- hysteresis effects
- явления гистерезиса
Авиасловарь. М.А.Левин. 2004.
Авиасловарь. М.А.Левин. 2004.
Hysteresis — Not to be confused with Hysteria. Fig. 1. Electric displacement field D of a ferroelectric material as the electric field E is first decreased, then increased. The curves form a hysteresis loop. Hysteresis is the dependence of a system not… … Wikipedia
hysteresis — Used to characterize a lagging effect. firms may fail to enter markets that appear attractive, or firms that are once invested in a market may persist in operating at a loss. The effect is characteristic of investments with high entry and exit… … Financial and business terms
hysteresis — by David B. Clarke Although it is most frequently as sociated with physical systems, Baudrillard has characterised contemporary society in terms of hysteresis the process whereby something continues to develop by inertia (A, 115). Coined by… … The Baudrillard dictionary
Hysteresis — From the Greek term meaning a coming short, a deficiency. Hysteresis, a term coined by Sir James Alfred Ewing, a Scottish physicist and engineer (1855 1935), refers to systems, organisms and fields that have memory. In other words, the… … Investment dictionary
Chaotic hysteresis — A nonlinear dynamical system exhibits chaotic hysteresis if it simultaneously exhibits chaotic dynamics (chaos theory) and hysteresis. As the latter involves the persistence of a state, such as magnetization, after the causal or exogenous force… … Wikipedia
Single-molecule magnet — Single molecule magnets or SMMs are a class of metalorganic compounds, that show superparamagnetic behavior below a certain blocking temperature at the molecular scale. In this temperature range, SMMs exhibit magnetic hysteresis of purely… … Wikipedia
Ewing , Sir James Alfred — (1855–1935) British physicist The son of a minister of the Free Church of Scotland, Ewing was educated at the University of Edinburgh where he studied engineering. He served as professor of engineering at the Imperial University, Tokyo, from 1878 … Scientists
FENE-P — is a continuous model of polymer. The name FENE stands for finitely extensible nonlinear elastic while P stands for the closure proposed by Peterlin. It takes the dumbbell version of the FENE model and assumed the Peterline statistical closure… … Wikipedia
Явлинский, Григорий Алексеевич — Григорий Алексеевич Явлинский … Википедия
Явлинский — Явлинский, Григорий Алексеевич Григорий Алексеевич Явлинский Заместите … Википедия
magnetism — /mag ni tiz euhm/, n. 1. the properties of attraction possessed by magnets; the molecular properties common to magnets. 2. the agency producing magnetic phenomena. 3. the science dealing with magnetic phenomena. 4. strong attractive power or… … Universalium