of its absolute temperature: L = 4πR2σT4. Also known as Stefan’s law. See also: Ludwig Eduard Boltzmann (1844-1906), an Austrian physicist, who made important contributions in the fields of statistical mechanics and statistical thermodynamics and Josef Stefan (1835-1893), an Austrian physicist; → law. |
farbin-e Steiner Fr.: théorème de Steiner The → moment of inertia of a body about an
arbitrary axis x’ is equal to the sum of its moment of inertia
about axis x, passing through the center
of mass of the body and parallel to axis x’, and the product of the mass M
of the body by the square of the distance d between axes x and x’:
Ix’ = Ix + Md2. See also: Named after Jakop Steiner (1796-1863), a Swiss mathematician who derived this statement; → theorem. |
2867 Šteins Fr.: 2867 Šteins |
birâheš-e setâre-yi Fr.: aberration stellaire Same as → aberration of starlight . |
âhazeš-e setâre-yi Fr.: association stellaire
See also: The concept of stellar association was first introduced by Viktor A. Ambartsumian (1908-1996), Armenian astrophysicist (1947, Stellar Evolution and Astrophysics, Armenian Acad. of Sci.; German translation, Abhandl. Sowjetischen Astron. Ser. 1. 33, 1951). → stellar; → association. |
axtaršenâsi-ye setâreyi (#) Fr.: astronomie stellaire The branch of astronomy that deals with the study of stars, their physical properties, formation, and evolution. Same as → stellar astrophysics and → stellar physics. |
axtarfizik-e setâre-yi Fr.: astrophysique stellaire The field of → astrophysics concerned with the study of the physical characteristics of stars, more specifically their → internal structure, physical processes taking place in their interiors, atmospheres, → stellar winds, → mass loss, interaction with the → interstellar medium, as well as the physical laws governing → star formation. Same as → stellar physics and → stellar astronomy. See also: → stellar; → astrophysics. |
javv-e setâre-yi, havâsephre ~ Fr.: atmosphère stellaire The outer envelope of gas and plasma that surrounds a star; characterized by pressure, temperature, density, chemical composition, and opacity at varying altitudes. See also: → stellar; → atmosphere. |
model-e javv-e setâré Fr.: modèle d'atmosphère stellaire A model that computes the radiation field crossing the boundary layers of a star at all frequencies. The parameters used for the characterization of a stellar atmosphere model are: → effective temperature, → surface gravity, and → metallicity. See also: → stellar; → atmosphere; → model. |
mile-ye setâre-yi Fr.: barre stellaire A bar-shaped accumulation of stars in galaxies, created by → density waves in a → spiral galaxy. → galactic bar, → barred spiral galaxy. |
siyah câl-e setâre-yi Fr.: trou noir stellaire A → black hole with a mass in the range 3-30
→ solar masses |
hamtâft-e setâre-yi Fr.: complexe stellaire Any of the largest stellar assemblages consisting of the groupings of → star clusters, → stellar associations, and individual stars with sizes of 300-1000 → parsecs and ages of up to 100 millions years. Most stellar complexes are physical entities containing objects of common origin and are the birth places of most star clusters and associations. The brightest and youngest complexes are well-known stellar superstructures that outline the Galactic → spiral arms, and also include → H II regions, → giant molecular clouds, and → neutral hydrogen clouds (Efremov, Y. N., 1996, The Origins, Evolutions, and Densities of Binary Stars in Clusters, ASP Conf. Series, Vol. 90). |
karyâ-ye âfarineš-e setâregân Fr.: fonction de création stellaire The number of stars born per unit area in the mass range log M to
log M + d log M during the time interval t
to t + dt. The integration of the creation function over time
gives the → present-day mass function |
tize-ye setâre-yi Fr.: cuspide stellaire A steeply rising radial profile (→ cusp)
in the number density of stars in the central region of a galaxy resulting from
the gravitational influence of a central
→ supermassive black hole, as predicted by theoretical models.
An important assumption of all cusp formation models is that the stellar cluster is
in dynamical equilibrium in the black hole potential. This radial profile is
usually characterized by a power law of the form n(r) ∝ r-γ,
with a slope that is steeper than that of a flat isothermal → core.
For a single-mass stellar cluster, Bahcall & Wolf (1976) determined the dynamically |
tavânik-e setâre-yi Fr.: dynamique stellaire The field of astrophysics that describes systems of many → point mass particles whose mutual gravitational interactions determine their orbits. Theses systems include → star clusters, → globular clusters, and galaxies (→ galaxy) consisting of about 102-103, 104-106, and up to about 1012 members respectively. Stellar dynamics deals with systems in which each member contributes importantly to the overall gravitational field and is usually concerned with the statistical properties of many orbits. It can be compared to the → kinetic theory of gases developed in the late 19th century. In contrast, → celestial mechanics deals with systems where the gravitational force of a massive planet or star determines the orbits of its satellites. |
fargašt-e setâré Fr.: évolution stellaire |
bâzxord-e setâre-yi Fr.: rétroaction stellaire The process whereby large quantities of → energy and
→ momentum are released into the gas
surrounding → star formation regions
in galaxies. More specifically, → massive stars Observations reveal feedback in the form of
→ galactic-scale outflows
of gas in galaxies with high → star formation rates, |
darune-ye setâré Fr.: intérieur stellaire |
tâbandegi-ye setâré Fr.: luminosité stellaire The total amount of energy emitted by a star per unit time. According to the → Stefan-Boltzmann law, the stellar luminosity is given by: L = 4πR2σTeff4, where R* is radius, σ is the → Stefan-Boltzmann constant, and Teff is → effective temperature. A star’s luminosity depends, therefore, on two factors, its size and its surface temperature. Stellar luminosity is measured either in ergs per second or in units of → solar luminosity or in → absolute magnitude. See also → luminosity class. See also: → stellar; → luminosity. |
meydân-e meqnâtisi-ye setâre-yi Fr.: champ magnétique stellaire The → magnetic field associated with a star. Magnetic fields are common among stars of solar and lower masses. So far definitive detections of fields in stars with masses ~1.5 Msun have, for the most part, been made for objects having anomalous chemical abundances (e.g., the → chemically peculiar A and B stars). Recently, however, observations of cyclic variability in the properties of → stellar winds from luminous → OB stars have been interpreted as evidence for the presence of large-scale magnetic fields in the surface layers and atmospheres of these objects (→ magnetic massive star). These inferences have been bolstered by the unambiguous measurement of a weak (~ 360 G) field in the chemically normal B1 IIIe star → Beta Cephei. These results suggest that magnetic fields of moderate strength might be more prevalent among → hot stars than had previously been thought. At the present time, the origin of magnetism in massive stars is not well understood. If the magnetic field of a hot star is produced by → dynamo effect in the → convective core, then a mechanism for transporting the field to the stellar surface must be identified. The finite electrical conductivity of the envelope leads to the outward diffusion of any fields contained therein, but only over an extended period of time. Estimates indicate that for stars more massive than a few solar masses, the resistive diffusion time across the radiative interior exceeds the → main sequence lifetime. Another possibility is that dynamo fields are advected from the core to the surface by rotation-induced → meridional circulation (MacGregor & Cassinelli, 2002, astro-ph/0212224). |
jerm-e setâre-yi Fr.: masse stellaire
|
felezigi-ye setâre-yi Fr.: métallicité stellaire The metallicity derived from observations of stars in galaxies. It is mainly based on spectral → absorption lines in → ultraviolet (UV) and optical ranges. Stellar metallicity is a direct measure of the amount of metals in a galaxy, since large part of heavy elements lies in its stars. See also: → stellar; → metallicity. |
haste-handâyeš-e setâre-yi Fr.: nucléosynthèse stellaire The → nuclear reaction process taking place inside stars, whereby → chemical elements are produced from pre-existing nuclei heavier than → hydrogen and → helium. See also: → stellar; → nucleosynthesis. |
barâxt-e setâre-yi Fr.: objet stellaire Any of a class of → astronomical objects which is thought to evolve into a → star or is a descendant of a star. |
didgašt-e setâré Fr.: parallaxe stellaire The apparent → difference in the → position See also: |
nursanji-ye setâre-yi Fr.: photométrie stellaire The precise measurement of a star’s brightness, usually through several specific wavelength bands. See also: → stellar; → photometry. |
fizik-e setâre-yi (#) Fr.: physique stellaire Same as → stellar astrophysics. |
porineš-e setâre-yi Fr.: population stellaire → Population I star; → Population II star. See also: → stellar; → population. |
handâyeš-e porinešhâ-ye setâre-yi Fr.: synthèse de poupulations stellaires A theoretical model that reconstructs the integrated spectrum of → stellar populations from an empirical library of stellar spectra containing the range of types expected to be present in the sample. The light received from a given galaxy is emitted by a large number of stars that may have different masses, ages, and metallicities. Stellar population synthesis models are tools for interpreting the integrated light that we observe from the galaxies. See also: → stellar; → population; → model. |
tapeš-e setâré, ~ setâre-yi Fr.: pulsation stellaire The expansion of a star followed by contraction so that its → surface temperature and → luminosity undergo periodic variation. Pulsation starts with a loss of → hydrostatic equilibrium, when, for example, a layer contracts. This layer heats up and becomes more opaque to radiation. Therefore, radiative diffusion slows down through the layer because of its increased → opacity and heat increases beneath it. Hence pressure rises below the layer. Eventually this increase in pressure starts to push the layer out. The layer expands, cools and becomes more transparent to radiation. Energy now escapes from below the layer and the pressure beneath the layer drops. The layer falls inward and the cycle starts over. See also → kappa mechanism; → gamma mechanism; → partial ionization zone; → pulsating star; → valve mechanism. |
carxeš-e setâré, é setêre-yi Fr.: rotation stellaire The spinning of a star about its axis, due to its angular momentum. Stars do not necessarily rotate as solid bodies, and their angular momentum may be distributed non-uniformly, depending on radius or latitude.Thus the equator of the star can rotate at a different angular velocity than the higher latitudes. These differences in the rate of rotation within a star may have a significant role in the generation of a stellar magnetic field. |
sâxtâr-e setâré, ~ setêre-yi Fr.: structure stellaire |
hamugeš-e sâxtâr-e setâré Fr.: équation de structure stellaire A set of → differential equations describing the physical properties of stars based on two main assumptions: a star is a perfect sphere and the net force on a macroscopic mass element is zero. If the effects of rotation and magnetism are ignored, these assumptions lead to a set of five differential equations. |
râžmân-e setâre-yi Fr.: système stellaire A system comprised of a group of stars bound by → gravitational attraction. Same as → star system. |
bâd-e setâre-yi Fr.: vent stellaire |
siyah câl bâ jerm-e setâre-y Fr.: trou noir de masse stellaire Same as → stellar black hole. |
karyâ-ye pelle-yi Fr.: fonction échelon Math.: A function f of a real variable defined on an interval [a,b] so that [a,b] can be divided into a finite number of sub-intervals on each of which f is a constant. The graph of a step function is a series of line segments resembling a set of steps. Etymology (EN): Step, from M.E. steppen, O.E. steppan; cf. Du. stap, O.H.G. stapfo, Ger. stapfe “footprint;” → function. Etymology (PE): Karyâ, → function; pellé “stair, step;” Mid.Pers. pylg “step,” pillagân “steps, staircase;” from *palak, from *padak, from pad-, → foot,
|
panjtâye-ye Stephan Fr.: Quintet de Stéphan A group of five closely grouped galaxies (NGC 7317, 7318A, 7318B, 7319 and 7320) in the constellation → Pegasus. Four of the galaxies show essentially the same → redshift, suggesting that they are at the same distance from us. The fifth galaxy (NGC 7320) has a smaller redshift than the others, indicating it is much closer. This one is probably a foreground galaxy which happens to lie along the line of sight. The four distant galaxies seem to be colliding, showing serious distortions due to gravitational → tidal forces. The NASA → Spitzer Space Telescope has revealed the presence of a huge intergalactic → shock wave. Collisions play an important role in the life cycles of galaxies. → merging galaxies. See also: Named after the French astronomer Edouard Stéphan (1837-1923), who discovered the group in 1877 at Marseilles Observatory, using the → Foucault’s reflector; → quintet. |
esterâdiân (#) Fr.: stéradian The solid angle subtended at the center of a sphere by an area on its surface numerically equal to the square of the radius. → square degree. See also: From ste(reo)-, → stereo-
|
estereyo- (#) Fr.: stéréo- A combining form meaning “having and dealing with three dimensions of space; solid.” Etymology (EN): From stereo a shortening of stereotype, from Fr. stéréotype (adj.) “printing by means of a solid plate of type,” from Gk. stereos “solid.” Etymology (PE): Loan from Fr., as above. |
ham-sanj-gar-e estereyo Fr.: stéréo comparateur A device that allows two images of the sky taken at different times to be optically superimposed so that changes in star brightness or moving objects can be detected. Etymology (EN): → stereo-; comparator, from L. comparare
Etymology (PE): Ham-sanj-gar “comapartor,” from ham-, → com-, |
estereyonegâri, estereyonegârik Fr.: stétéographique Of, relating to, or being a delineation of the form of a solid body on a plane. See also: → stereography; → -ic |
farâšâneš-e estereyonegârik Fr.: projection stéréographique A graphical method of depicting three-dimensional geometrical objects
in two dimensions. In a → planispheric astrolabe,
it is the projection of a point of the celestial sphere onto the equatorial plane, as
seen from one of the poles. The center of projection
is the South pole for the northern hemisphere, and the North pole for
the southern hemisphere. In this operation See also: → stereographic; → projection |
estereyonegâri Fr.: stétéographie |
estereyo-namâ, barjaste-namâ Fr.: stéréoscope |
setarvan (#) Fr.: stérile Incapable of producing offspring; not producing offspring (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.Fr. stérile “not producing fruit,” from L. sterilis “barren, unproductive, unfruitful,” from PIE *ster- “stiff, rigid, firm, strong.” Etymology (PE): Satarvan, literally “mule-like, resembling a mule,” from setar, variant of astar, → mule, + -van similarity and attribution suffix. |
notrino-ye setarvan Fr.: neutron stérile A hypothetical type of → neutrino which does not participate in the → weak interaction. It would arise only from ordinary neutrinos oscillating into a sterile form (singlet, right handed → helicity). The sterile neutrino is a candidate for the → dark matter. Sterile neutrinos might have been produced in primordial plasma in the → early Universe. The idea of sterile neutrino was first proposed by Bruno Pontecorvo (1967) in a paper which also discussed neutrino oscillations. |
