knife-edge - определение. Что такое knife-edge
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Что (кто) такое knife-edge - определение

REFERS TO VARIOUS PHENOMENA THAT OCCUR WHEN A WAVE ENCOUNTERS AN OBSTACLE OR A SLIT
Knife-edge effect; Diffracted; Diffractive optics; Diffraction of light; Diffraction pattern; Light bend; Knife-edge diffraction; Diffraction Pattern; Diffract; Defraction; Laser Light Diffraction; Single slit diffraction; Single-slit experiment; Knife-Edge diffraction; Diffracts; Diffraction of Light; Knife-edge technique; Difraction; Edge diffraction; Single slit; Single-slit; Singleslit; Single slits; Single-slits; Single slitted; Single-slitted; Singleslitted; Single-slit diffraction; Singleslit diffraction; Single slit diffractions; Single-slit diffractions; Wedge fringe; Wedge fringes; Diffractogram; Diffractive; Diffractions; Knife edge effect; Diffractive optical element; Knife-Edge Diffraction
  • Diffraction of a red laser using a diffraction grating.
  • 2-slit (top) and 5-slit diffraction of red laser light
  • 2D Single-slit diffraction with width changing animation
  • A diffraction pattern of a 633 nm laser through a grid of 150 slits
  • The upper half of this image shows a diffraction pattern of He-Ne laser beam on an elliptic aperture. The lower half is its 2D Fourier transform approximately reconstructing the shape of the aperture.
  • Simulated diffraction spikes in hexagonal telescope mirrors
  • diffraction pattern]] of a red [[laser]] beam projected onto a plate after passing through a small circular [[aperture]] in another plate
  • [[Diffraction spikes]] are diffraction patterns caused due to non-circular [[aperture]] in camera or support struts in telescope; In normal vision, diffraction through eyelashes may produce such spikes.
  • The bright spot ([[Arago spot]]) seen in the center of the shadow of a circular obstacle is due to diffraction
  • Infinitely many points (three shown) along length ''d'' project phase contributions from the [[wavefront]], producing a continuously varying intensity ''θ'' on the registering plate.
  • thumb
  • Circular waves generated by diffraction from the narrow entrance of a flooded coastal quarry
Найдено результатов: 1037
knife-edge      
also knife edge
1.
To be on a knife-edge means to be in a situation in which nobody knows what is going to happen next, or in which one thing is just as likely to happen as another. (mainly BRIT)
The game is poised on a knife-edge. One mistake or one piece of good luck could decide it.
PHRASE: oft v-link PHR
2.
You can use knife-edge to refer to something that is very exciting or tense because you do not know what is going to happen next. (mainly BRIT)
Tonight's knife-edge vote could be uncomfortably close.
ADJ: ADJ n
knife-edge      
¦ noun
1. the cutting edge of a knife.
[as modifier] (of creases or pleats) very fine.
2. a very tense or dangerous situation.
3. a steep mountain ridge; an arete.
4. a steel wedge on which a pendulum or other device oscillates or is balanced.
Knife-edge      
·noun A piece of steel sharpened to an acute edge or angle, and resting on a smooth surface, serving as the axis of motion of a pendulum, scale beam, or other piece required to oscillate with the least possible friction.
Foucault knife-edge test         
  •  From top: Parabolic mirror showing Foucault shadow patterns made by knife edge inside radius of curvature R (red X), at R and outside R.
Foucault test; Foucault Knife Edge Test; Knife-edge test
The Foucault knife-edge test is an optical test developed 150 years ago to accurately measure the shape of concave curved mirrors. It is commonly used by amateur telescope makers for figuring primary mirrors in reflecting telescopes.
Knife-edge scanning microscope         
MODEL OF MICROSOCOPE FOR BIOLOGICAL IMAGING
Knife-Edge Scanning Microscope
The Knife-Edge Scanning Microscope (KESM) was invented and patented in the late 1990s by Bruce McCormick at Texas A&M University.Kathy Flores (2007).
knives         
  • A Head knife (Round knife).
  • cKc pen knife
  • tang]] survival knife. The metal from the blade extends into the handle.
  • right
  • A traditional knife handle made from buffalo horn ([[Tasikmalaya]], Indonesia)
  • Characteristic parts of a knife
  • Knives for cutting [[cheese]]
  • Knife blades have different profiles
  • Morakniv carbon steel knife
  • An OTF knife, showing the sliding blade being extended from the handle
  • A [[Swiss Army knife]]
  • The Sacrifice of Isaac]]'' by [[Caravaggio]], (1590–1610; Oil on canvas; [[Uffizi]]). [[Abraham]] is holding the [[sacrificial]] knife.
  • Tuareg]] knife.
TOOL WITH A CUTTING EDGE OR BLADE
Knives; Knive; Knifes; Fish knife; Kiridashi (knife); Bladed article
Knives is the plural of knife
.
pocket knife         
  • A typical pruning knife, made by Opinel
  • Benchmade Bedlam auto-knife
  • Benchmade 4300 CLA Composite Lite Auto.  Auto knife push button operation with side mounted safety, reversible clip. Length 7.85- inches Blade length 3.4 inches. Blade Material CM154.
  • A canoe knife
  • A W.R. Case "Peanut" model with clip and spey blades
  • Case Sow Belly with three blades
  • Case Damascus Barlow Knife
  • A Case Trapper knife with stag scales
  • A congress knife
  • Cotton Sampler
  • A Toothpick knife
  • Herder ''Hippekniep''
  • A medium stockman knife
  • A small sunfish knife
  • Marlin Spike
  • Smaller Opinels are a type of peasant knife
  • Buck Two-Bladed Pen Knife. Primary Blade Two Inches
  • Roman pocketknife: original with a modern reconstruction beside it
  • Medium-sized lockback knife with deer-antler grips, nickel-silver bolsters and brass liners
  • Soldatenmesser 08]]'', the multi-tool knife issued to the Swiss Armed Forces since 2008
