释义 |
Definition of atom in English: atomnoun ˈatəmˈædəm 1The smallest particle of a chemical element that can exist. Atoms consist of a tiny, dense, positively charged nucleus made of neutrons and protons, surrounded by a cloud of negatively charged electrons, roughly 10⁻⁸ cm in diameter. Each chemical element consists of atoms with a characteristic number of protons. Atoms are held together in molecules by the sharing of electrons Example sentencesExamples - By the end of the century J. I. Thomson would reveal that atoms could also be divided into parts.
- In simulations it is possible to calculate atom density, mass density, and electron density profiles.
- Until now, molecules with fewer than 60 carbon atoms have only been made in the gaseous phase.
- Lam says that teleporting single atoms and molecules could be perfected within the next ten years.
- Dr Lewis said the acrosome reaction involved the channelling of charged calcium atoms, or ions.
- Water seems like the perfect energy source, packed, as it is, with two atoms of hydrogen per molecule.
- Once removed from an atom, an electron may in turn ionize other atoms or molecules.
- It reminds me of cell division in an embryo or the arrangement of atoms in a molecule.
- As early as 1991 Japanese researchers discovered that carbon atoms can form tiny tubes whose walls are just one atom thick.
- If it were a little more curved it would collapse, imploding on itself in a cosmic crunch; a little less curved, and every star, planet, sun and galaxy would fly apart from each other and so would every atom of matter in each of them.
- As can be seen, each silicon atom bonds together with four of its neighbors to form a rigid crystal structure.
- Everything is physical; the only things that exist consist of atoms in motion.
- Each radium atom is decaying into four more alpha-emitting radionuclides, creating in all 12,500 particles.
- Polychlorinated dibenzodioxin is 10 times more potent a toxin than hexachlorodibenzodioxin, even though the difference is just one chlorine atom.
- Recall also that one of the initial triumphs of quantum mechanics was to explain the stability of atoms.
- Ordinary gas is made from atoms that consist of electrons orbiting around nuclei.
- The electric field set up inside the tube excites atoms of mercury gas, making them emit ultraviolet light.
- They have six atoms of carbon in each molecule and are therefore called hexoses.
- This is caused by the movement of an atom or group of atoms from one position to another.
- Radioactive atoms decay into stable atoms by a simple mathematical process.
- The world of atoms and photons does not follow the rules of classical physics.
- Until now it has been impossible for scientists to detect every atom in the structure of protein molecules, which play a vital role in the body.
- Since all the variety we see around us is just a product of different arrangements of a few types of atom, nanotech has been hyped as a potentially limitless miracle technology.
- At the time, it was believed that electrons colliding with atoms always lost energy.
- Bacteria that can break down chlorinated compounds have been known for years, but none that could remove the last chlorine atom to complete the detoxification.
- These are electrically charged atoms of magnesium that form part of the gas surrounding a black hole.
- Its atoms have a nucleus of two protons and two neutrons, orbited by two electrons.
Synonyms particle, molecule, bit, little bit, tiny bit, tiny piece, fragment, fraction, grain, granule, crumb, morsel, mite, mote, speck, spot, dot - 1.1usually the atom Atomic particles as a source of nuclear energy.
Example sentencesExamples - The towering mushroom cloud is usually regarded as a symbol of the Nuclear Age, but in fact this phenomenon was first witnessed eighty-five years ago, before the power of the atom was recognised or released.
- ‘Today we're just going to learn about atom splitting,’ she started off.
- Over the centuries, people have turned to steam, to coal, to oil, even to the atom for their energy.
- In 1900 nobody could have anticipated 80% of France's electrical power would come from a source not known at that time: the atom.
- After all, they had lived at the end of fifty years of fantastic technological advancement, with powered flight becoming common, the power of the atom having been harnessed and computers having been created.
- Bohr and Heisenberg are among the first to realize that in splitting the atom mankind has acquired the power to destroy itself.
- It all started with the discovery of the atom, and how splitting it could release vast amounts of energy.
- Written as a memoir, the book provides his unparalleled insight into the use and abuse of the power of the atom.
- One day soon, man is going to be able to harness incredible energies, maybe even the atom, energies that could ultimately hurl us to other worlds in some sort of spaceship.
- They showed us how to split the atom and harness nuclear fuel so that we might finally meet them as equals.
- Heisenberg is already very famous as a scientist, and when the war starts, he will work for the Nazis trying to split the atom and develop an atomic bomb.
- When the atom's potential was realized, physicists and nuclear engineers became a kind of protected species.
- Rutherford knew that alpha particles, which readily pierced the atom's cloud of electrons, didn't have enough energy to penetrate and pry apart the nucleus.
- It's 60 years ago tomorrow since the world became aware of the awesome destructive power of the atom.
- Will they turn the awesome power of the atom upon themselves as we have done?
- America rose up and rebelled, and then expanded in power until it tipped the balance during World War One and harnessed the power of the atom to win World War Two.
- 1.2usually with negative An extremely small amount of something.
I shall not have one atom of strength left Example sentencesExamples - Immaculata, 19 years old and high-strung, appears at my bedroom door, hands on hips and nostrils flaring, every atom of her quivering with melodrama.