âzmâyeš-e Stern-Gerlach (#) Fr.: expérience de Stern et Gerlach An experiment devised for measuring the → magnetic moment of → silver atoms. A → beam of silver atoms is directed between the → poles of a non-homogeneous → magnetic field. Contrarily to the prediction of the classical theory, the atoms divide into two distinct parts. One half of atoms are deflected up, the other half deflected down. The amount of deflection up or down is exactly of the same magnitude. Whether an individual atom is deflected up or down appears to be random. From a measurement of the → deflection, one can find the strength of the magnetic moment. This experience provides proof that there exist only two permitted orientations, called the → quantization of → spin. See also: In honor of Otto Stern (1888-1969), German physicist, Nobel laureate in Physics 1943, and Walter Gerlach (1889-1979), German physicist, who carried out the experiment in 1922. They used a beam of silver atoms from a hot oven because they could be readily detected on a photograph emulsion. Moreover, the silver atoms allowed studying the magnetic properties of a single electron because the atoms have a single outer electron; → experiment. |
estilb Fr.: stilb Optics: A unit of luminance equal to one candle per square cm. See also: From Gk. stilbe “lamp.” |
gavâzidan Fr.: stimuler To cause physical activity in something; e.g. → stimulated emission. See also: Verb from → stimulus. |
gosil-e gavâzidé Fr.: émission stimulée The process by which an electron, which is already in an excited state (an upper energy level, in contrast to its lowest possible level or “ground state”), can “stimulate” a transition to a lower level, producing a second photon of the same energy. The quantum energy of the incoming photon should be equal to the energy difference between its present level and the lower level. This process forms the basis of both the → laser and → maser. Same as → induced emission. |
diseš-e gavâlide-ye setâré Fr.: formation stimulée d'étoiles A process in which a star is not formed spontaneously but is
provoked by the action of external forces, such as pressure and shock on
a molecular cloud by close-by → massive stars,
→ supernova explosions, etc. See also See also: Stimulated, p.p. of → stimulate; → star formation. |
gavâz Fr.: stimulus Something that incites or rouses to action; an incentive. Etymology (EN): From L. stimulus “goad, spur;” cognate with Pers. tiz→ sharp. Etymology (PE): Gavâz “goad, a stick with a pointed end, for driving cattle,” Mid.Pers. *gawâz, lowned in Arm. gawazan “goad;” Av. gauuāza- “whip, stick for driving cattle,” from gao- “cattle, cow” (→ Bootes)
|
nazdineš-e Stirling Fr.: approximation de Stirling A mathematical formula yielding an approximate value for → factorial n, when n is large: n! ≅ (2πn)1/2nne-n, where e is the base of → natural logarithm. See also: Named after James Stirling (1692-1770), a Scottish mathematician; → approximation. |
kâturgin Fr.: stochastique Involving or containing a random variable or variables. A stochastic variable is neither completely determined nor completely random. A system containing one or more stochastic variables is probabilistically determined. Etymology (EN): From Gk. stokhastikos “able to guess, conjecturing,” from stokhazesthai “to aim at, guess,” from stokhos “a guess, target,” literally “pointed stake.” Etymology (PE): Kâturgin, from kâtur, kâturé, → random
|
barangizeš-e kâturgin Fr.: excitation stochastique The mechanism arising from turbulent convection
in the → convective zone of stars, which is responsible
for the driving of stellar → pulsation modes. See also: → stochastic; → mode. |
farâravand-e kâturgin Fr.: processus stochastique Any process involving a sequence of random variables. The future evolution of a stochastic process is therefore described by probability distributions. See also: → stochastic; → process. |
diseš-e setâregân bâ xod-tuceš-e kâturgin Fr.: formation d'étoiles par auto-propagation stochastique A mechanism that could be responsible for global → spiral structure in galaxies either by itself or in conjunction with spiral → density waves. In this mechanism, star formation is caused by → supernova-induced → shocks which compress the → interstellar medium. The → massive stars thus formed may, when they explode, induce further → star formation. If conditions are right, the process becomes self-propagating, resulting in agglomerations of young stars and hot gas which are stretched into spiral shaped features by → differential rotation. Merging of small agglomerations into larger ones may then produce large-scale spiral structure over the entire galaxy. The SSPSF model, first suggested by Mueller & Arnett (1976) was developed by Gerola & Seiden (1978). While the → density wave theory postulates that spiral structure is due to a global property of the galaxy, the SSPSF model examines the alternative viewpoint, namely that spiral structure may be induced by more local processes. The two mechanisms are not necessarily mutually exclusive, but they involve very different approaches to the modeling of galaxy evolution. The SSPSF gives a better fit than the density wave theory to the patchy spiral arms found in many spiral galaxies. However, it cannot explain → galactic bars. See also: → stochastic; → self; → propagate; → star; → formation. |
stoyxiyošenâsi Fr.: stoicheiologie
See also: → stoichiometry, → -logy. |
stoyxiyosanjik Fr.: stoechiométrique
See also: → stoichiometry; → -ic. |
stoyxiyosanji Fr.: stoechiométrie
Etymology (EN): From Gk. stoikheion “element, component, principle,” Stoikheia
“elements” (the title of Euclid’s great collection of Gk. mathematics);
loaned in Ar. and Pers. (9-th century A.D.) as ustuqus (
Etymology (PE): Stoyxiyosanji, from stoyxiyo loan from Gk., as above, + -sanji, → -metry. |
stokes (#) Fr.: stokes The unit of → viscosity in the → cgs system, cm2 s-1, equal to 10-4 m2 s-1. See also: After Sir George Gabriel Stokes (1819-1903), a
British mathematician and physicist, who
made important contributions to fluid dynamics, optics, and mathematical physics; |
karvand-e mâleš-e Stokes Fr.: facteur de friction de Stokes For the translational motion of a spherical body moving in a → viscous fluid, the proportionality factor between the uniform flow velocity far from the sphere and the drag force, provided no-slip boundary condition and small → Reynolds numbers: f = 6πηR, where η is the Reynolds number and R radius of the sphere. |
qânun-e Stokes (#) Fr.: loi de Stokes
|
pârâmunhâ-ye Stokes Fr.: paramètres de Stokes Four parameters which are needed to fully describe the → polarization state of → electromagnetic radiation. They involve the maximum and minimum intensity, the ellipticity, and the direction of polarization. The four Stokes parameters are traditionally defined as follows: |
sang (#) Fr.: pierre The hard nonmetallic mineral or group of consolidated minerals either in mass or in a fragment of pebble or larger size. See also → rock. Etymology (EN): O.E. stan; cf. O.N. steinn, Dan. steen, O.H.G., Ger. Stein; from PIE *stai- “stone,” also “to thicken, stiffen” (cf. Skt. styayate “curdles, becomes hard;” Av. stay- “heap;” Gk. stear “fat, tallow,” stia, stion “pebble”). Etymology (PE): Sang “stone, rock;” Mid.Pers. sang; O.Pers. aθanga-; Av. asenga- “stone;” PIE *aken-. |
asr-e sang (#) Fr.: âge du fer A prehistoric period during which the main material used to make tools and weapons was stone. The Stone Age is usually divided into three separate periods (Paleolithic Period, Mesolithic Period, and Neolithic Period) based on the degree of sophistication in the fashioning and use of tools. The Paleolithic time period is by far the longest, beginning some two million years ago and ending around 10,000 BC to coincide with the end of the last ice age (Pleistocene epoch). |
šaxân-ye sangi Fr.: météorite pierreuse |
šaxâne-ye sangi-âhani Fr.: sidérolithe, sidérolite Meteorites comprised of roughly equal amounts of → nickel/→ iron and → stone. They are divided into two groups: → pallasites and → mesosiderites. The stony-irons are thought to have formed at the core/mantle boundary of their parent bodies. The stony-irons account for less than 2% of all known meteorites. Also called → siderolite. |
1) bâzdâštan; bâzdâšt (#); 2) daricé; (#) Fr.: diaphragme
Etymology (EN): M.E. stoppen (v.), O.E. -stoppian (in forstoppian “to stop up, stifle”); V.L. *stuppare “to stop or stuff with tow or oakum” (cf. It. stoppare, Fr. étouper “to stop with tow”), from L. stuppa “coarse part of flax, tow.” Etymology (PE): 1) Bâzdâštan, bâzdâšt- “to stop, restrain, inhibit, coerce, detain,”
from bâz-, → re-, + dâštan
“to have, hold, maintain, possess,” → access.
|
hamâvâ-ye isti Fr.: consonne occulsive |
vâbar-e kânuni Fr.: rapport focal Same as → focal ratio. |
tavân-e bâzdâšt Fr.: pouvoir d'arrêt A quantity indicating the extent with which a substance absorbs a → charged particle passing through it. It is the energy lost by a → non-relativistic particle per unit length of its path in the substance. |
rahâ-vâž, fekan-vâž Fr.: mot vide Computers: Etymology (EN): → stop; → word. Etymology (PE): Rahâ-vâž, literally “free word,” from rahâ
“free, set free” (O.Pers. rad- “to leave,”
Skt. rah-, rahati “separates, leaves,” Av. razah-
“isolation;” PIE *redh-) + vâž, vâžé, |
tufân (#) Fr.: orage An atmospheric disturbance with strong winds accompanied by
rain, snow, or other precipitation and often by thunder and lightning. Etymology (EN): M.E, from O.E. storm; cf. O.S., M.L.G., M.Du., Du. storm, O.H.G., Ger. sturm. Etymology (PE): Tufân “storm; the roaring of the sea; noise, confused hum of men or animals,” Lori tufo, Laki tuf “intense shower accompanied by wind,” from tufidan “to roar, raise a tumult.” |
dâstân (#) Fr.: conte, histoire A narrative, either true or fictitious, in prose or verse, designed to interest, amuse, or instruct the hearer or reader; tale (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. storie, from O.Fr. estorie, estoire “story, chronicle, history,” from L.L. storia, shortened from L. historia “history, account, tale, story,” → history. Etymology (PE): Dâstân “story, fable, romance.” |
veylân Fr.: traînard One who moves along slowly so as to remain some distance behind the person or people in front. → blue straggler. Etymology (EN): From straggle “to wander from the proper path, to rove from one’s companions,” from M.E. straglen “to wander.” Etymology (PE): Veylân “wanderer, vagabond,” of unknown origin, may be related to yalé “turned loose, vagabond, allowed to pasture at liberty, rover,” or vel “set free.” |
râst (#) Fr.: droit Free from a bend, angle, or curve. → straight line. Etymology (EN): M.E. streght, straight, from p.p. of strecchen, Etymology (PE): → right. |
xatt-e râst (#) Fr.: droite |
šepil Fr.: déformation Change of volume and/or shape of a body, or part of a body, due to an applied
→ stress. When a body is deformed Etymology (EN): M.E. streinen (v.), from O.Fr. estreindre “to bind tightly, clasp, squeeze,” from L. stringere “to bind or draw tight,” from PIE base *strenk- “tight, narrow; pull tight, twist;” cf. Gk. strangein “twist;” Lith. stregti “congeal;” O.H.G. strician “mends nets;” Ger. stramm, Du. stram “stiff.” Etymology (PE): Šepil “squeeze; fondness” (Dehxodâ) of unknown origin. |
šegeft (#) Fr.: étrange Unusual, not expected, extraordinary. → strange particle. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. estrange “foreign, alien,” from L. extraneus “foreign, external,” from extra “outside of,” → extra-. Etymology (PE): Šegeft, from Mid.Pers. škaft, škift, škuft “strange, wonderful, amazing;” Av. skapta- “wonderful.” |
zarre-e šegeft Fr.: particule étrange An elementary particle created in high-energy particle
collisions having a short life and a strangeness quantum number of 1. For example, See also: → strange; |
šegefti (#) Fr.: étrangeté A quantum number used to describe certain short-lived particles. It is defined as the number of strange anti-quarks minus the number of strange quarks in a particle. Strangeness is conserved in any strong and electromagnetic interaction, but not in weak interactions. See also: Strangeness, the quality or condition of being → strange. |
CDS Fr.: Centre de Données astronomiques de Strasbourg (CDS) A data center dedicated to the collection and worldwide distribution
of astronomical data and related information. It is located at the
Strasbourg Astronomical Observatory, France. The CDS has several goals, mainly: See also: CDS, short for Centre de Données astronomiques de Strasbourg. |
cine-bandi Fr.: stratification A layered structure of sedimentary rocks in which the individual layers can be traced a considerable distance. The layers can be caused by many differences which include materials of different composition, color, grain size or orientation. Etymology (EN): Strati-, from → stratum + -fication from L. -ficare “to do, make.” Etymology (PE): Ciné, → stratum + bandi, from bastan “to bind, shut; to contract, get, acquire; to coagulate,” (Mid.Pers. bastan/vastan “to bind, shut,” Av./O.Pers. band- “to bind, fetter,” banda- “band, tie,” Skt. bandh- “to bind, tie, fasten,” PIE *bhendh- “to bind,” cf. Ger. binden, E. bind, → band). |
cine-šenâsik, cine-negârik Fr.: stratigraphique Of, relating to, or determined by → stratigraphy. |
cine-šenâsi (#), cine-negâri Fr.: stratigraphie The study of → sedimentary rock units, including their geographic extent, age, classification, characteristics and formation. |
cine-sepehr Fr.: stratosphère The second major layer of Earth’s atmosphere, just above the → troposphere and below the → mesosphere, extending from about 20 km to 90 km above the Earth. It is characterized by little vertical increase in temperature. Etymology (EN): From Fr. stratosphère, literally “sphere of layers,” coined by Fr. meteorologist Léon-Philippe Teisserenc de Bort (1855-1913) from L. stratus “a spreading out” (from p.p. stem of sternere “to spread out”) + -sphère (→ sphere), as in atmosphère. Etymology (PE): Cine-sepehr, from Ciné, → stratum, + sepehr, → sphere. |
cine-sepehri Fr.: stratosphérique Of, relating to, or characteristic of the stratosphere. See also: → stratosphere; → -ic. |
Nepâhešgâh-e Cine-sepehri barây axtaršenâsi-ye forusorx Fr.: Observatoire stratosphérique pour l'astronomie infrarouge A partnership of NASA and the German Aerospace Center, consisting of an extensively modified Boeing 747SP aircraft carrying a reflecting telescope with an effective diameter of 2.5 m. NASA Ames Research Center manages SOFIA’s science and mission operations in cooperation with the Universities Space Research Association and the German SOFIA Institute. SOFIA is the largest airborne observatory in the world, with a planned 20-year lifetime. See also: → stratospheric; |
ciné (#) Fr.: couche Geophysics:
A layer of the atmosphere or the sea, regarded as lying between horizontal
planes. Etymology (EN): From L. stratum “thing spread out, pavement,” from neuter p.p. of
sternere “to spread out, lay down, stretch out,” from PIE base
*ster- “to spread, extend, stretch out;”
cf. Pers. gostar-, gostardan “to spread;”
Av. star- “to spread,” starati
“spreads;” Skt. star- “to spread out, extend, strew,” Etymology (PE): Ciné “layer,” from cin present stem of cidan “to collect, gather;” Mid.Pers. cyn- “to gather, collect,” Parthian Mid.Pers. (+*ni-) ncyn- “to pile up, heap up together,” nycnyšn “stack;” Av. ci- (caē-, caii-) “to heap up, gather;” cf. Skt. ci- “to gather, heap up,” cinoti “gathers.” |
xaš Fr.: raie, bande, veine
Etymology (EN): From M.E. streke, from O.E. strica; akin to O.H.G. strich “line.” Etymology (PE): Xaš “streak, scratch, stria,” maybe from xarâš-, xarâšidan “to scratch;” Proto-Ir. *xrāš- “to scratch” (Cheung 2007), or a variant of xatt, → line. |
xatt-e xaš Fr.: ligne d'émission In → fluid mechanics, the curve defined by the positions of all particles which have passed through a given point. In laboratory experiments, streak line may be displayed by the stream of color resulting from injection of a dye into the flow. |
1) râbé; 2) râbidan Fr.: 1) courant, cours d'eau; 2) couler
Related concepts: → current (jarayân = Etymology (EN): O.E. stream “a course of water;” cf. O.S. strom, O.N. straumr, Dan. strøm, Swed. ström, Norw. straum, Du. stroom, O.H.G. stroum, Ger. Strom “current, river,” from PIE base *sreu- “to flow;” cf. Pers. rud, from Mid.Pers. rôd “river;” O.Pers. rautah- “river;” Skt. srotas- “river,” sru- “to flow;” Pali sota- “stream, flood;” Gk. rhoos “a stream, a flowing,” from rhein “to flow.” Etymology (PE): 1) Râbé, from dialectal Gilaki râbé “flowing of water or liquid,”
Semnâni rové “a stream of water flowing beyond control,” Pers. colloquial
râ (in râ gereftan “to overflow, flow beyond control”);
probably from PIE base *rei- “to flow;” cf. Skt. ray- “to flow, run,”
raya- “stream;” L. rivus “stream, brook;”
O.C.S. reka “river;” M.Ir. rian “river, way;” Goth. rinnan
“run, flow,” rinno “brook;” M.L.G. ride “brook;” O.E. riþ “stream.”