  • Dual liner lock system as used in the ''Soldatenmesser 08'' and various other [[Victorinox]] 111 mm models
  • Splitback Whittler
  • Victorinox Soldier, a Camper or Scout pattern pocketknife
  • A [[Swiss Army knife]] made by [[Victorinox]]
KNIFE THAT CAN BE CARRIED IN A POCKET
Claspknife; Pocket-knife; Clasp-knife; Lock-knife; Lockback knife; Clasp knife; Barlow knife; Peanut (knife); Pocket knives; Pocket Knives; Lock knife; Pocket Knife; Tactical folding knife; Pocket knife; Folding knife; Pocketknives; Friction folder
also pocketknife (pocket knives)
A pocket knife is a small knife with several blades which fold into the handle so that you can carry it around with you safely.
= penknife
N-COUNT
clasp knife         
  • A typical pruning knife, made by Opinel
  • Benchmade Bedlam auto-knife
  • Benchmade 4300 CLA Composite Lite Auto.  Auto knife push button operation with side mounted safety, reversible clip. Length 7.85- inches Blade length 3.4 inches. Blade Material CM154.
  • A canoe knife
  • A W.R. Case "Peanut" model with clip and spey blades
  • Case Sow Belly with three blades
  • Case Damascus Barlow Knife
  • A Case Trapper knife with stag scales
  • A congress knife
  • Cotton Sampler
  • A Toothpick knife
  • Herder ''Hippekniep''
  • A medium stockman knife
  • A small sunfish knife
  • Marlin Spike
  • Smaller Opinels are a type of peasant knife
  • Buck Two-Bladed Pen Knife. Primary Blade Two Inches
  • Roman pocketknife: original with a modern reconstruction beside it
  • Medium-sized lockback knife with deer-antler grips, nickel-silver bolsters and brass liners
  • Soldatenmesser 08]]'', the multi-tool knife issued to the Swiss Armed Forces since 2008
  • Dual liner lock system as used in the ''Soldatenmesser 08'' and various other [[Victorinox]] 111 mm models
  • Splitback Whittler
  • Victorinox Soldier, a Camper or Scout pattern pocketknife
  • A [[Swiss Army knife]] made by [[Victorinox]]
KNIFE THAT CAN BE CARRIED IN A POCKET
Claspknife; Pocket-knife; Clasp-knife; Lock-knife; Lockback knife; Clasp knife; Barlow knife; Peanut (knife); Pocket knives; Pocket Knives; Lock knife; Pocket Knife; Tactical folding knife; Pocket knife; Folding knife; Pocketknives; Friction folder
¦ noun a knife with a blade that folds into the handle.
fish knife         
  • A Head knife (Round knife).
  • cKc pen knife
  • tang]] survival knife. The metal from the blade extends into the handle.
  • right
  • A traditional knife handle made from buffalo horn ([[Tasikmalaya]], Indonesia)
  • Characteristic parts of a knife
  • Knives for cutting [[cheese]]
  • Knife blades have different profiles
  • Morakniv carbon steel knife
  • An OTF knife, showing the sliding blade being extended from the handle
  • A [[Swiss Army knife]]
  • The Sacrifice of Isaac]]'' by [[Caravaggio]], (1590–1610; Oil on canvas; [[Uffizi]]). [[Abraham]] is holding the [[sacrificial]] knife.
  • Tuareg]] knife.
TOOL WITH A CUTTING EDGE OR BLADE
Knives; Knive; Knifes; Fish knife; Kiridashi (knife); Bladed article
(fish knives)
A fish knife is a knife that you use when you eat fish. It has a wide flat blade and does not have a sharp edge.
N-COUNT
knife         
  • A Head knife (Round knife).
  • cKc pen knife
  • tang]] survival knife. The metal from the blade extends into the handle.
  • right
  • A traditional knife handle made from buffalo horn ([[Tasikmalaya]], Indonesia)
  • Characteristic parts of a knife
  • Knives for cutting [[cheese]]
  • Knife blades have different profiles
  • Morakniv carbon steel knife
  • An OTF knife, showing the sliding blade being extended from the handle
  • A [[Swiss Army knife]]
  • The Sacrifice of Isaac]]'' by [[Caravaggio]], (1590–1610; Oil on canvas; [[Uffizi]]). [[Abraham]] is holding the [[sacrificial]] knife.
  • Tuareg]] knife.
TOOL WITH A CUTTING EDGE OR BLADE
Knives; Knive; Knifes; Fish knife; Kiridashi (knife); Bladed article
(knives, knifes, knifing, knifed)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
Note: 'knives' is the plural form of the noun and 'knifes' is the third person singular of the present tense of the verb.
1.
A knife is a tool for cutting or a weapon and consists of a flat piece of metal with a sharp edge on the end of a handle.
...a knife and fork...
Two robbers broke into her home, held a knife to her throat and stole her savings.
N-COUNT
2.
To knife someone means to attack and injure them with a knife.
Dawson takes revenge on the man by knifing him to death...
VERB: V n prep
3.
A surgeon's knife is a piece of equipment used to cut flesh and organs during operations. It is made of metal and has a very thin sharp edge.
= scalpel
N-COUNT
If you go under the knife, you have an operation in a hospital.
Kelly was about to go under the knife when her surgeon stopped everything.
PHRASE: PHR after v
4.
5.
If someone does something like a knife through butter or like a hot knife through butter, they do it very easily.
Spending by Japanese companies has left them more competitive than companies in other nations. They will be cutting through the competition like a hot knife through butter.
PHRASE: knife inflects, PHR after v
6.
If you have been in a place where there was a very tense atmosphere, you can say that you could have cut the atmosphere with a knife. (mainly BRIT)
PHRASE
7.
If a lot of people want something unpleasant to happen to someone, for example if they want them to lose their job, you can say that the knives are out for that person. (mainly BRIT)
The Party knives are out for the leader.
PHRASE: V inflects, usu PHR for n
8.
If you twist the knife or if you turn the knife in someone's wound, you do or say something to make an unpleasant situation they are in even more unpleasant.
Travis twisted the knife by laughing at her...
PHRASE: V inflects

