释义 |
deformationde‧for‧ma‧tion /ˌdiːfɔːˈmeɪʃən $ -ɔːr-/ noun [countable, uncountable] technical - deformation of the telescope's mirror
- B is termed the left Cauchy-Green deformation tensor, both terms having obvious origins in the definitions given above.
- Ductile substances are capable of considerable smooth, continuous deformation before they break.
- Fun-house reflections: deformations and odd angles.
- Many other sports, with a greater stress on grace and timing, require much less physical or hormonal deformation.
- Other evidence supports the idea of a lack of major deformation within plates, at least over plates composed of oceanic lithosphere.
- Skull deformation is widely known later in the Iron Age where it occurred among the Alans and Huns.
- Some continental-margin orogens show evidence of deformation attributable to contraction in the back-arc region.
- Such deformation can be minimised by linking suspension cables to tensioning cables, converting them into a series of straight lengths.
a change in the usual shape of something, especially one that makes it worse, or the process of changing something’s shape |