|
jarayân-e râbé Fr.: veine de courant |
rešte-ye râbé Fr.: A → stream tube with a small cross section so that |
lule-ye râbé Fr.: tube de courant A pipe-shaped volume obtained by drawing → streamlines through every point of a closed curve in the fluid. Since the stream tube is bounded on all sides by streamlines and since, by definition, there can be no velocity across a streamline, no fluid may enter or leave a stream tube, except through its ends. See also → stream filament. |
derafšak Fr.: jet, grand jet Any long, narrow piece or thing, as a spray of a plant or a strip of cloud; something that streams. → coronal streamer; → helmet streamer Etymology (EN): M.E. stremer, from → stream + -er. Etymology (PE): Derafšak, from derafš “flag, banner;” Mid.Pers.
drafš “banner;” Av. drafša- “banner;” cf.
Skt. drapsá- “flag, banner; drop, spark;” also Fr. drapeau; |
râbeš Fr.: 2) lecture en transit
See also: Verbal noun of → stream. |
râbxatt Fr.: ligne de courant An imaginary continuous curve drawn in a fluid so that the tangent at every point of it at any instant of time coincides with the direction of the motion of the fluid at that point. The component of velocity at right angles to the streamline is always zero. If a number of streamlines is considered at a particular instant, the pattern they form gives a good indication of the flow then occurring. Same as → flow line. See also → path line, → stream tube. |
vâbr-e Strehl Fr.: rapport Strehl The ratio of the peak intensity of the central core of the image of a point source to the corresponding intensity contained in an image obtained in the absence of aberration. An optically perfect system has a Strehl ratio of unity. The ratio may be computed by integrating the area under a → modulation transfer function (MTF) curve and dividing it by the integral over the diffraction-limited MTF. See also: In honor of Karl Strehl (1864-1940), |
zur (#) Fr.: force, intensité, résistance The quality or quantity of force, power, resistance, etc.
→ line strength. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. strengþu “power, force, vigor, moral resistance,” (cf. O.H.G. strengida “strength”), noun of strong. Etymology (PE): Zur “strength,” variant zâvar; Mid.Pers. zôr “strength, power, vigour,” zâvar “strength, force,” zôrik “powerful,” loaned in Arm. zaur; Av. zāvar- “strength.” |
zur-e mâdighâ Fr.: résistance des matériaux |
xošar Fr.: contrainte The force acting across a unit area in a solid body, tending to produce → strain in the body or part of it. When a stress is applied to a body, the ratio of stress to strain is a characteristic constant of the body. See also → shear. Etymology (EN): Stress “hardship, adversity, force, pressure,” in part a shortening of M.Fr. destresse (fr. détresse) in part from O.Fr. estrece “narrowness, oppression,” from L. strictus “compressed,” p.p. of stringere “draw tight.” Etymology (PE): Xošar variant of fešâr “pressure,” cf. Lori xošâr, Aftari xešâr, Qazvini, Qomi xošâl, Tabari qošâr Khotanese ssarr- “to exhilarate;” loaned in Arm. ôšarak, in Ar. afšaraj “juice.” |
dargidan Fr.: étirer To make something longer or wider by pulling it. Etymology (EN): M.E. strecchen, from O.E. streccan; cf. Dan. strække, Sw. sträcka, O.Fris. strekka, O.H.G. strecchan, M.L.G., M.Du., O.H.G., Ger. strecken “to stretch”), perhaps a variant of the root of stark, or from PIE root *strenk- “tight, narrow; pull tight, twist,” → strain. Etymology (PE): Dargidan, from darg “long” (Zâzâ, Ossetic),
variants derâz, derež “long” (→ longitude); |
tarm-e dargeš Fr.: terme d'étirement The second term of the right-hand side in the → induction equation. This term is at the origin of the → dynamo effect and also of the → Alfven waves when in the presence of a mean field. |
meydân-e paxš Fr.: champ d'éparpillement The area over which the → meteorite fragments from a particular → fall are dispersed. Etymology (EN): Strewn, p.p. of strew, from M.E. strewen, O.E. strewian; cf. O.S. stroian, O.N. stra, Dan. strø, Swed. strö, M.Du. strowen, Du. strooien, O.H.G. strouwen, Ger. streuen, Goth. straujan “to sprinkle, strew;” PIE base *stere- “to spread, extend, stretch out;” from which Pers. gostar-, gostardan “to stretch, expand;” Av. star- “to spead out;” → field. Etymology (PE): Meydân, → field; paxš “scattered,” → diffuse. |
xaš (#) Fr.: stria Secondary synchrones that originate at a certain point in some comets’ dust tail, a point where for some reason the dust particles have fragmented. Etymology (EN): Mod.L. stria “strip, streak,” L. “furrow, channel;” cognate with Du. striem, O.H.G. strimo, Ger. Strieme “stripe, streak,” from PIE base *streig- “to stroke, rub, press.” Etymology (PE): Xaš “streak,” dialectal Qomi xaš
“streak, stria, mark,” Yaqnavi xaš “to draw,”
Lori kerr “line;” litterary Pers. xatt→ line; Mid/Mod.Pers. kešidan, kašidan |
târ, rismân Fr.: corde
Etymology (EN): M.E. string, streng; O.E. streng “line, cord, thread;” Du. streng,Ger. Strang “rope, cord;” PIE base *strenk- “stiff, tight.” Etymology (PE): Târ “thread, warp, string” |
negare-ye rismân Fr.: théorie des cordes The latest theory of fundamental physics in which the basic entity is
a one-dimensional → brane rather than the “zero-dimensional”
point of conventional elementary particle physics. The one-dimensional
string-like objects exist in the normal four dimensions of
→ space-time |
1) navâr; 2a) loxtândan, loxt kardan, 2b) loxtidan, loxt šodan Fr.: 1) bande; 2a) désabiller, décaper, démonter, 2b) se désabiller
Etymology (EN): 1) M.E. probably from M.L.G. strippe “strap, thong,”
related to stripe.
Etymology (PE): 1) Navâr “strip.”
|
sepehr-e Stömgren, kore-ye ~ Fr.: sphère de Strömgren A theoretical sphere of → ionized hydrogen created by energetic → ultraviolet→ photons of a hot, → massive star embedded in a uniform interstellar → molecular cloud and lying at the center of the sphere. → H II region. See also: Named after Bengt Strömgren (1908-1987), a Danish astrophysicist, who put forward the first and simplest version of the model in 1939; → sphere. |
râžmân-e Strömgren Fr.: système de Strömgren A → photometric system, also called the → uvby system. See also: → Stromgren sphere; → system. |
sotorg, zurmand, nirumand (#) Fr.: fort, puissant Having an intense, powerful, or vivid effect. Etymology (EN): O.E. strang “physically powerful, powerful in effect, forceful;” Etymology (PE): Sotorg “large, strong,” Mid.Pers. sturg “fierce; gross, coarse,”
Av. stūra- “strong, large, rough,” stāuuišta- “strongest, biggest,”
cf. Skt. sthūrá- “strong, big, massy, thick,”
Gk. stylos “column, pillar,” M.L.G. stūr “big, strong, coarse.” |
parvaz-e ensân-hasti-ye sotorg Fr.: principe anthropique fort A version of the → anthropic principle that claims that |
kahkešân-e mârpic bâ bâzu-ye setorg Fr.: galaxie spirale à forts bras A galaxy with prominent stellar → spiral arms |
ruyâruyi-ye sotorg Fr.: rencontre proche In a star cluster, a → close encounter that strongly changes a star’s velocity. |
niru-ye sotorg Fr.: interaction forte The force responsible for holding quarks and gluons together to form protons, neutrons and other particles. It is the strongest of the four fundamental forces. Same as → strong interaction. |
lenzeš-e gerâneši-ye sotorg Fr.: effet de lentille gravitationnelle forte A → gravitational lensing phenomenon in which the image distortion is strong enough to be readily recognized, such as in the case of the → Einstein cross or when giant luminous arcs show up in → galaxy clusters (e.g. Abell 2218). Opposite to → weak gravitational lensing. See also: → strong; → gravitational; → lensing. |
andaržireš-e sotorg Fr.: interaction forte The interaction between quarks that is transmitted by gluons. The characteristic range of the strong interaction is 10-13 cm, and the time scale over which it operates is on the order of 10-23 second. Also called → strong force. See also: → strong; → interaction. |
lenzeš-e sotorg Fr.: effet de lentille fort A situation where the mass concentration in the central regions of → galaxy clusters exceeds the → critical density required for lensing, resulting in multiple images of background objects. |
estonsiom (#) Fr.: strontium A metallic chemical element; symbol Sr. Atomic number 38; atomic weight 87.62;
melting point 769°C; boiling point 1,384°C; specific gravity 2.6 at 20°C.
Strontium is a soft, silver-yellow metal with three allotropic crystalline forms. It is See also: The name derives from Strontian “a town in Scotland.” The mineral strontianite is found in mines in Strontian. The element was discovered by the Scottish chemist and physician Thomas Charles Hope in 1792 observing the brilliant red flame color of strontium. It was first isolated by the English chemist Humphry Davy in 1808. |
sâxtâr (#) Fr.: structure The arrangement of parts in an object or organism. Etymology (EN): M.E., from L. structura “a fitting together, adjustment, building,”
from structus, p.p. of struere “to pile, build, assemble,”
related to strues “heap,” from PIE *stere- “to spread, extend,
stretch out;” cf. Pers. gostar-, gostardan “to spread;”
Av. star- “to spread,” starati
“spreads;” Skt. star- “to spread out, extend, strew,” Etymology (PE): Sâxtâr, from sâxt “made; make, construction, structure; style,” past stem of sâxtan, sâzidan “to build, make, fashion; to adapt, adjust, be fit” (Mid.Pers. sâxtan, sâz-, Manichean Parthian s’c’dn “to prepare, to form;” Av. sak- “to understand, to mark,” sâcaya- (causative) “to teach”) + -âr verbal noun suffix. |
diseš-e sâxtâr Fr.: formation des structures The study of the processes that gave rise to the apparition of matter concentrations,
such as → superclusters of galaxies,
→ galaxy clusters, and galaxies, in a homogeneous
→ expanding Universe.
Cosmic structures are believed to result from → density fluctuations
that existed in the → early Universe
before radiation and matter decoupled (→ decoupling era
or → recombination era). Initial
→ quantum fluctuations in the → inflaton field
were expanded by → inflation. Inflation amplified
them up to scales that correspond to those of galaxy clusters and beyond.
Generally, a model of structure formation includes three main ingredients: 1) background
cosmology, 2) model for fluctuation generation, and 3) types of
→ dark matter. |
1) parhâné; 2) parhândan Fr.: 1) étude; 2) étudier 1a) Application of the mind to the acquisition of knowledge, as by
reading, investigation, or reflection. 1b) The cultivation of a particular branch of learning, science, or art. 1c) Something studied or to be studied. 1d) Research or a detailed examination and analysis of a subject, phenomenon, etc.
