angstrom

listen to the pronunciation of angstrom
Turkish - Turkish
Sayısal olarak bir milimetrenin on milyonda birinin mm.ye eşit olan uzunluğunun birimi
English - English
A very small unit of length, 10-10 m, approximately the size of an atom, used especially to measure the wavelength of electromagnetic radiation or distances between atoms. Abbreviated Å
used to express the length of light waves; a unit of length equal to one hundred millionth (10-8) of a centimeter (The visible spectrum extends from red light, 7,000 angstrom units, to violet light, which is about 4,000 angstrom units)
A unit of length 1/10,000 of a micrometer (10-4µm)
Abbreviated Ã… A unit of length equal to 10-8 cm (one-hundredth of a millionth of a centimeter) An Angstrom is on the order of the size of an atom
a unit of length, used especially in expressing the length of light waves, equal to one ten-thousandth of a micron, or one hundredth-millionth of a centimeter (1 x 10E-8 cm)
A unit of length particularly for measuring electromagnetic wavelengths; one angstrom -10-10 meters = 10-4 microns = 3 937 x 10-9 in
A unit for the measurement of wavelength Equals one hundred millionth of a centimeter
A unit of length equal to 10-10 meters Thus, there are ten angstroms to one nanometer (nm)
A unit of length = 1 0E-08cm
a metric unit of length equal to one ten billionth of a meter or 0
A unit of length 10,000 angstroms equals 1 micron 1x108 angstroms equals 1cm A silicon atom has a lattice spacing of 5 43 angstroms Symbol: Å See also micron
commonly used to measure the wavelength of light; equal to 10-10 meters
A unit of length 1/10,000 of a micrometer (10-4µm)
A unit of measure equal to 0 1 nanometers
A unit of distance corresponding to 10-10 m One angstrom (Å) is 0 1 nm so that 200 nm corresponds to 2000 Å
A unit of length equal to one hundred-millionth (10-8) of a centimeter, used especially to specify radiation wavelengths
A unit of linear measure equal to 10-10 m
Unit of length One angstrom = 1 Ã… = 10-10 meters = 0 0000000001 meters = 10 nanometers = 10,000 microns Angstroms are the units generally used when discussing wavelengths of light
A unit of distance measure that equals 10-10 meters
a metric unit of length equal to one ten billionth of a meter (or 0 0001 micron); used to specify wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation
Ten to the minus tenth meters (10-10) or one millimicron, a unit used to define the wave length of light Designated by the symbol Ã…
0001 micron; used to specify wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation
( in original Swedish spelling Ångström) Unit of length 1Å = 0 1 nm = 10-10m
Abbreviated Å A unit of length equal to 10-8 cm (one-hundredth of a millionth of a centimeter) An Angstrom is on the order of the size of an atom
A very small unit of length, 10[-10] m, approximately the size of an atom, used especially to measure the wavelength of electromagnetic radiation or distances between atoms. Abbreviated Å
A unit of length, represented by Ã…, equal to 10-8 centimeter It is commonly used to express the wavelengths of electromagnetic radiations in the visible, ultraviolet, and X-ray regions
{i} unit of measurement equal to a hundred-millionth of a centimeter (used to measure the wavelengths of light)
A unit of length equal to 10-10 meter
A unit of length equal to one ten-billionth of a meter (about four-billionth of an inch); often used to measure the wavelength of light
A unit of length often used for wave-lengths; 1 A = 10-10 meters
One ten-billionth (10-10) of a meter It is the shortest widely used unit of length, particularly to measure wavelengths of light and other forms of electromagnetic radiation It is abbreviated Ã…
An angstrom is a unit of length that is equivalent to 10^-10m or 0 1nm Used mainly to specify the wavelength of radiation
angstrom unit
angstrom (unit of length)
angstrom.
A
angstroms
plural of angstrom
Turkish - English
angstrom
angstrom

    Hyphenation

    ang·strom

    Turkish pronunciation

    ängstrım

    Pronunciation

    /ˈaɴɢstrəm/ /ˈæŋstrəm/

    Etymology

    [ 'a[ng]-str&m also ' ] (noun.) 1892. From the name of the Swedish physicist Anders Jonas Ångström.
Favorites