supporter la température - significado y definición. Qué es supporter la température
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Qué (quién) es supporter la température - definición

FIGURES USUALLY PLACED ON EITHER SIDE OF A HERALDIC SHIELD AND DEPICTED HOLDING IT UP
Supporter (heraldry); Heraldic supporter; Supporters; Supporters (heraldry)
  • Early example of the [[Royal Arms of England]] with lion and [[dragon]] as supporters, from a painting of [[Edward VI]] dated c. 1547
  • lions]] as supporters
  • bears]]

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.
Thermodynamic 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
Thermodynamic temperature is a quantity defined in thermodynamics as distinct from kinetic theory or statistical mechanics.

Wikipedia

Supporter

In heraldry, supporters, sometimes referred to as attendants, are figures or objects usually placed on either side of the shield and depicted holding it up.

Early forms of supporters are found in medieval seals. However, unlike the coronet or helmet and crest, supporters were not part of early medieval heraldry. As part of the heraldic achievement, they first become fashionable towards the end of the 15th century, but even in the 17th century were not necessarily part of the full heraldic achievement (being absent, for example, in Siebmachers Wappenbuch of 1605).

The figures used as supporters may be based on real or imaginary animals, human figures, and in rare cases plants or other inanimate objects, such as the pillars of Hercules of the coat of arms of Spain. Often, as in other elements of heraldry, these can have local significance, such as the fisherman and the tin miner granted to Cornwall County Council, or a historical link; such as the lion of England and unicorn of Scotland in the two variations of the Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom. The arms of nutritionist John Boyd-Orr use two 'garbs' (wheat sheaves) as supporters; the arms of USS Donald Cook, missiles; the arms of the state of Rio Grande do Norte in Brazil, trees. Letters of the alphabet are used as supporters in the arms of Valencia, Spain. Human supporters can also be allegorical figures, or, more rarely, specifically named individuals.

There is usually one supporter on each side of the shield, though there are some examples of single supporters placed behind the shield, such as the imperial eagle of the coat of arms of the Holy Roman Empire. The coat of arms of the Republic of the Congo provide an extremely unusual example of two supporters issuing from behind the shield. While such single supporters are generally eagles with one or two heads, there are other examples, including the cathedra in the case of some Canadian cathedrals. At the other extreme and even rarer, the Scottish chief Dundas of that Ilk had three supporters: two conventional red lions and the whole supported by a salamander. The coat of arms of Iceland even has four supporters.

The context of the application of supporters may vary, although entitlement may be considered conditioned by grant of a type of augmentation of honour by admission in orders of chivalry or by heraldic authorities, such as in the case of traditional British heraldry.