- It is the height of hypocrisy for him to complain that Darwinism lacks causal specificity when his own theory lacks any specificity, including one atom of historical concreteness.
- Every particle, every atom of me is alive in some way I cannot explain.
- It is still a spillage and by the terms of the sign even the spillage of one atom's worth of petrol should be reported.
- He was their property, heart and soul, body and blood; what they did claimed every atom of him, sleeping and waking; it colored life and dictated the terms of death.
- I will not fail to bring to your notice that this transaction is hitch free and that you should not entertain any atom of fear as all required arrangements have been made for the transfer.
- But they know me, every atom of my body, every hair on my head, and they pull me, each one of them, like a multitude of collapsed stars pulling all surrounding light into them forever.
- Burning determination gripped every atom of his being.
- Instead I just stood and stared at the sign and remembered their halcyon days when I loved them with every atom of my being.
- Was this, as I suspected in every atom of my being, a cooked sausage that just wasn't properly cooked?
- She says that the Supreme One is present in every atom of this world.
- Staring at the endless universe, looking at the twinkling stars and pondering the infinitesimally tiny atom of matter or the gene that makes us up, helps to put issues of religion in true perspective.
- Every atom of me still wants to hold on to those childish beliefs that sometime in the future it will all be different.
- Leibniz, meanwhile, believed every atom in the universe to have a soul, the universe being a projection through them of God's will, like a cosmic hologram.
- I feel with every atom of my body that it's untrue and wrong.
- You wonder how she doesn't deflate like a ruptured balloon at the end of every song; she seems to throw every atom inside her into each note.
Synonyms particle, molecule, bit, little bit, tiny bit, tiny piece, fragment, fraction, grain, granule, crumb, morsel, mite, mote, speck, spot, dot
2Canadian usually as modifier A level of amateur sport, typically involving children aged between nine and eleven. Example sentencesExamples - After having fielded a bantam team for several years, the Storm is now putting together an atom program open to players aged nine and 10.
- His hour-long presentation in the curling lounge at the Omniplex proved helpful to many people attending including Chad Anker, an atom level coach from Calgary.
- The local Foothills Elite North 93 team won the major atom title, beating the Red Deer Rustlers 5-2.
Origin Late 15th century: from Old French atome, via Latin from Greek atomos 'indivisible', based on a- 'not' + temnein 'to cut'. Long before scientists were able to prove the existence of atoms, ancient Greek philosophers believed that matter was made up of tiny particles that could not be broken down into anything smaller. The word the Greeks used for this hypothetical particle was atomos ‘indivisible, that cannot be cut up’. By way of Latin atomus, this came into English in the 15th century as atom. The word was used in the early 19th century by the British chemist John Dalton (1766–1844) when he gathered evidence for the existence of these building blocks of matter. A century later the physicist Ernest Rutherford (1871–1937) disproved the theory that the atom could not be divided when he split the atom for the first time in 1919. The term atom bomb was first recorded in The Times on 7 August 1945, the day after the Hiroshima blast. Japan surrendered on 15 August, the date when the Bomb first appeared in a headline in The Times as ‘Victory and the Bomb’. But the English novelist H. G. Wells (1866–1946) was writing about an atomic bomb as early as 1914.
Definition of atom in US English: atomnounˈadəmˈædəm 1The basic unit of a chemical element. An atom, roughly 10⁸ cm in diameter, consists of a tiny, dense, positively charged nucleus made of neutrons and protons, surrounded by a cloud of negatively charged electrons. Each chemical element consists of atoms that possess a characteristic number of protons. Atoms are held together in molecules by sharing electrons Example sentencesExamples - They have six atoms of carbon in each molecule and are therefore called hexoses.
- If it were a little more curved it would collapse, imploding on itself in a cosmic crunch; a little less curved, and every star, planet, sun and galaxy would fly apart from each other and so would every atom of matter in each of them.
- Until now, molecules with fewer than 60 carbon atoms have only been made in the gaseous phase.
- By the end of the century J. I. Thomson would reveal that atoms could also be divided into parts.
- As early as 1991 Japanese researchers discovered that carbon atoms can form tiny tubes whose walls are just one atom thick.
- The electric field set up inside the tube excites atoms of mercury gas, making them emit ultraviolet light.
- Each radium atom is decaying into four more alpha-emitting radionuclides, creating in all 12,500 particles.
- Radioactive atoms decay into stable atoms by a simple mathematical process.
- Water seems like the perfect energy source, packed, as it is, with two atoms of hydrogen per molecule.
- These are electrically charged atoms of magnesium that form part of the gas surrounding a black hole.
- This is caused by the movement of an atom or group of atoms from one position to another.
- Its atoms have a nucleus of two protons and two neutrons, orbited by two electrons.
- Recall also that one of the initial triumphs of quantum mechanics was to explain the stability of atoms.
- Ordinary gas is made from atoms that consist of electrons orbiting around nuclei.
- The world of atoms and photons does not follow the rules of classical physics.
- In simulations it is possible to calculate atom density, mass density, and electron density profiles.
- It reminds me of cell division in an embryo or the arrangement of atoms in a molecule.
