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单词 spectroscope
释义

Definition of spectroscope in English:

spectroscope

noun ˈspɛktrəskəʊpˈspɛktrəˌskoʊp
  • An apparatus for producing and recording spectra for examination.

    分光镜

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Not content with the instruments he had, Monty built microscopes, a spectroscope and other pieces of equipment, including a micrometer with a powered eyepiece for better speed control.
    • Within a century of Comte's death, thanks to the invention of the spectroscope, much of astronomy had become astrochemistry - a science he had roundly declared impossible.
    • Film colours are colours such as are seen in a spectroscope or a patch of blue or uniformly grey sky.
    • In 1859, Kirchoff and Bunsen invented the spectroscope and demonstrated that different atoms absorb and emit different wavelengths of light.
    • The demonstrated differences can be attributed to the fact that the girls with CF did less total work than control subjects in the magnetic resonance spectroscope.
    • To isolate harmful food, inspectors from 82 municipal laboratories armed with spectroscopes and radiation detectors comb the city's 69 open-air markets.
    • Turin instead proposed that our sense of smell works in much the same way as a spectroscope - an instrument used to identify elements and molecules.
    • Renishaw is a specialist in spectroscopes including Raman microscopes.
    • Bruno believed that other heavenly bodies are presumably made up of the same materials as the earth, a guess which required the spectroscope of the 19th century to prove scientifically valid.
    • An eclipse in India in 1868 offered an opportunity to do something never before done, pass light from the Sun's atmosphere through a spectroscope.
    • To do this they use a device known as a spectrometer or a spectroscope.
    • During the late 1800s, the widespread use of spectroscopes, coupled with the relatively new science of photography, enabled the field of astronomy to be reborn as the discipline of astrophysics.
    • A spectroscope splits light up into its component hues so that its precise mixture of colours can be analysed separately.
    • Astronomers could pass moonlight through spectroscopes to infer the chemical composition of the moon by comparing the moon's spectrum with that of known substances here on earth.
    • Rubidium and cesium were discovered in 1860 by Robert Bunsen using the newly developed spectroscope which shows light-emission patterns that are characteristic for each element.
    • Princeton University sent a team that was reputed to be the best equipped, with the latest telescopes and spectroscopes needed for the job.
    • We have found five planets orbiting that star, and with our spectroscopes we found one within the star's habitable zone that has an atmosphere.
    • Janssen used an instrument called a spectroscope to analyze the sunlight.
    • In 1868, the French astronomer Pierre Janssen studied light from the Sun during a solar eclipse using a spectroscope.
    • Both groups are exposed to basic principles behind astronomical instrumentation such as CCD cameras, spectroscopes, and (for the solar group) an optical bench setup to observe the sun in H-alpha light.

Definition of spectroscope in US English:

spectroscope

nounˈspɛktrəˌskoʊpˈspektrəˌskōp
  • An apparatus for producing and recording spectra for examination.

    分光镜

    Example sentencesExamples
    • To isolate harmful food, inspectors from 82 municipal laboratories armed with spectroscopes and radiation detectors comb the city's 69 open-air markets.
    • An eclipse in India in 1868 offered an opportunity to do something never before done, pass light from the Sun's atmosphere through a spectroscope.
    • Renishaw is a specialist in spectroscopes including Raman microscopes.
    • Both groups are exposed to basic principles behind astronomical instrumentation such as CCD cameras, spectroscopes, and (for the solar group) an optical bench setup to observe the sun in H-alpha light.
    • To do this they use a device known as a spectrometer or a spectroscope.
    • Janssen used an instrument called a spectroscope to analyze the sunlight.
    • Rubidium and cesium were discovered in 1860 by Robert Bunsen using the newly developed spectroscope which shows light-emission patterns that are characteristic for each element.
    • A spectroscope splits light up into its component hues so that its precise mixture of colours can be analysed separately.
    • Princeton University sent a team that was reputed to be the best equipped, with the latest telescopes and spectroscopes needed for the job.
    • During the late 1800s, the widespread use of spectroscopes, coupled with the relatively new science of photography, enabled the field of astronomy to be reborn as the discipline of astrophysics.
    • We have found five planets orbiting that star, and with our spectroscopes we found one within the star's habitable zone that has an atmosphere.
    • Astronomers could pass moonlight through spectroscopes to infer the chemical composition of the moon by comparing the moon's spectrum with that of known substances here on earth.
    • Turin instead proposed that our sense of smell works in much the same way as a spectroscope - an instrument used to identify elements and molecules.
    • In 1868, the French astronomer Pierre Janssen studied light from the Sun during a solar eclipse using a spectroscope.
    • In 1859, Kirchoff and Bunsen invented the spectroscope and demonstrated that different atoms absorb and emit different wavelengths of light.
    • Film colours are colours such as are seen in a spectroscope or a patch of blue or uniformly grey sky.
    • Not content with the instruments he had, Monty built microscopes, a spectroscope and other pieces of equipment, including a micrometer with a powered eyepiece for better speed control.
    • The demonstrated differences can be attributed to the fact that the girls with CF did less total work than control subjects in the magnetic resonance spectroscope.
    • Within a century of Comte's death, thanks to the invention of the spectroscope, much of astronomy had become astrochemistry - a science he had roundly declared impossible.
    • Bruno believed that other heavenly bodies are presumably made up of the same materials as the earth, a guess which required the spectroscope of the 19th century to prove scientifically valid.
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更新时间:2024/10/19 13:23:40