A written account of such research, examination, or analysis. 2a) To apply oneself to the acquisition of knowledge, as by reading, investigation,
or practice. 2b) To think deeply, reflect, or consider. 2c) To take a course of study, as at a college (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. studie, from O.Fr. estudie “care, skill, thought; study, school,” from L. studium “study, application;” originally “eagerness,” from studere “to press forward, be eager for, pursue,” from PIE *(s)teu- “to push, stick, beat;” cf. Gk. typtein “to strike,” typos “a blow, mold;” Skt. tup- “harm,” tundate “pushes, stabs;” Gothic stautan “push.” Etymology (PE): Parhâné, from Proto-Ir. *pari-huan- “to read thoroughly, to read through,” from *pari- “through, throughout; thoroughly” (O.Pers. pariy “around, about;” Av. pairi “around, over”)
|
Styx, Stux Fr.: Styx The fifth confirmed → satellite of
→ Pluto discovered in 2012 using a set of the
→ Hubble Space Telescope. Also called Pluto V (P5).
It orbits Pluto
between → Charon and → Nix
at a distance of about 42,000 km. See also: Named for the Greek mythological river that separates the world of the living from the realm of the dead. |
zir- (#), ir- Fr.: sub- A prefix occurring originally in loanwords from L. but
freely attached to elements of any origin and used with the Etymology (EN): From L. preposition sub “under” (also “next to, up to, toward”),
from PIE base *upo- “from below,” hence “turning upward, upward, up, over,
beyond;” cf.
O.Pers. upā (prep.) “under, with;” Av. upā, upa
(prep.; prevb) “toward, with, on, in” (upā.gam- “to arrive at,”
upāpa- “living in the water,” upa.naxturušu “bordering on
the night”);
Mod.Pers. bâ “with,” from abâ;
Skt. úpa (adv., prevb., prep.) “toward, with, under, on;”
Gk. hypo “under;” Goth. iup, Etymology (PE): Zir- “below, down;” Mid.Pers. azêr “below, under,”
êr “below, down; low, under,” adar “low;” |
zir-sâniye-yi Fr.: A measure of angle smaller than 1 arcsecond, usually until 0.1 arcsecond. See also: → sub-; → arc second. |
tasvir-gari-ye zir-sâniye-yi Fr.: Imaging in excellent seeing conditions using an adequate detector to obtain stellar images whose profile lies in the sub-arcsecond range. See also: → sub-arcsecond; → imaging. |
zir-vine, zir-tasvir Fr.: sous-image |
zir-atomi (#) Fr.: subatomique |
zarre-ye zir-atomi (#) Fr.: particule subatomique |
zir-radé (#) Fr.: sous-classe |
zir-paržani Fr.: sous-critique Of or pertaining to a state, value, or quantity that is less than critical, especially the condition of a → subcritical reactor. |
jerm-e zir-paržani Fr.: masse sous-critique An amount of → fissile material that by its mass or geometry is incapable of sustaining a → fission → chain reaction. See also: → subcritical; → mass. |
vâžirgar-e zir-paržani Fr.: réacteur sous-critique A → nuclear reactor in which the See also: → subcritical; → reactor. |
zir-hâzeš Fr.: subduction Geology: The process by which one tectonic plate slides down and below another tectonic plate as the two converge. The subduction zone is the zone of convergence of two tectonic plates, one of which usually overrides the other. Etymology (EN): From L. subductionem (nominative subductio), from subductus, p.p. of subducere “to draw away, withdraw, remove,” from → sub- + ducere “to lead.” Etymology (PE): Zir-hâzeš, verbal noun of zir-hâzidan, from zir-→ sub- + hâzidan, hâxtan, from Mid.Pers. “to lead, guide, persuade;” Av. hak-, hacaiti “to attach oneself to, to join;” cf. Skt. sacate “accompanies, follows;” Gk. hepesthai “to follow,"; L. sequi “to follow;” PIE *sekw-. |
zir-kutulé Fr.: sous-naine A metal-poor main-sequence star with spectral type later than M7 and luminosity class VI.
They are population II dwarfs which appear less luminous than their solar metallicity
counterparts due to the dearth of metals in their atmospheres. Subdwarfs are |
zir-qul Fr.: sous-géante A star with a lower absolute magnitude than a normal giant star of its → spectral type. It is a star that has exhausted the hydrogen at its center and is evolving into a → red giant. Subgiants are luminosity class IV. |
1, 2, 3) darâxt; 4) karin Fr.: sujet
Etymology (EN): M.E. suget, from O.Fr. suget, subget “a subject person or thing,”
from L. subjectus “placed beneath, inferior, open to inspection,” Etymology (PE): Darâxt “thing drawn in, under” from dar- + âxt.
The prefix dar-, from preposition dar “in, into, within; on, upon, above;
of, about, concerning;”
from Mid.Pers. andar “in, into, within,” |
1) darâxti; 2) karini Fr.: subjectif
See also: Adjective of → subject. |
darâxtigi Fr.: subjectivité
See also: → subjective + → -ity. |
vâlâyeš Fr.: sublimation The process whereby a substance goes from a solid directly to a gaseous form. Etymology (EN): From M.L. sublimationem (nominative sublimatio) “refinement,” literally “a lifting up, deliverance,” from L. sublimare “to raise, elevate,” from sublimis “lofty.” Etymology (PE): Vâlâyeš, verbal noun from vâlâ “sublime, majestic,” may be
a variant of bâlâ “up, above, high, elevated, height,”
variants boland “high,”
borz “height, magnitude”
(it occurs also in the name of the mountain chain Alborz), |
setâre-ye zir-tâbân Fr.: étoile sous-lumineuse |
zir-daryâ-yi (#) Fr.: sous-marin |
ruk-e zir-daryâ-yi Fr.: |
cešme-ye zir-daryâ-yi Fr.: source sous-marine |
1) marcidan; 2) marcândan Fr.: submerger
Etymology (EN): From L. submergere, from → sub- + mergere “to dip, immerse;” probably by rhotacism from PIE *mezg- “to dip, plunge;” cf. Skt. majj- “to sink in water;” Lith. mazgoju “to wash.” Etymology (PE): Marcidan, from Av. mraoc- “to float, submerge;” cf. Skt. mroc/mloc “to go down, set (of the Sun), to disappear, to hide;” Kurd., Laki, Nahâvandi, Bovir-Ahmadi mala- “swim,” Kurd. melâna “ship, boat,” melaq “wave” may be related to this Av. form. |
zir-milimetri Fr.: sub-millimétrique Of or pertaining to scales smaller than millimeter. See also: → sub-; → millimeter. |
axtaršenâsi-ye zir-milimetri Fr.: astronomie sub-millimétrique The study of astronomical objects with → submillimeter waves. As with millimeter-wave astronomy, this part of the spectrum is rich in lines emitted by interstellar molecules and dust. See also: → submillimeter; → astronomy. |
kahkešân-e zir-milimetri Fr.: galaxie sub-millimétrique A member of an extremely luminous population of → high-redshift
galaxies which are detected in → submillimeter waves
(→ flux density at 850 μm
≥ 3 - 5 mJy). SMGs are powered primarily by star formation rather than
an → active galactic nucleus (AGN).
Because of their high → dust content, these galaxies emit almost See also: → submillimeter; → galaxy. |
tâbeš-e zir-milimetri Fr.: rayonnement sub-millimétrique That part of the → electromagnetic radiation with a → wavelength beyond 300 → microns. See also: → submillimeter; → radiation. |
mowj-e zir-milimetri Fr.: onde sub-millimétrique An electromagnetic wave having wavelengths less than one millimeter (frequencies greater than 300 gigahertz). See also: → millimeter; → wave. |
dar-sepord Fr.: soumission |
dar-sepordan Fr.: soumettre To present for the approval, consideration, or decision of another or others. For example, to submit a research paper for publication, to submit an observing proposal. Etymology (EN): From L. submittere “to yield, lower, let down, put under, reduce,” from → sub- “under” + mittere “to let go, send.” Etymology (PE): Dar sepordan, dar sepârdan “to yield, surrender, give in,” from dar “in, into” (→ in-)
|
zirâvin Fr.: sous preuve |
zir-bazânigimand Fr.: subrelativiste Describing a system or situation for which the → Lorentz factor, γ, is much smaller than 1. See also → ultrarelativistic. See also: → ultra- + → relativistic |
zirveštan, zirvisidan Fr.: souscrire
Etymology (EN): → sub- + scribe, → inscribe. Etymology (PE): Zirveštan, from zir-, → sub-,
|
zirnevešt (#) Fr.: indice inférieur
Etymology (EN): From L. subscriptus, p.p. of subscribere “to write underneath,” Etymology (PE): Zirnevešt, from zir-, → sub-, + nevešt “written,” from neveštan, nevis- “to write;” Mid.Pers. nibištan, nibes- “to write;” Av./O.Pers. nī- “down; in, into,” → ni- (PIE), + paēs- “to paint; to adorn,” paēsa- “adornment” (Mid.Pers. pēsīdan “to adorn”); O.Pers. pais- “to adorn, cut, engrave” (Mod.Pers. pisé “variegated”); cf. Skt. piśáti “adorns; cuts;” Gk. poikilos “multicolored;” L. pingit “embroiders, paints;” O.C.S. pisati “to write;” O.H.G. fēh “multicolored;” Lith. piēšti “to draw, adorn;” PIE base *peik- “colored, speckled.” |
zirvešt Fr.: souscription |
zir-hangard Fr.: sous-ensemble |
zir-pusté Fr.: sous couche |
noqte-ye zir-xoršidi Fr.: point subsolaire |
zir-sedâyi Fr.: subsonique Describing a speed that is less than the speed of sound in the medium concerned. → supersonic. |
tacân-e zir-sedâyi Fr.: écoulement subsonique |
zirist Fr.: substance
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. substance, from L. substantia “being, essence, material,” from substans, pr.p. of substare “to stand under or be present,” from → sub- “up to, under” + stare “to stand,” cognate with Pers. istâdan “to stand,” as below. Etymology (PE): Zirist, literally “to stand under,” from zir-, → sub-,
|
ziristin Fr.: substantif Grammar: A word or word group functioning syntactically as a noun. Substantives include nouns and → nominals. Etymology (EN): M.E., from L.L. substantivus “of substance or being,” from L. substantia “being, essence, material,” → substance, contraction of “noun substantive” from L. nomen substantivum (“independent noun”) as opposed to nomen adiectivum “noun adjective” (“dependent noun”). Etymology (PE): Ziristin, from zirist, → substance, + -in a suffix of relation. |
zir-setâre-yi Fr.: sous-stellaire
|
hadd-e zir-setâre-yi Fr.: limite sous-stellaire The mass limit below which → hydrogen fusion
cannot take place, and the cloud collapse cannot lead to
the formation of a star. The limit is 0.075 → solar masses, See also: → substellar; → limit. |
bart-e zir-setâre-yi Fr.: objet sous-stellaire An object with a mass too small to sustain the → proton-proton chain and thus become a true star. See → brown dwarf. See also: → substellar; → object. |
noqte-ye zir-setâre-yi Fr.: point substellaire The point on the Earth, or other body, at which a particular star is directly overhead at a given time. See also: → substellar; → point. |
zir-setâregi Fr.: nature sous-stellaire The fact or condition, for an object, of not being capable to sustain the → hydrogen fusion because of its low mass (less than 0.08 → solar masses). See also: → substellar + → -ity. |
zir-râžmân Fr.: sous-système |
zirtânidan Fr.: sous-tendre To be opposite and delimit the extent of an angle or side of a geometric figure. Etymology (EN): From L. subtendere “to stretch beneath,” from → sub-
Etymology (PE): Zirtânidan from zir-, → sub-, + tânidan
from tân “thread, warp of a web,” tâl “thread” (Borujerdi dialect),
târ “thread, warp, string,” |
zâvie-ye zirtânidé Fr.: angle sous-tendu |
noqte-ye zir-zamini Fr.: point subterrestre The point on the surface of a celestial body where the star is perceived to be directly overhead (in zenith). The sublunar point and subsolar point are the equivalent points for the Moon and Sun, respectively. See also: → sub-; → terrestrial. |
naqz (#) Fr.: subtil Fine or delicate in meaning or intent. Etymology (EN): M.E. sotil, from O.Fr. sotil, soutil, subtil “adept, adroit; cunning, wise; detailed,” from L. subtilis “fine, thin, delicate, finely woven,” from → sub- “under” + -tilis, from tela “web, net, warp of a fabric,” → texture. Etymology (PE): Naqz “subtle, elegant, beautiful, excellent, good.” |
zirkaršidan, kâhidan Fr.: soustraire To take one number away from another; deduct. To perform the arithmetic operation of → subtraction. Etymology (EN): From L. subtractus, p.p. of subtrahere “to draw from beneath, take away, draw off,” from → sub- “from under” + trahere “to pull, draw.” Etymology (PE): Zirkaršidan, literally “to draw beneath,” from zir-,
→ sub-, + karšidan “to draw, pul, drag,” variant of
kašidan “to draw, protract, trail, drag, carry;” |
zirkaršeš Fr.: soustraction The operation of finding the difference between two numbers or quantities. See also: Verbal noun of → subtract. |
zirkaršeši Fr.: soustractif
|
rang-e zirkaršeši Fr.: synthèse soustractive Color produced by mixing pigments rather than light. Mixing all of the subtractive colors together results in the color black. See also → additive color. See also: → subtractive; → color. |
zir-guné Fr.: sous-type |
kâmyâbidan Fr.: réussir
Etymology (EN): M.E. succeden, from O.Fr. succeder “to follow on” and directly from L. succedere “come after, follow after; go near to; come under; take the place of,” also “go from under, mount up, ascend,” hence “get on well, prosper, be victorious,” from → sub- “next to, after” + cedere “to go, move” → process. Etymology (PE): Kâmyâbidan, back formation from kâmyâbi, → success. |
kâmyâbi (#), kâmyâft Fr.: succès
Etymology (EN): From L. successus “an advance, a coming up; a good result, happy outcome,” noun use of p.p. of succedere “come after,” from suc-, → sub-, + ceder “to go, move,” → process. Etymology (PE): Kâmyâbi, literally “acquiring, obtaining, finding one’s desire, wish,” from kâm “desire, wish,” → despite, + yâbi, from yâftan “to obtain, find,” → interpolation. |
kâmyâb (#) Fr.: réussi, couronné de succès
See also: → success + -ful a suffix meaning “full of, characterized by.” |
