high pressure - meaning and definition. What is high pressure
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What (who) is high pressure - definition


High pressure         
MATERIAL SCIENCE TERM FOR PRESSURES OVER 100 MPA
High pressure physics; Ultrahigh pressure; High-pressure physics; High-pressure; High Pressure
In science and engineering the study of high pressure examines its effects on materials and the design and construction of devices, such as a diamond anvil cell, which can create high pressure. By high pressure is usually meant pressures of thousands (kilobars) or millions (megabars) of times atmospheric pressure (about 1 bar or 100,000 Pa).
high-pressure         
MATERIAL SCIENCE TERM FOR PRESSURES OVER 100 MPA
High pressure physics; Ultrahigh pressure; High-pressure physics; High-pressure; High Pressure
v. (D; tr.) to high-pressure into (she was high-pressured into signing)
High-pressure         
MATERIAL SCIENCE TERM FOR PRESSURES OVER 100 MPA
High pressure physics; Ultrahigh pressure; High-pressure physics; High-pressure; High Pressure
·adj Fig.: Urgent; intense; as, a high-pressure business or social life.
II. High-pressure ·adj Having or involving a pressure greatly exceeding that of the atmosphere;
- said of steam, air, water, ·etc., and of steam, air, or hydraulic engines, water wheels, ·etc.
Examples of use of high pressure
1. Nobody knows why the high pressure developed in the Atlantic.
2. But high–pressure systems have dominated in Europe this winter.
3. High pressure built over California and the central Plains.
4. The high pressure foam has worked successfully so far.
5. Today‘s high–pressure society has no sense of seasonal rhythm.