absorption ratio - translation to greek
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

absorption ratio - translation to greek

THEOREM
Absorption identities; Absorption Identities; Absorption Law; Absorption laws; Absorption identity

absorption ratio      
συντελεστής απορροφήσεως
συντελεστής απορροφήσεως      
absorption coefficient, absorption ratio
absorption constant         
Absorption constant; Absorption rate
σταθέρα απορροφητικότητας

Definition

ratio
(ratios)
A ratio is a relationship between two things when it is expressed in numbers or amounts. For example, if there are ten boys and thirty girls in a room, the ratio of boys to girls is 1:3, or one to three.
The adult to child ratio is 1 to 6.
N-COUNT: usu sing, oft N of n to n

Wikipedia

Absorption law

In algebra, the absorption law or absorption identity is an identity linking a pair of binary operations.

Two binary operations, ¤ and ⁂, are said to be connected by the absorption law if:

a ¤ (ab) = a ⁂ (a ¤ b) = a.

A set equipped with two commutative and associative binary operations {\displaystyle \scriptstyle \lor } ("join") and {\displaystyle \scriptstyle \land } ("meet") that are connected by the absorption law is called a lattice; in this case, both operations are necessarily idempotent.

Examples of lattices include Heyting algebras and Boolean algebras, in particular sets of sets with union and intersection operators, and ordered sets with min and max operations.

In classical logic, and in particular Boolean algebra, the operations OR and AND, which are also denoted by {\displaystyle \scriptstyle \lor } and {\displaystyle \scriptstyle \land } , satisfy the lattice axioms, including the absorption law. The same is true for intuitionistic logic.

The absorption law does not hold in many other algebraic structures, such as commutative rings, e.g. the field of real numbers, relevance logics, linear logics, and substructural logics. In the last case, there is no one-to-one correspondence between the free variables of the defining pair of identities.

Examples of use of absorption ratio
1. Pyongyang, December 22 (KCNA) –– December 22 is the winter solstice. Ѓ@It is an old custom of the Koreans to celebrate the winter solstice. Ѓ@The winter solstice is the 22nd one out of the 24 seasons of a year in the lunar calendar. Ѓ@The Korean people celebrate this day as a holiday, calling it "Ase" or "small New Year‘s Day". The night is longest and daytime shortest on the day around the year. Ѓ@The Korean people have made various folk dishes with new crops of the year and taken them on the holiday. Ѓ@Conspicuous among the dishes is red–bean porridge. Ѓ@The porridge is made by the method of boiling red–bean well first and then putting rice and small glutinous rice dumplings as big as bird egg in it and boiling it again. Ѓ@It has been told that one should take glutinous rice dumplings as much as one‘s age for health. Ѓ@The red–bean porridge is a seasonal food and health food which is high in nutritive value and good in digestion and absorption ratio.