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data bank bânk-e dâdehâ, dâdé bânk (#) Fr.: banque de données A set of data related to a given subject and organized in such a way that it can be consulted by users. → data; bank, from M.Fr. banque, from O.It. banca "table," because of "the moneylender's exchange table," from P.Gmc. *bankiz (O.H.G. bank "bench"). Bânk, from Fr. banque, see above; dâdehâ, plural of dâdé→ datum. |
data mining kânkâvi-ye dâde-hâ, dâdé kâvi Fr.: exploration de données The process of digging through large quantities of raw data stored in → databases to uncover new characteristics, patterns, and correlations using various automatic or semi-automatic statistical/mathematical means. → data; mining, from mine, M.E., from O.Fr. mine, probably from a Celtic source. Kânkâvi, literally "digging mine," from kân "mine," related to kandan "to dig" (Mid.Pers. kan, qn; O.Pers. ka(n) "to dig;" Av. kan- "to dig;" cf. Skt. khan- "to dig") + kâvi from kâvidan/kâftan "to split; to dig" (Mid.Pers. kandan "to dig;" cf. Gk. skaptein "to dig;" L. scabere "to scratch, rub"). |
data model model-e dâde-hâ Fr.: modèle de données An abstract entity that describes the structure of → database by including the formal description of the information system used in the database. |
data number (DN) šomâr-e dâdehâ Fr.: Unit of the analog-to-digital conversion system of a CCD apparatus. For example a 16 bit system may use a maximum of 65536 DN. The acronym ADU, for analog-to-digital unit, is also used. |
data processing dâdé âmâyi (#) Fr.: traitement de données Systematic operations on data, such as handling, merging, sorting, and computing. → data; → processing. |
data processor dâdé âmâ (#) Fr.: processeur de donées A machine for handling data in → data processing. |
data reduction bâzhâzeš-e dâdehâ Fr.: réduction de données The process of converting crude observational data into usable information for scientific interpretation, by correcting, rearranging, ordering, and simplifying. |
data structure sâxtâr-e dâdehâ Fr.: structure de données A → method or → format for organizing and storing data. Any data structure is designed to organize data to suit a specific purpose so that it can be accessed and worked with in appropriate ways. In computer programming, a data structure may be selected or designed to store data for the purpose of working on it with various algorithms. |
database pâygâh-e dâdehâ (#) Fr.: base de données A combined and coordinated set of data that supplies information for a specific purpose in a variety of forms. |
date gâhdâd Fr.: date A particular day, month, and year at which some event happened or will happen. Date, from O.Fr. date, from M.L. data, from datus "given," p.p. of dare "to give, grant, offer," from PIE base *do- "to give" (cf. Pers. dâdan "to give," as below). The Roman convention of closing a document by writing "given" and the day and month (meaning "given to messenger") led to data becoming a term for "the time stated." Gâhdâd, from gâh "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") + dâd "given," as in Latin;
p.p. of dâdan "to give"
(Mid.Pers. dâdan "to give," O.Pers./Av. dā-
"to give, grant, yield," Av. dadāiti "he gives,"
Skt. dadáti "he gives," Gk. didomi
"I give;" akin to L. data, as above); cf. Mid.Pers., Mod.Pers. dâd
"year, age, period of life," Lori, Laki dâ(d) "age," homdâ
"of equal age." |
dating senn yâbi (#) Fr.: datation Use of appropriate techniques to estimate the age of geological specimens or astronomical objects such as meteorites. Verbal noun of date, from O.Fr. date, from M.L. → data. Sen yâbi, from Ar. sen "age" + yâbi verbal noun of yâftan, yâbidan "to find, discover; to obtain, acquire," Mid.Pers. ayâftan, ayâpênitan "to reach, attain," Manichean Mid.Pers. 'y'b "to attain," Parthian, Sogdian (+ *pati-) pty'b "to reach, obtain," Av. ap- "to reach, overtake," apayeiti "achieved, reached," Skt. âp- "to reach, gain," âpnoti "reaches, gains," Gk. hapto, haptomai "to touch, cling to, adhere to," L. apiscor "touch, reach;" PIE base *ap- "to take, reach." |
dative case kâte-ye barâyi Fr.: cas datif The form of a word (in Latin and other inflected languages) indicating the noun or pronoun for which an action happens or a quality exists. In English loosely used for → indirect object (for example, him in Give him the book). From L. casus dativus ("case for giving"), a translation of Gk. dotike ptosis ("inflection for giving"), from dativus "pertaining to giving," from datus "given" (from PIE root *do- "to give"), → datum; → case. Kâte, → case; barâyi, adj. of barâye, "→ because of," "→ for." |
