adiabatic saturation - significado y definición. Qué es adiabatic saturation
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Qué (quién) es adiabatic saturation - definición

THERMODYNAMIC PROCESS
Adiabatic cooling; Adiabatic Process; Adiabatic heating; Adiabatic approximation; Adiabatic principle; Adiabat; Adibatic cooling; Adiabatic compression; Adiabatic expansion; Adiabatic decompression; Adiabatic transformation; Adiabatic Processes; Adiabatic

Magnetic Saturation         
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  • Due to saturation, the magnetic permeability μ<sub>f</sub> of a ferromagnetic substance reaches a maximum and then declines
(IN SOME MAGNETIC MATERIALS) STATE REACHED WHEN AN INCREASE IN APPLIED EXTERNAL MAGNETIC FIELD H CANNOT INCREASE THE MAGNETIZATION OF THE MATERIAL FURTHER, SO THE TOTAL MAGNETIC FLUX DENSITY B MORE OR LESS LEVELS OFF
Magnetic saturation; Saturation magnetization
The maximum magnetic force which can be permanently imparted to a steel bar. A bar may be magnetized beyond this point, but soon sinks to it. The magnetism produced in a bar is prevented from depolarization by the retentivity or coercive force of the bar. The higher the degree of magnetization the greater the tendency to depolarization. It is also defined as the maximum intensity of magnetism produced in a paramagnetic substance by a magnetic field as far as affected by the permeability of the substance in question. The more lines of force passed through such a substance the lower is its residual permeability. It is assumed that this becomes zero after a certain point, and then the point of saturation is reached. After this point is reached the addition of any lines of force is referred entirely to the field and not at all to the permeability of the substance. But such a zero is only definable approximately.
Saturation (magnetic)         
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  • Due to saturation, the magnetic permeability μ<sub>f</sub> of a ferromagnetic substance reaches a maximum and then declines
(IN SOME MAGNETIC MATERIALS) STATE REACHED WHEN AN INCREASE IN APPLIED EXTERNAL MAGNETIC FIELD H CANNOT INCREASE THE MAGNETIZATION OF THE MATERIAL FURTHER, SO THE TOTAL MAGNETIC FLUX DENSITY B MORE OR LESS LEVELS OFF
Magnetic saturation; Saturation magnetization
Seen in some magnetic materials, saturation is the state reached when an increase in applied external magnetic field H cannot increase the magnetization of the material further, so the total magnetic flux density B more or less levels off. (Though, magnetization continues to increase very slowly with the field due to paramagnetism.
Oxygen saturation (medicine)         
  • Blood circulation: Red = oxygenated (arteries), Blue = deoxygenated (veins)
  • Hemoglobin saturation curve
  • Example pulse oximeter
FRACTION OF OXYGEN-SATURATED HEMOGLOBIN RELATIVE TO TOTAL HEMOGLOBIN IN THE BLOOD
Spo2; SpO2; Blood oxygen level; SvO2; Medical oxygenation; Oxygenation (medical); SPO2; Oxygenation (medicine); Oxygen saturation in medicine; Hemoglobin saturation
Oxygen saturation is the fraction of oxygen-saturated hemoglobin relative to total hemoglobin (unsaturated + saturated) in the blood. The human body requires and regulates a very precise and specific balance of oxygen in the blood.

Wikipedia

Adiabatic process

In thermodynamics, an adiabatic process (Greek: adiábatos, "impassable") is a type of thermodynamic process that occurs without transferring heat or mass between the thermodynamic system and its environment. Unlike an isothermal process, an adiabatic process transfers energy to the surroundings only as work. As a key concept in thermodynamics, the adiabatic process supports the theory that explains the first law of thermodynamics.

Some chemical and physical processes occur too rapidly for energy to enter or leave the system as heat, allowing a convenient "adiabatic approximation". For example, the adiabatic flame temperature uses this approximation to calculate the upper limit of flame temperature by assuming combustion loses no heat to its surroundings.

In meteorology and oceanography, adiabatic cooling produces condensation of moisture or salinity, oversaturating the parcel. Therefore, the excess must be removed. There, the process becomes a pseudo-adiabatic process whereby the liquid water or salt that condenses is assumed to be removed upon formation by idealized instantaneous precipitation. The pseudoadiabatic process is only defined for expansion because a compressed parcel becomes warmer and remains undersaturated.