Examples of using Spectroscopy in English and their translations into Turkish
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
-
Programming
He later founded the Commission on Spectroscopy at the Academy, which in 1968 was transformed into the Institute for Spectroscopy Russian Academy of Sciences.
Emission spectroscopy developed in the late 19th century
high signal-to-noise infrared spectroscopy to penetrate the dust that obscures the inner Galaxy.
The ART-P X-ray telescope covered the energy range 4 to 60 keV for imaging and 4 to 100 keV for spectroscopy and timing.
Analysis of NMR spectroscopy data- Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy experiments produce two(or higher)
There are also KML plugins for SDSS photometry and spectroscopy layers, allowing direct access to SkyServer data from within Google Sky.
programs in nuclear physics, solid-state physics, and mass spectroscopy.
Detecting photoelectrons that are ejected by x-rays is called x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy(XPS) or electron spectroscopy for chemical analysis ESCA.
nuclear physics, Auger electron spectroscopy, cosmology and mass spectrometry.
liquids by Raman absorption spectroscopy through the 1960s and 1970s drove the development of continua sources.
The graph to the right illustrates the sine curve using Doppler spectroscopy to observe the radial velocity of an imaginary star which is being orbited by a planet in a circular orbit.
The ESA long-term policy-plan"Horizon 2000", produced in 1984, called for a High Throughput Heterodyne Spectroscopy mission as one of its cornerstone missions.
In his early years, he contributed to X-ray spectroscopy, but then broadened out to make contributions to quantum mechanics,
I will subject the tissue to reflectant spectroscopy to get a rough idea… of when the blows were sustained
And in the MRI and MR spectroscopy here, the prostate tumor activity is shown in red-- you can see it diminishing after a year.
This meaning is used in Auger electron spectroscopy(and other x-ray techniques),
NMR spectroscopy was independently developed in the late 1940s and early 1950s by the Purcell group at Harvard University and the Bloch group at Stanford University.
This brought Slater's observation concerning the mechanical properties of ionic crystals into line with the theory that Bohr had based on the spectroscopy of gaseous elements.
Wheatstone and others also contributed to early spectroscopy through the discovery and exploitation of spectral emission lines.
Common experimental methods include X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy, both of which can produce structural information at atomic resolution.