- Until now it has been impossible for scientists to detect every atom in the structure of protein molecules, which play a vital role in the body.
- Dr Lewis said the acrosome reaction involved the channelling of charged calcium atoms, or ions.
- Everything is physical; the only things that exist consist of atoms in motion.
- At the time, it was believed that electrons colliding with atoms always lost energy.
- Lam says that teleporting single atoms and molecules could be perfected within the next ten years.
- Once removed from an atom, an electron may in turn ionize other atoms or molecules.
- Since all the variety we see around us is just a product of different arrangements of a few types of atom, nanotech has been hyped as a potentially limitless miracle technology.
- Bacteria that can break down chlorinated compounds have been known for years, but none that could remove the last chlorine atom to complete the detoxification.
- As can be seen, each silicon atom bonds together with four of its neighbors to form a rigid crystal structure.
- Polychlorinated dibenzodioxin is 10 times more potent a toxin than hexachlorodibenzodioxin, even though the difference is just one chlorine atom.
Synonyms particle, molecule, bit, little bit, tiny bit, tiny piece, fragment, fraction, grain, granule, crumb, morsel, mite, mote, speck, spot, dot - 1.1 Atoms as a source of nuclear energy.
Example sentencesExamples - Over the centuries, people have turned to steam, to coal, to oil, even to the atom for their energy.
- In 1900 nobody could have anticipated 80% of France's electrical power would come from a source not known at that time: the atom.
- They showed us how to split the atom and harness nuclear fuel so that we might finally meet them as equals.
- It's 60 years ago tomorrow since the world became aware of the awesome destructive power of the atom.
- ‘Today we're just going to learn about atom splitting,’ she started off.
- The towering mushroom cloud is usually regarded as a symbol of the Nuclear Age, but in fact this phenomenon was first witnessed eighty-five years ago, before the power of the atom was recognised or released.
- Bohr and Heisenberg are among the first to realize that in splitting the atom mankind has acquired the power to destroy itself.
- Rutherford knew that alpha particles, which readily pierced the atom's cloud of electrons, didn't have enough energy to penetrate and pry apart the nucleus.
- It all started with the discovery of the atom, and how splitting it could release vast amounts of energy.
- After all, they had lived at the end of fifty years of fantastic technological advancement, with powered flight becoming common, the power of the atom having been harnessed and computers having been created.
- One day soon, man is going to be able to harness incredible energies, maybe even the atom, energies that could ultimately hurl us to other worlds in some sort of spaceship.
- When the atom's potential was realized, physicists and nuclear engineers became a kind of protected species.
- America rose up and rebelled, and then expanded in power until it tipped the balance during World War One and harnessed the power of the atom to win World War Two.
- Heisenberg is already very famous as a scientist, and when the war starts, he will work for the Nazis trying to split the atom and develop an atomic bomb.
- Written as a memoir, the book provides his unparalleled insight into the use and abuse of the power of the atom.
- Will they turn the awesome power of the atom upon themselves as we have done?
- 1.2usually with negative An extremely small amount of a thing or quality.
I shall not have one atom of strength left Example sentencesExamples - Every particle, every atom of me is alive in some way I cannot explain.
- Every atom of me still wants to hold on to those childish beliefs that sometime in the future it will all be different.
- Immaculata, 19 years old and high-strung, appears at my bedroom door, hands on hips and nostrils flaring, every atom of her quivering with melodrama.
- It is still a spillage and by the terms of the sign even the spillage of one atom's worth of petrol should be reported.
- Was this, as I suspected in every atom of my being, a cooked sausage that just wasn't properly cooked?
- Leibniz, meanwhile, believed every atom in the universe to have a soul, the universe being a projection through them of God's will, like a cosmic hologram.
- Instead I just stood and stared at the sign and remembered their halcyon days when I loved them with every atom of my being.
- Burning determination gripped every atom of his being.
- It is the height of hypocrisy for him to complain that Darwinism lacks causal specificity when his own theory lacks any specificity, including one atom of historical concreteness.
- She says that the Supreme One is present in every atom of this world.
- Staring at the endless universe, looking at the twinkling stars and pondering the infinitesimally tiny atom of matter or the gene that makes us up, helps to put issues of religion in true perspective.
- I will not fail to bring to your notice that this transaction is hitch free and that you should not entertain any atom of fear as all required arrangements have been made for the transfer.
- But they know me, every atom of my body, every hair on my head, and they pull me, each one of them, like a multitude of collapsed stars pulling all surrounding light into them forever.
- He was their property, heart and soul, body and blood; what they did claimed every atom of him, sleeping and waking; it colored life and dictated the terms of death.
- I feel with every atom of my body that it's untrue and wrong.
- You wonder how she doesn't deflate like a ruptured balloon at the end of every song; she seems to throw every atom inside her into each note.
Synonyms particle, molecule, bit, little bit, tiny bit, tiny piece, fragment, fraction, grain, granule, crumb, morsel, mite, mote, speck, spot, dot
Origin Late 15th century: from Old French atome, via Latin from Greek atomos ‘indivisible’, based on a- ‘not’ + temnein ‘to cut’. |