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单词 picosecond
释义

Definition of picosecond in English:

picosecond

(also ps)
noun ˈpiːkəʊsɛkəndˈpʌɪkəʊsɛkəndˈpēkōˌsek(ə)nd
  • One trillionth of a second.

    the first picosecond of the Big Bang
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It knows the time within 100 picoseconds or so.
    • Their values imply that a free proton will jump between adjacent loci once within a few picoseconds.
    • Well, since the "clustering" of water only lasts for a few picoseconds, making an eye-blink seem like a lifetime in comparison, the matter is moot, anyway.
    • Trajectory snapshots were saved every picosecond.
    • While vibrations of chemical bonds take less than a picosecond, reorientations of protein segments may be observed within nanoseconds, and a transient complete unfolding of the protein may eventually occur within years.
    • There are 1 trillion picoseconds in every second.
    • They plan to use a UV laser to fire a 5-joule pulse lasting less than half a picosecond.
    • These fluctuations range in timescale from picoseconds to seconds.
    • On the shortest time scale of a few picoseconds, the lipids show bond and angle fluctuations of dihedral angles within the same molecule.
    • In contrast, most current MD simulations for larger realistic systems are usually restricted to a few nanoseconds or picoseconds.
    • Ten picoseconds of constant pressure and temperature (N, P, T) allowed the system to reach the proper density.
    • A typical chemical reaction takes place on a timescale of about a picosecond.
    • Our initial attempts at simulating with explicit water were unsuccessful because the computational limits of the large model confined trajectory lengths to only several picoseconds.
    • You're frozen in that second, that nanosecond—even a picosecond, maybe.
    • The lifetime of this fluorescent state is usually found to be approximately one-half picosecond.
    • The system center of mass motion was removed at every picosecond to avoid the "cold solute / hot solvent" problem.
    • To elucidate the role of conformational entropy upon thermal unfolding in more detail, conformational dynamics in the time regime of picoseconds was investigated with neutron spectroscopy.
    • We also define a coordinate, X, by cumulating the sum of one-dimensional displacements of all water molecules in the mentioned region every picosecond.
    • For example, FPMD simulations are currently limited to a few hundred atoms for a few picoseconds.
    • If a water molecule enters or exits the defined region within a picosecond, only the portion of its displacement within the region contributes to the sum.
 
 

Definition of picosecond in US English:

picosecond

(also ps)
nounˈpēkōˌsek(ə)nd
  • One trillionth of a second.

    the first picosecond of the Big Bang
    Example sentencesExamples
    • There are 1 trillion picoseconds in every second.
    • Trajectory snapshots were saved every picosecond.
    • We also define a coordinate, X, by cumulating the sum of one-dimensional displacements of all water molecules in the mentioned region every picosecond.
    • It knows the time within 100 picoseconds or so.
    • You're frozen in that second, that nanosecond—even a picosecond, maybe.
    • If a water molecule enters or exits the defined region within a picosecond, only the portion of its displacement within the region contributes to the sum.
    • While vibrations of chemical bonds take less than a picosecond, reorientations of protein segments may be observed within nanoseconds, and a transient complete unfolding of the protein may eventually occur within years.
    • To elucidate the role of conformational entropy upon thermal unfolding in more detail, conformational dynamics in the time regime of picoseconds was investigated with neutron spectroscopy.
    • Their values imply that a free proton will jump between adjacent loci once within a few picoseconds.
    • For example, FPMD simulations are currently limited to a few hundred atoms for a few picoseconds.
    • The system center of mass motion was removed at every picosecond to avoid the "cold solute / hot solvent" problem.
    • These fluctuations range in timescale from picoseconds to seconds.
    • Ten picoseconds of constant pressure and temperature (N, P, T) allowed the system to reach the proper density.
    • They plan to use a UV laser to fire a 5-joule pulse lasting less than half a picosecond.
    • Well, since the "clustering" of water only lasts for a few picoseconds, making an eye-blink seem like a lifetime in comparison, the matter is moot, anyway.
    • The lifetime of this fluorescent state is usually found to be approximately one-half picosecond.
    • A typical chemical reaction takes place on a timescale of about a picosecond.
    • On the shortest time scale of a few picoseconds, the lipids show bond and angle fluctuations of dihedral angles within the same molecule.
    • Our initial attempts at simulating with explicit water were unsuccessful because the computational limits of the large model confined trajectory lengths to only several picoseconds.
    • In contrast, most current MD simulations for larger realistic systems are usually restricted to a few nanoseconds or picoseconds.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 14:27:28