payâpey (#) Fr.: successif Following in order or in uninterrupted sequence; e.g. → method of successive approximations. Etymology (EN): M.E. from M.L. successivus, from Etymology (PE): Peyâpey “successive,” from pey “after; step,” related to pâ “foot” (Mid.Pers. pâd, pây, Av. pad-, Skt. pat, Gk. pos, gen. podos, L. pes, gen. pedis, P.Gmc. *fot, E. foot, Ger. Fuss, Fr. pied; PIE *pod-/*ped-) + -â- epenthetic vowel + pey, as explained. |
sukroz (#) Fr.: sucrose |
basandegi (#) Fr.: suffisance
See also: → sufficient + -cy a suffix used to form abstract nouns. |
basandé (#) Fr.: suffisant
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. sufficient, from L. sufficiens, pr.p. of sufficere “supply, suffice,” from sub “up to,” → sub-, + root of facere “to make,” → fact. Etymology (PE): Basandé “sufficient, complete, worthy,” from *basidan, from bas “many, much,” → multi-. |
pasvand (#) Fr.: suffixe |
šekar (#) Fr.: sucre
Etymology (EN): M.E. sugre, sucre, from O.Fr. sucre, from M.L. succarum, from Ar. sukkar, from Pers. shakar, from Skt. šárkarā- “ground or candied sugar,” originally “grit, gravel.” Etymology (PE): Šekar, Mid.Pers. šakar, ultimately from Skt. šárkarā-, as above. |
pišnehâdan (#), pišnehâd kardan (#) Fr.: suggérer To mention or introduce (an idea, proposition, plan, etc.) for consideration or possible action: The architect suggested that the building be restored (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): From L. suggestus, p.p. of suggerere “to bring under, bring up, Etymology (PE): From pišnehâd, from piš “before,” → pre-,
|
pišnehâd (#) Fr.: suggestion
See also: Verbal noun of → suggest. |
gugerd (#) Fr.: soufre Also sulphur, a nonmetallic chemical element; symbol S. Atomic number 16; atomic weight 32.06; melting point 112.8°C (rhombic), 119.0°C (monoclinic), about 120°C (amorphous); boiling point 444.674°C; specific gravity at 20°C, 2.07. Etymology (EN): M.E. sulphur, from L. sulpur, sulphur, sulfur “brimstone;” maybe from Skt. sulveri “eneny of copper,” as copper loses all its properties when heated with sulfur. It was known from prehistoric times. In 1809, the French chemists, Louis-Joseph Gay-Lussac and Louis-Jacques Thenard proved the elemental nature of sulfur. Etymology (PE): Gugerd, from Mid.Pers. gôgird “sulfur,” gôgirdômand “sulfurous.” |
1) bazâv; 2) bazâvidan Fr.: 1) somme; 2) sommer 1a) Math.: The number or quantity that is the result of adding
two or more numbers or quantities. 1b) A particular amount or total, especially of money. 2a) To combine into an aggregate or total (often followed by up). 2b) To ascertain the sum of, as by addition (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. summe, from O.Fr. summe, from L. summa “total number, whole, essence, gist,” noun use of feminine of summus “highest,” superlative of superus, → super-. Etymology (PE): Bazâv, from Mid.Pers. abzây-, abzudan (Mod.Pers. afzâ-, afzudan) “to increase;” Parthian abigâw- “to increase;” Sogd. β(ə)žāw “to grow, increase;” O.Pers. abiyajāv- “to increase, add to, promote,” from abi-, aiby- “in addition to; to; against” + root jav- “press forward;” Av. gu- “to increase;” Khotanese gvāna- “growth;” Skt. jav- “to press forward, impel quickly, excite,” javate “hastens”). |
bazâvakidan Fr.: résumer |
bazâvak Fr.: résumé |
tâbestân (#) Fr.: été The season that starts when the Sun, during its apparent yearly motion, attains the celestial longitude 90 degrees in the Northern Hemisphere and 270 degrees in the Southern Hemisphere. The current length of the summer season, around the epoch 2000, is 93.65 days. Etymology (EN): M.E. sumer, from O.E. sumor (cf. O.S., O.N., O.H.G. sumar,
O.Fris. sumur, M.Du. somer, Du. zomer, Ger. Sommer),
from PIE base *sem- “summer;” Etymology (PE): From Mid.Pers. tâpistân, ultimately from Proto-Iranain *tap-stā-
“hot, heat season, time, place.” The first component The second component *stā- “to stand; to set; to place;” a suffix of “place, land, country” and in rare cases “time;” examples: “Afghanistan;” region, highland;" From Mid.Pers. -stân, -istân. Examples: gôstân ( |
xoristân-e tâbestâni Fr.: solstice d'été The moment in the northern hemisphere when the → Sun attains its highest → declination of 23°26’ (or 23°.44) with respect the → equator plane. It happens when the Earth’s axis is orientated directly toward the Sun, on 21 or 22 June. During the northern solstice the Sun appears to be directly overhead at noon for places situated at → latitude 23.44 degrees north, known as the → tropic of Cancer. The summer solstice can occur at any moment during the day. Two successive summer solstices are shifted in time by about 6 h. The summer solstice in the northern hemisphere is the → winter solstice in the southern hemisphere. |
sebar-e tâbestâni Fr.: triangle d'été |
xoršid (#) Fr.: Soleil The star that governs the solar system. It is a yellow main-sequence star of spectral type G2, shines with apparent magnitude -26.74, and has an absolute magnitude of +4.83. The Sun is 4.6 billion years old and lies 27,000 light-years from the Galactic center. Etymology (EN): O.E. sunne; cf. O.N., O.S., O.H.G. sunna, M.Du. sonne, Du. zon, Ger. Sonne, Goth. sunno; cognate with Pers. xor, hur, as below. Etymology (PE): Xoršid “sun,” originally “sunlight,”
from xor “sun,” variant hur; Mid.Pers. xwar
“sun;” Av. hū-, hvar- “sun;” cf. Skt. surya-,
Gk. helios, L. sol, cognate with E. sun, as above; |
sotun-e xoršid Fr.: pilier solaire → light pillar. |
xoršid-barmaž Fr.: A comet that passes extremely close to the Sun’s → surface,
in some cases
within a few thousand kilometres of the Sun’s surface. |
sâ'at-e âftâbi (#) Fr.: cadran solaire An instrument for showing apparent solar time by the position of the shadow cast by an indicator. → gnomon. Etymology (EN): From → Sun + -dial M.E. instrument for telling time by the Sun’s shadow, presumably from M.L. dialis “daily,” from L. dies “day;” → diurnal. Etymology (PE): Sâ’at-e âftâbi, from sâ’at, → clock,
|
âftâb (#) Fr.: lumière solaire The light of the Sun. Etymology (EN): → sun; → light. Etymology (PE): Âftâb, “sun(shine);” Mid.Pers. âftâp; Proto-Iranian *abi-tap-,
from *abi- “to, upon, against” (O.Pers./Av. abiy-/aiwi- |
barâmad-e xoršid Fr.: lever du soleil The time at which the apparent upper limb of the rising Sun is on the astronomical horizon, that is when the true zenith distance, referred to the center of the Earth, of the central point of the disk is 90°50’, based on adopted values of 34’ for horizontal refraction and 16’ for the Sun semidiameter. |
forušod-e xoršid Fr.: coucher du soleil The time at which the apparent upper limb of the setting Sun is on the astronomical horizon, that is when the true zenith distance, referred to the center of the Earth, of the central point of the disk is 90°50’, based on adopted values of 34’ for horizontal refraction and 16’ for the Sun semidiameter. |
hurlak (#) Fr.: tache solaire An area seen as a dark patch on the Sun’s surface. Sunspots appear dark because
they are cooler (of about 4000 °C) than the surrounding
→ photosphere (about 6000 °C).
They range in size from a few hundred kilometers to several times the Earth’s
diameter and last from a few hours to a few months. Very small sunspots are called
→ pores. The number of sunspots |
carxe-ye hurlak Fr.: cycle des taches solaires → solar cycle. |
kamine-ye hurlak Fr.: minimum des taches Periods of time when the → relative sunspot number is low. These periods of time occur approximately every 11 years and represent the minimum in the → sunspot cycle. |
šomâr-e hurlak Fr.: nombre de taches, ~ ~ Wolf A quantity which gives the number of sunspots |
oskar-e Sunyaev-Zeldovich Fr.: effet Sunyaev-Zel'dovich The loss of energy by high-energy electrons in a → galaxy cluster, which distorts the → cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation through → inverse Compton effect. When photons from the CMB radiation travel through a hot plasma (with a temperature of around 108 K), in which bathe a galaxy cluster, they collide with energetic electrons and some of the energy of the electrons is transferred to the low energy CMB photons. If we look at the CMB radiation through such a plasma cloud, we therefore see fewer microwave photons than we would if the cloud were not there. See also: Named after Rashid Sunyaev (1943-) and Yakov Borisovich Zel’dovich (1914-1987), Russian astrophysicists; → effect. |
abar mâh Fr.: pleine lune de périgée Same as → perigee full Moon. |
abar-xuše-ye setâre-yi Fr.: super amas stellaire A group of hundreds to thousands of very young stars packed into an unbelievably small volume of a few parsecs in size. These objects represent the youngest stage of → massive star cluster evolution yet observed. The most massive and dense SSCs, with ages less than 106 years, may be proto globular clusters. SSCs are thought to dissolve within 10 million years and merge into the field star population. |
abar- (#) Fr.: super- A prefix occurring originally in loanwords from Latin, with the basic meaning “above, beyond.” Etymology (EN): L. adverb and preposition super “above, over, on the top (of), beyond, besides, in addition to,” from PIE base *uper “over,” cognate with Pers. abar-, as below. Etymology (PE): Mid.Pers. abar (Mod.Pers. bar- “on, upon, up”); O.Pers. upariy “above; over, upon, according to;” Av. upairi “above, over,” upairi.zəma- “located above the earth;” cf. Gk. hyper- “over, above;” L. super-, as above; O.H.G. ubir “over.” |
setâre-ye abar-hanjârvâr Fr.: étoile super-canonique A star whose mass exceeds the → canonical upper limit of the stellar → initial mass function (Kroupa et al. 2012, arXiv:1112.3340). |
abar-now-axtar-e gune-ye Ia-ye abar-Chandrasekhar Fr.: supernova de type Ia super-Chandrasekhar A superluminous → Type Ia supernova which is characterized by a bright → light curve peak, a slow light curve evolution during the photospheric phase, and moderately low ejecta velocities. Modeling suggests ejecta masses far in excess of the → Chandrasekhar limit of mass for non-rotating → white dwarfs and the production of about 1.5 Msun of 56Ni. This precludes the interpretation of these events as thermonuclear explosions of Chandrasekhar-mass white dwarfs. See also: → super-; → Chandrasekhar limit. |
abar-zamin Fr.: super-Terre An → extrasolar planet more massive than the Earth but less massive than 10 → Earth masses. The first discovered super-Earth orbits an M4 V star named GJ 876. Its estimated mass is 7.5±0.7 Earth masses and it has an orbital period of 1.94 days. It is close to the host star, and the surface temperature is calculated to lie between 430 and 650 K (Rivera et al. 2005, ApJ 634, 625). |
bâd-e abar-Eddingtoni Fr.: vent super-Eddington A → stellar wind accelerated by radiation pressure in the continuum from a star with a luminosity above the → Eddington limit. See also: → super-; → Eddington limit; → wind. |
setâre-ye abar-porfelez Fr.: étoile très riche en métaux A very → metal-rich star whose iron → metallicity, [Fe/H], exceeds 0.20 → dex. Examples include HD 32147, HD 121370, and HD 145675 (Feltzing & Gonzalez, 2001, A&A 367, 253). |
zine-ye damâ-ye abar-bidarrow Fr.: gradient de température super-adiabatique A condition in which there is an excess of the actual temperature gradient over the → adiabatic temperature gradient corresponding to the same pressure gradient. A region with superadiabatic temperature gradient is convectively unstable. → Hayashi forbidden zone. See also: → super-; → adiabatic; → temperature; → gradient. |
abar-tangol Fr.: superbulle |
abar-xušé Fr.: superamas
|
abar-xuše bandi Fr.: Grouping of galaxies in supercluster structure. See also: → super-; → clustering |
abar-hâzandegi Fr.: superconductivité The phenomenon in which certain materials, when cooled to a sufficiently low temperature, lose all resistance to the flow of electricity. See also: → super-; → conductivity |
abar-hâzandé Fr.: superconducteur |
abar-sardeš Fr.: surfusion The process by which a liquid or a gas is cooled below the temperature at which a → phase transition should occur. For example, water can be cooled well below the → freezing point without freezing (as often happens in the upper atmosphere). The introduction of an → impurity or surface can trigger freezing. |
abar-paržani Fr.: supercritique
|
šârre-ye abar-paržani Fr.: fluide supercritique A fluid that is at a temperature and pressure above its thermodynamic critical point. In these conditions the substance acquires unique characteristics of density and mobility. Supercritical fluids exist deep inside some planets; for example, there is supercritical water deep inside the Earth. See also: → supercritical; → fluid. |
abar-šâré Fr.: superfluide A → fluid that exhibits frictionless flow, very high heat → conductivity, and other unusual physical properties. For example, → liquid helium at the temperature about 2.17 K (→ lambda point) becomes a zero → viscosity fluid which will move rapidly through any pore in the apparatus. See also → helium II. |
abar-šâregi Fr.: superfluidité The phenomenon occurring in → liquid helium |
abarkahkašâni Fr.: supergalactique Of or pertaining to a system composed of nearby groups and clusters of galaxies in the → local Universe. Se also → galaxy cluster. |
râžmân-e hamârâhâ-ye abarkahkašâni Fr.: système des coordonnées supergalactiques A spherical → coordinate system in which the
→ equator is the → supergalactic plane.
Supergalactic longitude, SGL, is measured → counterclockwise
from direction l = 137.37 deg, b = 0 deg (between 0 and 360
deg). The zero point for supergalactic longitude is defined by the intersection of
this plane with the → Galactic plane.
