air bubble viscosimeter - meaning and definition. What is air bubble viscosimeter
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is air bubble viscosimeter - definition

GLOBULE OF ONE SUBSTANCE IN ANOTHER, USUALLY GAS IN A LIQUID
Air bubble; Gas bubble; Liquid bubble; 🫧
  • A [[soap bubble]] floating in the air
  • Air bubbles rising from a [[scuba diver]] in water

bubble pack         
  • insulation]]
  • A child playing with bubble wrap
PLIABLE TRANSPARENT PLASTIC MATERIAL
Bubble-wrap; Air cellular cushioning material; Bubblewrap; Puchipuchi; Mugen puchi puchi; Bubble Wrap Appreciation Day; Bubble paper; Bubble pack; Bubble packaging material
¦ noun a small package enclosing goods in transparent dome-shaped plastic on a flat cardboard backing.
Bubble chart         
  • Bubble chart displaying the relationship between poverty and violent and property crime rates by state. Larger bubbles indicate higher percentage of state residents at or below the poverty level. Trend suggests higher crime rates in states with higher percentages of people living below the poverty level.
  • Circular Packing chart, sometimes called a "bubble chart," showing the proportions of professions of people who create programming languages
  • A series of bubbles on a [[map]] is called a [[proportional symbol map]] or sometimes "bubble map"
CHART
Bubble plot; Bubble charts
A bubble chart is a type of chart that displays three dimensions of data. Each entity with its triplet (v1, v2, v3) of associated data is plotted as a disk that expresses two of the vi values through the disk's xy location and the third through its size.
bubble memory         
  • Bubble memory driver coils/windings/field coils and guides (T bar guides in this case); the guides or propagation elements, are on top of a magnetic film, which is on top of a substrate chip. This is mounted to a PCB (not shown) and then surrounded by two windings.
TYPE OF NON-VOLATILE COMPUTER MEMORY
Magnetic bubble memory; Magnet bubble memory; GGGQEP
A storage device built using materials such as gadolinium gallium garnet which are can be magnetised easily in only one direction. A film of these materials can be created so that it is magnetisable in an up-down direction. The magnetic fields tend to join together, some with the north pole facing up, some with the south. When a veritcal magnetic field is imposed on this, the areas in opposite alignment to the field shrink to circles, or 'bubbles'. A bubble can be formed by reversing the field in a small spot, and can be destroyed by increasing the field. Bubble memory is a kind of non-volatile storage but EEPROM, Flash Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory and ferroelectric technologies, which are also non-volatile, are faster. ["Great Microprocessors of the Past and Present", V 4.0.0, John Bayko <bayko@hercules.cs.uregina.ca>, Appendix C] (1995-02-03)

Wikipedia

Bubble (physics)

A bubble is a globule of one substance in another, usually gas in a liquid. Due to the Marangoni effect, bubbles may remain intact when they reach the surface of the immersive substance.