Examples of using Charged particles in English and their translations into Turkish
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Programming
These atoms and molecules are composed of charged particles, i.e., protons
The charged particles of the solar wind require heat and combustion to escape
The relative strength of the electromagnetic interaction between two charged particles, such as an electron and a proton, is given by the fine-structure constant.
Historically, the first accelerators used simple technology of a single static high voltage to accelerate charged particles.
And a plasma beam is a bunch of very, very energetically charged particles, um, that would glow so you would get the effect of the lightsaber.
Charged particles try to get in,
The magnetic sail deflects charged particles from the solar wind with a magnetic field, thereby imparting momentum to the spacecraft.
While the modern Maxwell's equations describe how electrically charged particles and currents or moving charged particles give rise to electric
it opens up a little hole and allows charged particles to enter the eye-spot, and that allows this
knows what is creating the ENA(energetic neutral atoms) ribbon" along the termination shock of the solar wind,"but everyone agrees that it means the textbook picture of the heliosphere-in which the Solar System's enveloping pocket filled with the solar wind's charged particles is plowing through the onrushing'galactic wind' of the interstellar medium in the shape of a comet-is wrong.
In Thomson scattering a charged particle emits radiation under incident light.
Let a fast charged particle penetrate through this overheated liquid.
Or a bolt of lightning or a charged particle, like from the Northern Lights.
The quantum of charge becomes small, but each charged particle has a huge number of charge quanta so its charge stays finite.
Scattering of light===In Thomson scattering a charged particle emits radiation under incident light.
A charged particle which experiences acceleration is known to emit electromagnetic waves, i.e., to lose energy.
Other difficulties may arise trying to solve the equation of motion for a charged particle in the presence of this damping force.
When a charged particle does that in a dielectric material, the electromagnetic equivalent of a shock wave, known as Cherenkov radiation, is emitted.
Energy emission can occur when a moving electron is deflected by a charged particle, such as a proton.
is the recoil force on an accelerating charged particle caused by the particle emitting electromagnetic radiation.