In the → equatorial coordinate system See also: → supergalactic; → coordinate; → system. |
varunâ-ye abarkahkašâni Fr.: latitude supergalactique → supergalactic coordinate system. See also: → supergalactic; → latitude. |
derežnâ-ye abarkahkašâni Fr.: longitude supergalactique → supergalactic coordinate system. See also: → supergalactic; → longitude. |
hâmon-e abarkahkašâni Fr.: plan supergalactique The symmetry plane of the → Local Supercluster, where density of galaxies in our environment is the largest. The plane passes through the → Virgo cluster of galaxies, about which many of the brightest galaxies in the sky are concentrated. The supergalactic plane was recognized by Gérard de Vaucouleurs (1918-1995) in 1953 from the → Shapley-Ames catalogue. See also: → supergalactic; → plane. |
abar-qul Fr.: supergéante A star with maximum intrinsic brightness and low density. The radius of a supergiant can be as large as 1000 times that of the Sun. See also → blue supergiant; → red supergiant; → yellow supergiant. |
setâre-ye B[e]-ye abarqul Fr.: étoile B[e] supergéante A highly luminous → B[e] star with a luminosity greater than 104L_sun. A number of such objects exist in the → Magellanic Clouds, e.g. LMC R126, R66, SMC R4, and R50. A likely example in our Galaxy is MWC 300. See also: → supergiant; → B[e] star. |
yâxte-ye abar-dâne-bandi Fr.: cellule de supergranulation One of a number of large convective cells (about 15,000-30,000 km in diameter) in the solar photosphere, distributed fairly uniformly over the solar disk, that last longer than a day. See also: → super-; → granulation; → cell. |
boxâr-e abar-garmidé Fr.: vapeur surchauffée |
abar-garmeš, abar-garmâyeš Fr.: surchauffe |
girande-ye abar-heterodini (#) Fr.: récepteur superhétérodyne A radio receiver which uses the → superheterodyne technique. See also: → super-; → heterodyne; → receiver. |
tašnik-e abar-heterodin Fr.: technique superhétérodyne The technique used in a radio receiver in which the frequency
of an incoming signal is changed by adding it to a signal generated
within the receiver to produce fluctuations or beats of a frequency
equal to the difference between the two signals. See also: → superheterodyne receiver; → technique. |
abaryon Fr.: superion An ion which is responsible for the existence of a strong → P Cygni profile observed in many early O stars. Since the → effective temperature of the star is too low to produce such an ion appreciably, the ion is termed a superion. For example, the ion O5+ which is at the origin of a strong O VI λλ1031, 1038 P Cygni profile observed in many O stars. Similarly, the lines due to N V λλ1238, 1242 belong to the superion category, while in later spectral types C IV λλ1548, 1552 also falls into this category. Initial modeling of the → ultraviolet line superions assumed the → stellar winds were smooth and homogeneous. However it is now generally accepted that the winds are (→ clumped wind), and this can have a profound influence on the formation of the superion profiles. We know that the strength of lines due to the superions is strongly influenced by the → interclump medium. Indeed, the interclump medium may be more important for producing the lines than are the clumps – this is simply a consequence of the higher ionization in the interclump medium which occurs because of its lower density (see D. John Hillier, 2020, https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4434/8/3/60/htm, and references therein). |
zabarin (#) Fr.: supérieur Upper or situated higher up in rank, degree, etc. Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr., from L. superiorem (nominative superior) “higher,” comparative of superus “situated above, upper,” from super “above, over,” → super-. Etymology (PE): Zabar, from Mid.Pers. azabar “above,” related to abar (Mod.Pers. bar- “on, upon, up”); O.Pers. upariy “above; over, upon, according to;” Av. upairi “above, over,” upairi.zəma- “located above the earth;” cf. Gk. hyper- “over, above;” L. super-, as above; O.H.G. ubir “over” + -in comparative suffix. |
hamistân-e zabarin Fr.: conjonction supérieure The conjunction of a planet with the Sun which occurs when the planet is beyond the Sun. → inferior conjunction. See also: → superior; → conjunction. |
bâlest-e zabarin Fr.: culmination supérieure The meridian transit of a star between the celestial pole and the south point of the horizon. Same as → upper culmination. → inferior culmination. See also: → superior; → culmination. |
sayyâre-ye zabarin Fr.: planète supérieure |
jonbeš-e abar-nuri Fr.: mouvement superluminal Apparent proper motion exceeding the velocity of light seen toward certain astronomical objects, such as the jets of radio galaxies and quasars. However, these jets are not actually moving at speeds in excess of the speed of light: the apparent superluminal motion is a projection effect caused by objects moving near the speed of light and at a small angle to the line of sight. Etymology (EN): → super-; luminal, from → lumen; → motion. Etymology (PE): Jonbeš, → motion; abar→ super-; nur, → light. |
abartâbân Fr.: superlumineux |
abarnowaxtar-e abartâbân Fr.: supernova superlumineuse A → supernova with an → absolute magnitude of about -22 in optical. Examples of these newly discovered SNe include SN 2006gy, SN 2005ap, and SNe 2003ma. The nature of these objects is poorly known. Some of them are powered by the circumstellar interaction, or by the shock breakout from the dense circumstellar medium, as suggested by the presence of narrow emission lines in superluminous → Type II-N supernovae. It is also argued that superluminous SNe could be powered by a large amount of 56Ni which is synthesized as a result of energetic → core-collapse supernovae. Other scenarios include the interaction between shells ejected by the pulsational → pair-instability. See, e.g. Tanaka et al. 2012, MNRAS 422, 2675, arXiv:1202.3610, and references therein. See also: → superluminous; → supernova. |
abar-porjerm Fr.: supermassif Having a mass highly exceeding a certain limit. → supermassive black hole, → supermassive neutron star, → supermassive star. |
siyahcâl-e abar-porjerm Fr.: trou noir supermassif A → black hole of tremendous mass, equivalent to those of millions or even billions of stars, which is believed to exist and occupy the centers of many galaxies. The supermassive black hole residing in the center of our → Milky Way Galaxy is the object → Sgr A* with a mass of 4 x 106→ solar masses within a radius of 100 → astronomical units. See also: → supermassive; → black hole. |
setâre-ye notroni-ye abar-porjerm Fr.: étoile à neutron supermassive A → neutron star of mass above the typical value that is temporarily prevented from → collapseing into a → black hole because of its rapid → rotation. See also: → supermassive; → neutron; → star. |
setâre-ye abar-porerm Fr.: étoile supermassive A star with an initial mass over about 120 solar masses.
The existence of such stars is the present Universe is not confirmed.
Such stars were proposed as an explanation for very bright O type stars
in the Large Magellanic
Cloud, but these are now known to be clusters of ordinary O stars. See also: → supermassive; → star. |
abarmâng Fr.: super lune Same as → perigee full Moon. |
abar-bastâyé Fr.: supermultiplet |
abar-zâstâri Fr.: supernaturel |
abar-zâstâr-gerâyi, abar-zâstâr-bâvari Fr.: supernaturalisme Belief in the doctrine of supernatural or divine agency as manifested in the world, in human events, religious revelation, etc. (Dictionary.com). See also: → super-; → naturalism. |
abar-novâ, abar-now-axtar Fr.: supernova A violent stellar explosion which blows off all or most of the
star’s material at high velocity leaving a compact stellar remnant such
as a → neutron star or → black hole.
At → maximum light,
the supernova can have → luminosity
about 108 or 109 times the
→ solar luminosity. The phenomenon results from
the later evolution of stars when an instability sets in |
nâmzad-e abar-now-axtar Fr.: candidat supernova |
ešânâk-e abar-now-axtar Fr.: éjecta de supernova The material ejected by a → supernova explosion. |
kâruž-e abar-now-axtar Fr.: énergie de supernova |
oskaft-e abar-now-axtar Fr.: explosion de supernova The very short and violent phenomenon that occurs when a star undergoes → core collapse or → thermonuclear runaway. |
bâzxord-e abar-now-axtar Fr.: rétroaction des supenovae
|
abar-now-axtar-e daqalkâr Fr.: supernova imposteuse A brilliant burst of light that would suggest a → supernova explosion, but analysis of the star’s → light curve, → spectrum, and → luminosity rules it out as a genuine supernova. Energetic → outbursts of → massive stars are often labeled as “supernova impostors” (Van Dyk et al. 2000). Many of these giant eruptions are spectroscopically similar to → Type II-n supernovae and thus receive a supernova (SN) designation, but are later recognized as subluminous or their spectra and light curves do not develop like true supernovae. Consequently, they are often referred to as “supernova impostors.” These impostors or giant eruptions are examples of high → mass loss episodes apparently from evolved massive stars. Authors often refer to them as → Luminous Blue Variables (LBVs), but these giant eruptions are distinctly different from LBV/→ S Doradus variability in which the star does not increase in luminosity and the eruption or maximum light can last for several years. The mechanisms triggering these events are not yet fully understood (see, e.g., Humphreys et al., 2016, arXiv:1606.04959v1). |
xam-e nur-e abarnovâ, ~ ~ abar-now-axtar Fr.: courbe de lumière de supernova The graph of luminosity as a function of time after a → supernova explosion. The → light curve goes up rapidly to a → peak luminosity, then decays away slowly over time, with different rates, depending on the → supernova type. The temporal evolution of a supernova’s luminosity contains important information on the physical processes driving the explosion. The observed → bolometric light curves provide a measure of the total output of converted radiation of → Type Ia supernovae, and hence serve as a crucial link to theoretical models of the explosion and evolution. |
zâdâr-e abar-now-axtar Fr.: progéniteur de supernova A star which is at the origin of a supernova phenomenon. See also: → supernova; → progenitor. |
bâzmânde-ye abar-now-axt Fr.: reste de supernova The body of expanding gas ejected at a speed of about 10,000 km s-1
|
šok de abar-now-axtar, toš-e ~ Fr.: choc de supernova A → shock wave that forms when the inner → iron core (of ~ 0.5 Msun) → collapses until it reaches densities in excess of → nuclear density. At this point the pressure rises dramatically and resists further collapse. The homologous core bounces and drives out a shock wave that works its way through the remainder of the initial iron core. The small compressibility of nuclear matter halts the infall of the innermost core by an elastic collective bounce whose kinetic energy is almost immediately depleted by the → photodisintegration of heavy nuclei and the emission of → neutrinos. |
gunehâ-ye abar-now-axtar Fr.: types de supernova The classification of supernovae according to the presence or absence of the absorption lines of different chemical elements that appear in their spectra shortly after their explosion. Basically, supernovae come in two main types: those that have hydrogen (Type II, from a very massive star that blows up) and those that do not (Type I, due to thermonuclear runaways in a less massive star). Both types exhibit a wide variety of subclasses. Type Ia lacks hydrogen and presents a singly-ionized silicon (Si II) line at 6150 Å, near peak light. Type Ib has non-ionized helium (He I) line at 5876 Å, and no strong silicon absorption feature near 6150 Å. Type Ic shows weak or no helium lines and no strong silicon absorption feature near 6150 Å. Type II stars also have various subclasses. See also → Type I supernova, → Type Ia supernova, → Type Ib supernova, → Type Ic supernova, → Type II supernova, → Type II-L supernova, → Type II-n supernova, and → Type II-P supernova |
faršomâr Fr.: surnuméraire Exceeding the usual or prescribed number; extra; additional. Etymology (EN): L.L. supernumarius “excess, counted in over” (of soldiers added to a full legion), from L. super numerum “beyond the number,” → super- “beyond, over” + numerum, accusative of numerus, → number. Etymology (PE): Faršomâr, from far- intensive prefix “much, abundant; elegantly;” also “above, upon, over; forward, along,” → pro-, + šomâr, → number. |
rangin-kamân-e faršomâr Fr.: arc-en-ciel surnuméraire An additional faint arc or series of arcs just See also: → supernumerary; → rainbow. |
barhamneheš Fr.: superposition
Etymology (EN): → super- + → position. Etymology (PE): Barhamneheš, from |
parvaz-e barhamneheš Fr.: principe de superposition
See also: → superposition; → principle. |
abar-anjâleš Fr.: super-saturation The process whereby the amount of → water vapor in the air exceeds that needed to → saturate. In other words, the condition of air in which the → humidity is above the level required for saturation at a given temperature (i.e. the → relative humidity is greater than 100%). When the temperature drops below freezing, this can lead to a situation where more water vapor is present in the air than the air can hold. At every temperature, there is a maximum amount of water vapor that can be supported in the air. The higher the temperature, the more water vapor can be accommodated. But if the air that is already at 100% relative humidity is cooled then it becomes supersaturated, and this situation is unstable. As a result, the excess water vapor crystallizes out, either into water droplets or directly into ice. See also: → super-; → saturation. |
zabarneveš (#) Fr.: indice supérieur An → index (a digit or symbol)
written slightly above and to the right of a letter, such as for representing
variable components in → tensor analysis.
→ subscript. The most common mathematical superscript is
an → exponent.