Википедия

Diffraction

Diffraction is defined as the interference or bending of waves around the corners of an obstacle or through an aperture into the region of geometrical shadow of the obstacle/aperture. The diffracting object or aperture effectively becomes a secondary source of the propagating wave. Italian scientist Francesco Maria Grimaldi coined the word diffraction and was the first to record accurate observations of the phenomenon in 1660.

In classical physics, the diffraction phenomenon is described by the Huygens–Fresnel principle that treats each point in a propagating wavefront as a collection of individual spherical wavelets. The characteristic bending pattern is most pronounced when a wave from a coherent source (such as a laser) encounters a slit/aperture that is comparable in size to its wavelength, as shown in the inserted image. This is due to the addition, or interference, of different points on the wavefront (or, equivalently, each wavelet) that travel by paths of different lengths to the registering surface. If there are multiple, closely spaced openings (e.g., a diffraction grating), a complex pattern of varying intensity can result.

These effects also occur when a light wave travels through a medium with a varying refractive index, or when a sound wave travels through a medium with varying acoustic impedance – all waves diffract, including gravitational waves, water waves, and other electromagnetic waves such as X-rays and radio waves. Furthermore, quantum mechanics also demonstrates that matter possesses wave-like properties, and hence, undergoes diffraction (which is measurable at subatomic to molecular levels).

The amount of diffraction depends on the size of the gap. Diffraction is greatest when the size of the gap is similar to the wavelength of the wave. In this case, when the waves pass through the gap they become semi-circular.