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continental drift delek-e qârehâ Fr.: dérive de continents A hypothesis proposed by Alfred Wegener (1912) suggesting that the → continents are not stationary, but drift through time. Wegener's hypothesis has since been developed and included in a new theory called → plate tectonics. → continental; → drift. |
cosmological redshift sorxkib-e keyhânšenâsik, ~ keyhânšenâxti Fr.: décalage vers le rouge cosmologique, redshift ~ The → redshift of a remote object (galaxy, quasar, supenova) due to the expansion of the Universe. → cosmological; → redshift. |
cross identification idâneš-e calipâyi Fr.: identification croisée The identification of an object in a data base or catalog and matching it with the same object identified in another catalog. → cross; → identification. |
defuzzification vâporzvâreš Fr.: défuzzification, concrétisation The process of producing a quantifiable result in a → fuzzy logic system, given → fuzzy sets and corresponding → membership functions. Defuzzification is the last step in a fuzzy logic system. After → fuzzy inferencing, the overall result is a → fuzzy value. This result should be defuzzified to obtain a final → crisp value. |
defuzzify vâpozvâridan Fr.: défuzzifier To transform a → fuzzy set to a → crisp set in a → fuzzy logic system. |
demystify vâšârdidan Fr.: démystifier To rid of mystery or obscurity; clarify. The removal of mystery or confusion surrounding a topic or idea. |
differ degarsân budan (#) Fr.: différer, être différent To be unlike, dissimilar, or distinct in nature or qualities. From O.Fr. différer, from L. differre "to set apart, differ," from → dis- "away from" + ferre "to carry, bear" (cf. Av. baraiti "carries," O.Pers. barantiy "they carry," Mod.Pers. barad "carries," Skt. bharati "carries," Arm. berem "I carry," Gk. pherein "to carry," O.E., O.H.G. beran, Rus. brat' "to take," bremya "a burden"). Degarsân "different," from degar "another, other" (Mid.Pers. dit, ditikar "the other, the second," O.Pers. duvitiya- "second," Av. daibitya-, bitya- "second," Skt. dvitiya- "second," PIE *duitiio- "second") + sân "manner, semblance" (variant sun, Mid.Pers. sân "manner, kind," Sogdian šôné "career") + budan "to be" (Mid.Pers. budan, from O.Pers./Av. bav- "to be; become, take place," Av. buta- perf. ptcpl. pass., bavaiti "becomes," Skt. bhavati "becomes, happens," bhavah "becoming; condition, state," PIE *bheu- "to be, come into being, become;" cf. Gk. phu- "become," phuein "to bring forth, make grow," L. fui "I was" (perf. tense of esse), futurus "that is to be, future," Ger. present first and second person sing. bin, bist, E. to be, O.Ir. bi'u "I am," Lith. bu'ti "to be," Rus. byt' "to be"). |
difference degarsâni (#) Fr.: différence The quality or condition of being different. Noun form of → differ. |
different degarsân (#) Fr.: différent Not alike in character or quality; differing; dissimilar. Adj. of → difference. |
differentiability degarsânipaziri Fr.: différentiabilité Of a mathematical function, the quality of being → differentiable. Noun from → differentiable. |
differentiable degarsânipazir, degarsânidani Fr.: différentiable Capable of being → differentiated. → differentiable function. From → differentiate + → -able. |
differentiable function karyâ-ye degarsânipazir, ~ degarsânidani Fr.: différentiable Property of a mathematical function if it has a → derivative at a given point. From → differentiable; → function. |
differential 1) degarsâné; 2) degarsâneyi Fr.: différentiel 1) Noun. From M.L. differentialis, from differenti(a), → difference, + → -al. Degarsâné, from degarsân, → different + noun suffix -é. |
differential and integral calculus afmârik-e degarsâne-yi va dorostâli Fr.: calcul différentiel et intégral The two branches of mathematics that make up the → calculus. → differential calculus; → integral calculus. → differential; → integral; → calculus. |
differential calculus afmârik-e degarsâneyi, ~ degarsânehâ Fr.: calcul différentiel A branch of calculus which is concerned with the instantaneous rate of change of quantities with respect to other quantities, or more precisely, the local behavior of functions. → integral calculus. → differential; → calculus. |
differential equation hamugeš-e degarsâneyi Fr.: équation différentielle An equation expressing a relationship between an → independent variable, x, an unknown → function, y = f(x), and its → derivatives. The general form of a differential equation is: F(x, y, y', y'', ..., y(n)) = 0, or F(x,y, dy/dx, d2y/dx2, ..., dny/dxn) = 0. See also: → ordinary differential equation; → partial differential equation; → linear differential equation; → exact differential equation; → first-order differential equation; → homogeneous linear differential equation; → nonhomogeneous linear differential equation; → differential equation with separated variables; → differential equation with separable variables. → differential; → equation. |
differential equation with separable variables hamugeš-e degarsâne-yi bâ vartandehhâ-ye jodâyi-pazir Fr.: équation différentielle à variables séparables A → differential equation of the form: M1(x) N1(y) dx + M2(x) N2(y) dy = 0, which can be reduced to a → differential equation with separated variables. → differential; → equation; → separate; → variable. |
differential equation with separated variables hamugeš-e degarsâne-yi bâ vartandehhâ-ye jodâ Fr.: équation différentielle à variables séparées A → differentail equation that can be transformed into the form: M(x)dx + N(x)dy = 0. → differential; → equation; → separate; → variable. |
differential geometry hendese-ye degarsâneyi Fr.: géométrie différentielle The study of curved spaces using differential calculus. → differential; → geometry. |
differential image motion monitor (DIMM) pahregar-e jonbeš-e degarsâneyi-ye vine, ~ ~ ~ tasvir Fr.: moniteur de mouvements d'images différentiels,
moniteur seeing A device that is commonly used to measure the → seeing at optical astronomical sites. The DIMM delivers an estimate of the → Fried parameter based on measuring the variance of the differential image motion in two small apertures, usually cut out in a single larger telescope pupil by a mask. The DIMM concept was introduced by Stock & Keller (1960, in Stars and Stellar Systems, Vol. 1, ed. G. P. Kuiper & B. M. Middlehurst, p. 138), whereas its modern implementation was first described by Sarazin & Roddier (1990, A&A 227, 294). → differential; → image; → motion; → monitor. |
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