Other common superscripts are the single and double prime marks Etymology (EN): → super- + script, → subscript. Etymology (PE): Zabarneveš, from zabar- “above,” → superior
|
abar-sedâyi Fr.: supersonique Describing a speed that is greater than the → sound speed in the medium concerned. See also → Mach number, → subsonic. |
abar-hamâmuni Fr.: supersymétrie A class of theories that seek to unify the four fundamental forces of nature. It proposes symmetrical relationships linking fermions and bosons (particles of half integer spin, like electrons, protons, and neutrinos) with particles of integral spin (like photons and gluons). |
kahkešân-e abarnâzok Fr.: galaxie supermince A galaxy that appears as an extraordinary thin and long figure |
abar-bâd Fr.: super-vent A galactic-scale wind driven by the collective effect of a large number of → supernovae and → winds from → massive stars occurring in the central region of a galaxy. Superwinds have been invoked, among other things, as the source by which the → intergalactic medium is provided with → enriched gas (see, e.g. Heckman et al. 1990, ApJS 74, 833). |
kahkešân-e abar-bâd Fr.: galaxie à super-vent |
1) âporé; 2) âporidan Fr.: supplément 1a) A thing added to something else in order to complete, reinforce, or extend it. 1b) A separation section added to a book, document, etc., to supply additional or later
information, or the like. 2a) To complete, add to, or extend by a supplement. 2b) To form a supplement or addition to. Etymology (EN): From L. supplementum “that which fills up, that with which anything is made full or whole, something added to supply a deficiency,” from supplere “to fill up, complete,” from → sub- “up from below” + plere “to fill;” cognate with Pers. por, as below. Etymology (PE): Âporidan, from prefix â-
|
âporandé, âpore-yi Fr.: supplémentaire Completing something or added as a supplement. See also: → supplement; → -ary. |
zâviye-ye âporandé Fr.: angle supplémentaire The angle that when added to a given angle makes 180°. → complementary angle. See also: → supplementary; → angle. |
1) pâdir; 2) pâdiridan Fr.: 1) appui, soutien, support; 2) supporter, soutenir, être pour, appuyer 1a) Something that serves as a foundation, prop, brace, or stay. 1b) The act or an instance of supporting. 2a) To bear or hold up (a load, mass, structure, part, etc.); serve as a foundation for. 2b) To uphold (a person, cause, policy, etc.) by aid, countenance, one’s vote, etc.; back (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. supporten, from M.Fr. supporter, from L. supportare “convey, carry, bring forward,” from → sub- “up from under”
Etymology (PE): Pâdir “a column supporting a building; a post supporting a wall.” |
engâštan, engâridan (#) Fr.: supposer
Etymology (EN): M.E. supposen, from O.Fr. supposer, from L. supponere “to put or
place under,” from → sub- “under” + ponere “to put, place,” Etymology (PE): Engâštan, engâridan “to suppose,” from Mid.Pers. (h)angârtan “to conside, to bear in mind, to regard as,” from han, ham “together” → com- + kartan “to establish; to declare; to found;” Av. han-kârayeiti, from han-, ham- “together,” + kar- “to remember; to impress on memory.” |
nehâvidan Fr.: supprimer
Etymology (EN): L. suppressus, p.p. of supprimere “to press down, stop, stifle,” from → sub- “down, under” + premere “to press, push against,” → express. Etymology (PE): Nehâvidan, from ne-, → ni- “down, below,” + hâvidan “to press,” → express. |
nehâveš Fr.: suppression The act of suppressing; the state of being suppressed. → Compton suppression, → zero suppression. |
farâz, bâlâ, abar- Fr.: supra- |
lâye-ye abar-Eddingtoni Fr.: couche super-eddingtonienne In some stellar models, particularly for evolved → massive stars, See also: → supra-; → Eddington limit; → layer. |
setâre-ye farâz-e šâxe-ye ofoqi Fr.: étoile au-dessus de la branche horizontale A member of a rare class of objects found in → globular clusters to lie about one magnitude above and to the blue part of the → horizontal branch. These stars are identified as post → EHB stars on their way from to the → asymptotic giant branch. See also: → supra-; → horizontal; → branch; → star. |
goriz-e farâzgarmâyi Fr.: échappement suprathermal An → atmospheric escape mechanism that occurs
where individual atoms
or molecules in the atmosphere are raised to
→ escape velocity
because of chemical reactions or ionic interactions. Same as |
abartom Fr.: suprême
Etymology (EN): M.E., from M.Fr. suprême, and directly from L. supremus “highest,” superlative of superus “situated above,” from super “above,” → super-. Etymology (PE): Abartom “highest,” from abar “high, upon,” → super-, + -tom superlative suffix, → extreme. |
bar-, abar-, ru- Fr.: sur- A prefix meaning “over, above, beyond, in addition,” occurring mainly in loanwords from Fr. Etymology (EN): From O.Fr. sour-, sor-, sur-, from L. → super-. Etymology (PE): Bar-, abar-, → super-; ru-, ruy- “face, surface; aspect; appearance,” variant rox (Mid.Pers. rôy, rôdh “face;” Av. raoδa- “growth,” in plural form “appearance,” from raod- “to grow, sprout, shoot;” cf. Skt. róha- “rising, height”). |
tenz Fr.: sûr Free from doubt as to the reliability, character, action, etc., of something (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E. sur(e), from M.Fr. sur, O.Fr. seur “safe, secure; trustworthy,” from L. securus “free from care, untroubled, safe,” from *se cura, from se “free from” + cura “care.” Etymology (PE): Tenz, from (Fine-e Bandar Abbâs) tenz “firm, fixed, solid,” variant
tereng; (Tabari) tereng, təreq “firm, fixed;”
(Baxtiyâri) teng “firm;” cf.
Baluci tranj-, dranjit, tranjit/drannj-, draht, dratk “to hang up;”
ultimately from Proto-Ir. *dra(n)j- “to fix, fasten, hold;” |
tenzâné Fr.: sûrement |
atimâri Fr.: caution, garantie, sureté
Etymology (EN): M.E. surte, from M.Fr., from O.Fr. seurte “a promise, pledge, guarantee; assurance, confidence;” from L. securitas “freedom from care or danger, safety,” from securus, → secure. |
ruyé (#) Fr.: surface |
deraxandegi-ye ruyé, ~ ruye-yi Fr.: brillance de surface The brightness of an extended object, such as a planet, nebula, galaxy, or the sky background, expressed as magnitudes per unit area (usually square arc second). Surface brightness is calculated by dividing the object’s magnitude by its size (→ isophotal radius). See also: → surface; → brightness. |
jarayân-e ruye-yi Fr.: courant de surface |
cagâli-ye ruye-yi Fr.: densité de surface |
gerâni-ye ruyé, ~ ruye-yi Fr.: gravité de surface
|
ruye-ye vâpasin parâkaneš Fr.: surface de dernière diffusion Same as → last scattering surface. See also: → surface; → last; → scattering. |
damâ-ye ruyé, ~ ruye-yi Fr.: température de surface
See also: → surface; → temperature. |
taeš-e ruye-yi Fr.: tension superficielle The inward → attraction of the → molecules at the → surface of a → liquid. The reason is that the molecules at the surface do not have other like molecules on all sides of them and consequently they cohere more strongly to those directly associated with them on the surface. Also called surface energy and capillary forces. |
boruntâz Fr.: surge Electricity: A sudden rush or burst of current or voltage. Etymology (EN): From M.Fr. sourgir “to rise, swell,” from L. surgere “to rise, spring out” from → sub- “up from below” + regere “to keep straight, guide,” cognate with Pers. râst, → right. Etymology (PE): Boruntâz, from borun “out, the outside,”
→ out, + tâz present stem of
tâxtan, tâzidan “to run; to hasten; to assault” |
baršâneš Fr.: surjection A mapping f of a set A onto a set B in such a way that every b
element of B is the image of at least one element a of A.
In other words, for any element b of B,
the equation f(a) = b yields at least one solution. |
baršâni Fr.: surjectif Of or pertaining to a → surjection. |
hamtâyeš-e baršâni Fr.: application surjective Same as → surjection. See also: → surjective; → mapping. |
1) râxé (#); 2) râxidan Fr.: 1) conjecture; 2) conjecturer, présemer
Etymology (EN): M.E. surmisen, from O.Fr. surmis “accusation,”
noun use of p.p. of surmettre Etymology (PE): Râxé, from râx (Dehxodâ) “conjecture, opinion; sorrow, sadness.” |
1, 2) bardid; 3) bardid kardan Fr.: 1, 2) relevé; 3) relever
Etymology (EN): M.E. surveien, from M.Fr. surv(e)eir, surveoir “to oversee,”
Etymology (PE): Bardid from bar- “up; upon; on; in; into; at; forth; with; near; before; according to” (Mid.Pers. abar; O.Pers. upariy “above; over, upon, according to;” Av. upairi “above, over,” upairi.zəma- “located above the earth;” cf. Gk. hyper- “over, above;” L. super-; O.H.G. ubir “over;” PIE base *uper “over”)
|
bardidgar Fr.: 1) arpenteur-géomètre
|
barziveš Fr.: survie |
barzividan Fr.: survivre To remain alive after the death of someone, the cessation of something, or the occurrence of some event; continue to live (Dictionary.com). Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. souvivre, from L. supervivere “live beyond, live longer than,” from → super- “over, beyond,” + vivere “to live,” cognate with Gk. bios, → bio-, and Pers. zistan “to live,” as below. Etymology (PE): Barzividan, from bar- “over, above,” variant of abar-, → super-, + zividan, from Mid.Pers. zivastan “to live,” zivik, zivandag “alive, living,” Mod.Pers. zistan “to live;” cf. O.Pers./Av. gay- “to live;” Av. gaya- “life,” gaeθâ- “being, world, mankind,” jivya-, jva- “aliving, alive,” Skt. jivah “alive, living;” Gk. bios “life;” L. vivus “living, alive,” vita “life;” O.E. cwic “alive;” E. quick, Lith. gyvas “living, alive;” PIE base *gweie- “to live.” |
barxodgiri Fr.: susceptibilité State or character of being susceptible. → magnetic susceptibility Etymology (EN): M.L. susceptibilitas, from susceptibilis “capable, sustainable, susceptible,” from susceptus, p.p. of suscipere “sustain, support, acknowledge,” from sub “up from under” + capere “to take” …… Etymology (PE): Barxodgiri, from bar-
“up; upon; on; in; into; at; forth; with; near; before;
according to” (Mid.Pers. abar; O.Pers.
upariy “above; over, upon, according to;” Av. upairi “above, over,”
upairi.zəma- “located above the earth;” cf. Gk. hyper- “over, above;”
L. super-; O.H.G. ubir “over;” PIE base *uper “over”) +
xod “self, own” (Mid.Pers. xwad “self; indeed;” |
1) bargâsidan; 2) bargâsâr Fr.: 1) soupçonner; 2) suspect
Etymology (EN): M.E., from M.Fr. suspecter, from O.Fr. suspect, from L. suspectus “suspected, regarded with suspicion or mistrust,” p.p. of suspicere “look up at, look upward,” from assimilated form of → sub-
Etymology (PE): Bargâsidan, from bar- “on; up; upon; in; into; at; forth; with,” → on-, + gâsidan “to look at,” → speculate; bargâsâr, from bargâs + -âr, contraction of âvar agent noun of âvardan “to bring; to cause, produce,” → format. |
bargâsidé Fr.: soupçonné Believed likely. See also: Past participle of → suspect. |
bargâseš Fr.: suspicion
Etymology (EN): M.E., from suspecioun, from O.Fr. suspicion, sospeçon “mistrust, suspicion,” from L.L. suspectionem “mistrust, suspicion, fear,” noun of state from past participle stem of L. suspicere “to look up at,” → suspect. Etymology (PE): Verbal noun from bargâsidan, → suspect. |
bargâsenâk Fr.: suspicieux
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. sospecious, from L. suspiciosus, suspitiosus “exciting suspicion, causing mistrust,” from stem of suspicere, → suspect. Etymology (PE): Bargâsnâk, from bargâs present stem of pargâsidan, → suspect, + -nâk adj. suffix. |
padârdan Fr.: soutenir, maintenir, prolonger To cause or allow something to continue for a long period of time. Etymology (EN): M.E. suste(i)nen, from O.Fr. sustenir “hold up, endure,” from L. sustinere “hold up, support, endure,” from → sub- “up from below” + tenere “to hold,” from from PIE root *ten- “to stretch,” → tension. Etymology (PE): Padârdan, from Sogd. padâr “to sustain, support,” from Proto-Ir. *pati-dar-, from *pati- “to, toward, in, at, agianst,” → ad hoc, + *dar “to hold, keep, maintain,” → property, + -dan infinitive suffix. |
padârešpaziri Fr.: durabilité An ecological concept, the property or condition of being → sustainable. See also: Quality, state noun from → sustainable. |
padârdani, padârešpazir Fr.: durable Ecology:
Maintaining ecological balance; exploiting natural resources without
destroying the ecological balance of an area, e.g.
→ sustainable agriculture; |
kešâvarzi-ye padârdani Fr.: agriculture durable The ability of a farm to produce food indefinitely, without causing severe or irreversible damage to → ecosystem health. See also: → sustainable; → agriculture. |
govâleš-e padârdani Fr.: développement durable Ecology: A development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. See also: → sustainable; → development. |
qu (#) Fr.: cygne A large, usually white bird with a long neck that lives on rivers and lakes (family Anatidae, especially genus Cygnus). Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.E. swan; cf. O.S. swan, O.N. svanr, M.Du. swane, Du. zwaan, O.H.G. swan, Ger. Schwan, probably literally “the singing bird,” from PIE base *swon-/*swen- “to sing, make sound.” Etymology (PE): Qu “swan,” maybe an onomatopoetic word from the sound of swan’s call; cf. Russ. ky-ky “cry of a swan.” |
bând-e Swan Fr.: bande de Swan One of the three prominent bands in the spectra of comets and carbon stars caused by diatomic carbon (C2). See also: Named after the Scottish physicist William Swan (1818-1894) who first studied the spectral analysis of radical carbon C2 in 1856; → band. |
miq-e qu Fr.: nébuleuse du Cygne Same as → Omega Nebula. |
qang Fr.: essaim A great number of things especially in motion. → meteorite swarm. Etymology (EN): ME; OE swearm; cf. O.S., M.L.G. swarm, Swed. svärm, M.Du. swerm, O.H.G. swarm, Ger. Schwarm “swarm;” O.N. svarmr “tumult.” Etymology (PE): Qang in Lârestâni “swarm of bees, flies, or the like,” Lori qem (qem zaye) “swarm of bees, ants, and the like.” |
šo'â'-e rubeš Fr.: rayon de balayage The → radius of a
→ supernova remnant (SNR) when, at the
end of the → free expansion phase, the mass of the swept-up RSW = (3Me / 4πρ0)(1/3), where Me is the ejected mass and ρ0 is the initial density of the → interstellar medium. Etymology (EN): Sweep, from M.E. swepen, from O.E. swapan “to sweep;” cognate with Ger. schweifen; → up; → radius. Etymology (PE): Šo’â’, → radius; rubeš, noun from ruftan, rubidan “to sweep,” → scan. |
1) degarbân; 2) degarbânidan Fr.: 1) interrupteur; 2) interrompre 1a) A shift from one to another. 1b) A device used to break or open an electric circuit or to divert
current from one conductor to another.
