stagnation temperature - ορισμός. Τι είναι το stagnation temperature
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Τι (ποιος) είναι stagnation temperature - ορισμός


Stagnation temperature         
In thermodynamics and fluid mechanics, stagnation temperature is the temperature at a stagnation point in a fluid flow. At a stagnation point the speed of the fluid is zero and all of the kinetic energy has been converted to internal energy and is added to the local static enthalpy.
Absolute Temperature         
  • '''Figure 2.5''' This simulation illustrates an argon atom as it would appear through a 400-power optical microscope featuring a reticle graduated with 50-micron (0.05 mm) tick marks. This atom is moving with a velocity of 14.43 microns per second, which gives the atom a kinetic temperature of one-trillionth of a kelvin. The atom requires 13.9 seconds to travel 200 microns (0.2 mm). Though the atom is being invisibly jostled due to zero-point energy, its translational motion seen here comprises all its kinetic energy.
  • '''Figure 7''' Water's temperature does not change during phase transitions as heat flows into or out of it. The total heat capacity of a mole of water in its liquid phase (the green line) is 7.5507 kJ.
  • [[Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac]]
  • [[Guillaume Amontons]]
  • [[Johann Heinrich Lambert]]
  • [[Jacques Alexandre César Charles]]
  • [[Macquorn Rankine]]
ABSOLUTE MEASURE OF TEMPERATURE
Absolute temperature; Absolute Temperature; Thermodynamic temperature scale; Kelvin temperature; Temperature (thermodynamic); Atoms can have zero kinetic velocity and simultaneously be vibrating due to zero-point energy
Temperature reckoned from absolute zero (see "Zero, Absolute"). It is obtained by adding for the centigrade scale 273, and for the Fahrenheit scale 459, to the degree readings of the regular scale.
absolute temperature         
  • '''Figure 2.5''' This simulation illustrates an argon atom as it would appear through a 400-power optical microscope featuring a reticle graduated with 50-micron (0.05 mm) tick marks. This atom is moving with a velocity of 14.43 microns per second, which gives the atom a kinetic temperature of one-trillionth of a kelvin. The atom requires 13.9 seconds to travel 200 microns (0.2 mm). Though the atom is being invisibly jostled due to zero-point energy, its translational motion seen here comprises all its kinetic energy.
  • '''Figure 7''' Water's temperature does not change during phase transitions as heat flows into or out of it. The total heat capacity of a mole of water in its liquid phase (the green line) is 7.5507 kJ.
  • [[Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac]]
  • [[Guillaume Amontons]]
  • [[Johann Heinrich Lambert]]
  • [[Jacques Alexandre César Charles]]
  • [[Macquorn Rankine]]
ABSOLUTE MEASURE OF TEMPERATURE
Absolute temperature; Absolute Temperature; Thermodynamic temperature scale; Kelvin temperature; Temperature (thermodynamic); Atoms can have zero kinetic velocity and simultaneously be vibrating due to zero-point energy
¦ noun a temperature measured from absolute zero in kelvins.