datum 1) dâdé (#); 2) dâdebon; 3) farâzbon Fr.: donnée 1) A single piece of information, as a fact, statistic, or code. L. datum "given," neuter p.p. of dare "to give, offer," cf. Av. and O.Pers. dā- "to give, grant, yield," Av. dadāiti "he gives," Skt. dadáti "he gives," Gk. didomi "I give," PIE base *do- "to give." Dâdé "given," p.p. of dâdan "to give,"
Mid.Pers. dâdan "to give," O.Pers./Av. dā- "to give, grant,
yield," akin to L. data, as above. |
daughter doxtar (#) Fr.: noyau fils A term used in → nuclear physics to denote a → nuclide produced by the → radioactive decay of a → parent nuclide. From M.E. doughter, O.E. dohtor, from P.Gmc. *dochter (Ger. Tochter), from PIE *dhug(h)əter-; cf. Av. dugədar-, duγdar-, Mod.Pers. doxtar, Skt. duhitár-, Gk. thygater, Arm. dowstr, Lith. dukte. Doxtar, from Mid.Pers. duxtar, duxt, O.Pers. *duxçi-, Av. dugədar-, duγdar-, cognate with daughter, as above. |
daughter product doxtar (#) Fr.: noyau fils In → nuclear physics, same as → daughter. |
Davisson-Germer experiment âzmâyeš-e Davisson-Germer Fr.: expérience de Davisson-Germer The experiment carried out in 1927 that confirmed the → de Broglie hypothesis as to the → wave nature of the → electron. It showed that electrons scattering off crystals form a → diffraction pattern. The experimental setup consisted of a → nickle chloride → crystal as → target, an electron gun, and a → detector placed on a graduated circular scale. The intensity of the reflected electrons was measured as a function of angle and electron energy. The observations showed a strong intensity peak at a certain angle. The nickel crystal acted as a → diffraction grating. → Constructive interference occurred at a particular angle, where the peak intensity was observed in accord with → Bragg's law. Interestingly, the intent of the initial experiment was was not to confirm the de Broglie hypothesis. In fact, the discovery was made by accident. Carried out by American physicists Clinton Davisson (1881-1958) and Lester Germer (1896-1971); → experiment. |
dawn pegâh (#), sepidedam (#), bâmdâd (#) Fr.: aube, point du jour, aurore The first daylight in the sky before sunrise, equivalent to morning astronomical → twilight; opposed to → dusk. M.E. dawen (v.), from O.E. dagung, from dagian "to become day," from root of dæg→ day. Pegâh, from Mid.Pers. pa gâh, literally "soon; near the time (of sunrise),"
from pa "to; for; in; on; with;
by; according to," O.Pers. upā,
Av. upa "toward, with, on, in, in the time of"
(cf. Skt. úpa "toward, together with, under, near to, on,"
Gk. hypo "under, below," L. sub "under," Ger. auf, E. up;
PIE *upo "under, up from under, over") + gâh "time,"
O.Pers. gāθu-, Av. gātav-, gātu- "place, throne,
spot" (Skt. gátu- "going, motion; free space for moving; place of abode,"
PIE *gwem- "to go, come"). |
Dawn spacecraft fazânâv-e Dawn Fr.: sonde spatiale Dawn NASA's mission to explore the two largest objects in the → asteroid belt, the asteroid Vesta and the → dawarf planet Ceres, gathering data relating to their composition, internal structure, density and shape. Launched in September 2007, Dawn entered the orbit of → Vesta in July 2011 and spent 16 months there before leaving for → Ceres. It entered Ceres orbit on March 6, 2015. The Dawn spacecraft is made of aluminium and graphite composite, it has a dry mass of 747.1 kg and a mass of 1217.7 kg when fully fuelled prior to launch. The spacecraft is a box-shaped design measuring 1.64m × 1.27m × 1.77m. Dawn ran out of fuel on Nov. 1, 2018, but the spacecraft will continue to orbit Ceres for several decades. → dawn; → spacecraft. |
day ruz (#) Fr.: jour The length of time it takes Earth (or a planet) to rotate once on its axis relative to some external reference. The day is measured in several ways, depending on this reference, → sidereal day; → solar day; → mean solar day. M.E., from O.E. dæg (cf. Ger. Tag, Swedish and Danish dag "day"), from PIE base *dhegh- "to burn." Not related to L. dies "day" (from *dyeu- "to shine," → diurnal), but rather to Av. dag- "to burn," dažaiti "burns," Mod.Pers. dâq "hot," Skt. dah- "to burn," dáhati, Gk. tephra "ash," L. fovere "to boil," Albanian djeg "to burn," Russ. žeč' "to burn," Lith. dagas "hot season," degti "to burn," O.Prus. dagis "summer." Ruz "day," from Mid.Pers. rôc, O.Pers. raucah-, Av. raocah- "light, luminous; daylight," Skt. roka- "brightness, light," cognate with Gk. leukos "white, clear," L. lux "light" (also lumen, luna), PIE base *leuk- "light, brightness". The Persian words rowšan "bright, clear," foruq "light," and afruxtan "to light, kindle" also belong to this family, as well as the E. light, Ger. Licht, and Fr. lumière. |
daylight meteor šahâb-e ruz Fr.: météore de jour A → meteor detected using → radar techniques during daylight or when skies are cloudy. |
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