Etymology (EN): Switch “slender riding whip, flexible stick,” Etymology (PE): Degarbân, from degar “other, another” |
degarbâni Fr.: interrompre The act of changing one thing or position for another. Etymology (EN): Verbal noun of → switch (v.). |
šamšir (#) Fr.: épée
Etymology (EN): M.E.; O.E. sweord; cognate with Du. zwaard, Ger. Schwert, Sw. svärd. Etymology (PE): Šamšir, Mid.Pers. šamšêr / šamšyl, Parthian safsêr; cf. Gk. sampsera denoting a “foreign sword.” The E. scimitar derives ultimately from šamšir through M.Fr. cimeterre or directly from It. scimitarra, possibly from an unknown Ottoman Turkish word, borrowed from Pers. |
bâhamšomâri (#) Fr.: syllogisme A kind of → deductive reasoning
whereby from two initial → propositions
(two → premises) a third related
proposition (→ conclusion) is derived. The typical
form of a → categorical syllogism is “A is B;”
“C is A;” “Therefore, C is B.” For example, “Mortal” (B) is called the
→ major term; it occurs in the first premise and
is the → predicate of the conclusion.
“John” (C), the subject of the conclusion, is called the
→ minor term. “Human,” which is common to
both premises and is excluded from the conclusion, is called the
→ middle term.
See also → Aristotelian forms.
Syllogism is purely formal. It does not enrich knowledge, but gives a new presentation to what
is already known. It is also possible to have a logically valid syllogism based on
→ absurd premises. For example, “All cats are mammals.”
“All cats are animals.”
“Therefore, all animals are mammals.”
Syllogism, representing the earliest branch of → formal logic,
was developed in its original form by Aristotle in his Organon (Prior Analytics) about
350 BC. → bivalent logic, → polyvalent logic, → symbolic logic, → propositional logic, → first-order logic, → predicate logic, → syllogistic; → fuzzy logic. Etymology (EN): M.E. silogisme, from O.Fr. silogisme, from L. syllogismus, from Gk. syllogismos “a syllogism,” originally “inference, conclusion; computation, calculation,” from syllogizesthai “bring together before the mind, compute, conclude,” from assimilated form of → syn- “together” + logizesthai “to reason, to count,” from logos “a reckoning, reason,” → logic. Etymology (PE): Bâhamšomârik, literally “reckoning together,” from bâham “together,”
from bâ “with,” → hypo-, + ham, |
bâhamšomârik (#) Fr.: syllogistique |
hamzi Fr.: symbiotique Of or pertaining yo symbiosis in biology, denoting a close, prolonged association between two or more different organisms of different species that may be, but does not necessarily, of mutual benefit. → symbiotic star. Etymology (EN): From Mod.L., from Gk. symbiosis “a living together,” from symbioun
“live together,” from symbios “(one) living together (with another), partner,”
from → syn- “together” + bios “life,” Etymology (PE): Hamzi “living together,” from ham- “together,” → syn-,
|
setâre-ye B[e]-ye hamzi Fr.: étoile B[e] symbiotique |
setâre-ye hamzi Fr.: étoile symbiotique |
namâd (#) Fr.: symbole
Etymology (EN): M.E., from L.L. symbolum “creed, token, mark,” from Gk. symbolon “sign, mark,” from → syn- “together” + stem of ballein “to throw.” Etymology (PE): Namâd variant of namud, nemud past stem of
nemudan “to show;” Mid.Pers. nimūdan, nimây-
“to show,” from O.Pers./Av. ni- “down; into,”
→ ni- (PIE), + māy-
“to measure;” cf. Skt. mati “measures,” matra- “measure;” |
nemâdin (#) Fr.: symbolique |
guyik-e nemâdin Fr.: logique symbolique A modern development of → formal logic based on a
system of → symbols and → axiomatics |
bâzâneš-e hamâmun Fr.: relation symétrique |
tânsor-e hamâmun Fr.: tenseur symétrique |
hamâmun Fr.: symétrique |
hamâmuni Fr.: symétrie
See also: Etymology (EN): From L. symmetria, from Gk. symmetria “agreement in dimensions, due proportion, arrangement,” from symmetros “having a common measure, even, proportionate,” from → syn- “together”
Etymology (PE): Hamâmun from ham-, → syn- “together,” +
-â- epenthetic vowel + mun, variant mân “measure,” as in Pers. terms
pirâmun “perimeter,” âzmun “test, trial,” |
goruh-e hamâmuni Fr.: groupe de symétrie |
ham-, han- Fr.: syn- A prefix occurring in loanwords from Gk., having the same function as → co-; used, with the meaning “with, together,” in the formation of compound words. Variants sy-, syl-, sym-, sys-. Etymology (EN): From Gk. syn “with, together with,” of unknown origin. Etymology (PE): Ham- “together, with; same, equally, even,” Mid.Pers. ham-, like L. com-
and Gk. syn- with neither of which it is cognate. O.Pers./Av.
ham-, Skt. sam-; also O.Pers./Av. hama-
“one and the same,” Skt. sama-, Gk. homos-; |
hamgâm Fr.: synchrone A line connecting the dust grains in a comet tail that left the nucleus at the same time. → syndyne. Etymology (EN): From L. synchronus “simultaneous,” from Gk. synchronos “happening at the same time,” from → syn- “together”
Etymology (PE): Hamzamân, from ham-, → syn- “together” + zamân, → time. |
hamgâm (#) Fr.: synchrone
Etymology (EN): From L. synchronus “simultaneous,” from Gk. synchronos “happening at the same time,” from → syn- “together”
Etymology (PE): Hamgâm literally “at the same pace,” from ham-, → syn-, + gâm “step, pace,” Mid.Pers. gâm, O.Pers. gam- “to come; to go,” Av. gam- “to come; to go,” jamaiti “goes,” Mod.Pers. âmadan “to come,” Skt. gamati “goes,” Gk. bainein “to go, walk, step,” L. venire “to come,” Tocharian A käm- “to come,” O.H.G. queman “to come,” E. come; PIE root *gwem- “to go, come.” |
madâr-e hamgâm Fr.: orbite synchrone See also: → synchronous; → orbit. |
carxeš-e hamgâm (#) Fr.: rotation synchrone Of a body orbiting another, where the orbiting body See also: → synchronous; → rotation. |
sankrotron Fr.: synchrotron A type of → accelerator that accelerates charged
subatomic particles (generally protons) in a circular path. Unlike
→ cyclotrons, in which particles follow a spiral path, Etymology (EN): From synchro- a combining form representing synchronized or synchronous in compound words, from L. synchronus “simultaneous,” from Gk. synchronos “happening at the same time,” from → syn- “together”
Etymology (PE): Sankrotron, from Fr., as above. |
basâmad-e sinkrvtrvn Fr.: fréquence synchrotron The revolution frequency of a → relativistic particle
of charge q and mass m in the See also: → synchrotron; → frequency. |
tâbeš-e sankrotron Fr.: rayonnement synchrotron The electromagnetic radiation emitted by high-energy particles
that are moving in magnetic fields, as in a synchrotron particle accelerator. See also: → synchrotron; → radiation. |
hamtavân Fr.: syndyne |
hamkâruži Fr.: synergie The working together or simultaneous action of separate elements or agencies when the result is greater than the sum of the individual effects or capabilities. Etymology (EN): From Mod.L. synergia, from Gk. synergia “joint work, help,” from synergos “working together,” related to synergein “to work together, help another,” from → syn- “together” + → ergon, → work, → erg. Etymology (PE): Hamkâruži, from ham- “together,” → syn-,
|
sinestiyâ Fr.: synestia A hypothesized rapidly spinning doughnut-shaped mass of vaporized and molten rock formed from the collision of two planet-sized objects. In numerical simulations studying giant impacts of rotating objects, a synestia can form if the total → angular momentum is greater than the → co-rotational limit. Beyond the co-rotational limit, the velocity at the equator of a body would exceed the orbital velocity (Simon J. Lock nd Sarah T. Stewart, 2017, arXiv:1705.07858v1). See also: From → syn- “connected; together” + Hestia the goddess of architecture. |
hamâgami Fr.: synodique Of or pertaining to the → conjunction of two or more heavenly bodies, especially the interval between two successive conjunctions of a planet or the Moon with the Sun. Etymology (EN): From L.L. synodicus, from Gk. synodikos, from synodos “assembly, meeting,” from → syn- “together”
Etymology (PE): Hamâgam, literally “coming together,” from |
mâh-e hamâgami Fr.: mois synodique |
dowre-ye hamâgami Fr.: période synodique For planets, the mean interval of time between two successive → conjunctions with or → oppositions to the Sun. For example, → Mars has a synodic period of 779.9 days from Earth; thus Mars’ oppositions occur once roughly 2.135 years. In comparison, the synodic period of → Venus is 583.9 days. If the sideral periods of the two bodies around the third are denoted T1 and T2, their synodic period is given by: 1/Tsyn = |1/T1 - 1/T2|. |
hamcem Fr.: synonyme Grammar: A word having the same or nearly the same meaning as another in the language. Opposite of → antonym. Etymology (EN): From L. synonymum, from Gk. synonymon “word having the same sense as another,” from synonymos “having the same name as, synonymous,” from → syn- “together, same” + onyma, → name. Etymology (PE): Hamcem, from ham-, → syn-, + cem, → meaning. |
hanvin Fr.: synopsis, résumé, précis A brief and condensed summary giving the major points and a general view of a topic. Etymology (EN): L.L. synopsis “a synopsis,” from Gk. synopsis “general view,” from a stem of synoran “to see altogether, all at once,” from → syn- “together” + horan “to see, view.” Etymology (PE): Hanvin, from han- variant of ham-, → syn-
|
hanvini Fr.: synoptique In general, pertaining to or affording an overall view. See also: M.L. synopticus, from Gk. synoptikos, from |
naqše-ye hanvini Fr.: carte synoptique
|
amrâžik Fr.: syntactique |
amrâž Fr.: syntaxe
Etymology (EN): From Fr. syntaxe, from L.L. syntaxis, from Gk. syntaxis “a putting together or in order, arrangement,” from syntassein “to put in order,” from → syn- “together” + tassein “to arrange;” PIE base *tāg- “to put in order.” Etymology (PE): Amrâž, from am-, variant of ham-, → syn-,
|
handâyeš Fr.: synthèse The combining of the constituent elements of separate materials or
abstract entities into a single or unified entity; opposite of
→ analysis. Etymology (EN): From L. synthesis “collection, set,” from Gk. synthesis “composition,” from syntithenai “put together, combine,” from → syn- “together” + tithenai “to put, place,” from PIE base *dhe- “to put, to do,” cf. Pers. dâdan “to give,” as below. Etymology (PE): Handâyeš,
from han-, variant ham- “together,” → syn- +
O.Pers./Av. dā- “to give, grant, put,”
dadāiti “he gives;” Mid.Pers./Mod.Pers.
dâdan “to give, put”
|
handâyidan Fr.: synthétiser |
handâgar Fr.: synthétiseur A person or thing that synthesizes. See also: Agent noun from → synthesize. |
handâyi, handâyeši Fr.: synthétique
See also: Adj. from synthesize. |
baxš-e handâyeši Fr.: division synthétique A method of dividing a polynomial in the special case of dividing by a linear factor. Synthetic division allows one to do long division problems much quicker. It is related to the → Ruffini-Horner method. |
zabân-e handâyeši Fr.: langue synthétique A language in which the phrase meaning is determined by case endings of individual words and not by the relation between the words. Old English was a highly synthetic language. Compare with → analytic language. |
Sirtis Mâyor Fr.: Syrtis Major A dark triangular plateau near the Martian equator, located in the boundary between the northern lowlands and southern highlands of Mars. Syrtis Major is centered near at 8.4°N 69.5°E, extends some 1,500 km north from the planet’s equator, and spans 1,000 from west to east. See also: From the classical Roman name Syrtis maior “the Gulf of Sidra” on the coast of Cyrenaica (today Libya) |
râžmân Fr.: système 1a) An assemblage or combination of things or parts forming
a complex or unitary whole. 1b) An ordered and comprehensive assemblage of facts, principles, doctrines, or the like
in a particular field of knowledge or thought (Dictionary.com).
Etymology (EN): From L.L. systema “an arrangement, a whole consisting of several parts,” from
Gk. systema “arrangement, organized whole,” from sy-, variant of
syn- “together” + ste- variant stem of histanai
“to cause to stand” (from PIE base *sta- “to stand;” cf. Pers. ist, istâdan
“to stand;” Mid.Pers. êstâtan; Etymology (PE): Râžmân, from raž, from Av. rāz-
“to direct, put in line, set,”
rasman- “the lines or files of the army,” razan “rule, order”
(variants raj, râž, rak, râk, rezg (Lori), radé, râdé
“line, rule, row,” rasté, râsté “row, a market with regular ranges
of shops;” ris, risé “straight”), related to râst “right, true;
just, upright, straight;” Mid.Pers. râst “true, straight, direct,”
rây-, râyênitan “to arrange;” Sogdian rəšt “right;” |
gonârgar-e râžmân Fr.: administrateur de système |
nufe-ye râžmân Fr.: bruit de système |
râžmânmand Fr.: systématique |
irang-e râžmânmand Fr.: erreur systématique The error that is constant in a series of repetitions of the same experiment or observation. Usually, systematic error is defined as the expected value of the overall error. opposite of → random error. See also: → systematic; → error. |
râžmânmandik Fr.: systématique, taxinomie Biology: The science that deals with the systematic naming and classification of all kinds of organisms. See also: From → systematic + → -ics. |
râžmâni Fr.: systémique |
negare-ye râžmân Fr.: théorie des systèmes |
yujân Fr.: syzygie The alignment of three or more celestial bodies in the same gravitational system along a
nearly straight line. Etymology (EN): From L.L. syzygia, from Gk. syzygia “yoke, pair, union of two, conjunction,” from syzygein “to yoke together,” from → syn- “together” + zygon “yoke,” cognate with Pers. yuq, jug “yoke,” as below. Etymology (PE): Yujân from yuj “yoke,” variants
yuq, juh (Mid.Pers. jug, ayoxtan “to join, yoke;”
Av. yaog- “to yoke, put to; to join, unite;” cf. |