释义 |
decoupling
de·cou·ple D0080900 (dē-kŭp′əl)tr.v. de·cou·pled, de·cou·pling, de·cou·ples 1. Electronics To reduce or eliminate the coupling of (one circuit or part to another).2. Physics To decrease or eliminate airborne shock waves from (an explosion) by having it take place underground.3. To separate or detach: "Bipeds have a potential advantage over quadrupeds in decoupling their breathing from their locomotion" (Craig Stanford). de·cou′pler n.decoupling (diːˈkʌplɪŋ) n1. (General Engineering) the separation of previously linked systems so that they may operate independently2. (Electronics) electronics the reduction or avoidance of undesired distortion or oscillations in a circuit, caused by unwanted common coupling between two or more circuitsTranslationsdecoupling
decoupling[dē′kəp·liŋ] (electricity) Preventing transfer or feedback of energy from one circuit to another. decouplingThe separating of building elements to reduce the transfer of heat, sound, or physical loads from one element to another.Decoupling A proposal stating that the peer review process for a scientific manuscript should be separated conceptually from its publication in a peer-reviewed journal, to decrease costs associated with publishing manuscripts in highly-specialized, low-volume journalsDecoupling
DecouplingA situation in which returns on two assets or asset classes that normally move together move separately. For example, oil and natural gas prices usually move together: when one goes up, so does the other, and vice versa. Likewise, stocks and corporate bonds usually behave the same way. Decoupling in both cases occurs when oil moves in one direction while natural gas moves in the opposite, or when stocks' and corporate bonds' returns diverge.ThesaurusSeedecouple |