释义 |
electromagnetisme‧lec‧tro‧mag‧ne‧tis‧m /ɪˌlektrəʊˈmæɡnətɪzəm $ -troʊ-/ noun [uncountable] - Albert Einstein spent the last 50 years of his life unsuccessfully trying to unify the theories of electromagnetism and gravity.
- In addition to the usual material, it contains useful chapters on electromagnetism and relativistic fluids and introduces the reader to tensor notation.
- In particular they made great progress in their attempts to put electromagnetism and the weak nuclear force together within the same theoretical framework.
- It was not unlikely that they were closely linked, or even identical, with the forces of gravity and of electromagnetism.
- Newtonian mechanics, wave optics and classical electromagnetism all constituted and perhaps constitute paradigms and qualify as sciences.
- The quantitative details of classical electromagnetism yield an estimated time of about 10 -8 seconds for this collapse to occur.
- They are difficult to explain within the laws of electromagnetism.
- Together these results produce the combined subject of electromagnetism.
► Electricityammeter, nounamp, nounanode, nounblow, verbcathode, nouncircuit, nouncontact, nouncurrent, noundiode, noundirect current, noundischarge, noundynamo, nounelectricity, nounelectro-, prefixelectromagnet, nounelectromagnetic, adjectiveelectromagnetism, nounflat, adjectiveflex, nounimpulse, nounincandescent, adjectiveinduction, nounJ, kilowatt, nounkW, LED, nounlight-emitting diode, nounmagnetic, adjectivemagnetic field, nounmagnetic tape, nounmagnetism, nounmagnetize, verbohm, nounoscillate, verboscillator, nounoverload, verbplasma, nounpolarity, nounpole, nounpositive, adjectivepotential, nounradio wave, nounrepel, verbrepulsion, nounresistance, nounresistor, nounsemiconductor, nounshock, nounsolid-state, adjectivestatic, nounstatic electricity, nounsubatomic, adjectivesubstation, nounsuperconductivity, nounsuperconductor, nountransmission, nountransmit, verbvoltmeter, noun technical the relationship between electricity and magnetism, and the effect that they have on each other |