Etymology: [ "I-s&-'trO-pik, -'trä ] (adjective.) circa 1860. From iso- + Ancient Greek τρὁπ-ος (“turn, way, manner, disposition”) + -ic. Compare Ancient Greek ἰσὁτροπος of like character
Having properties that are identical in all directions; exhibiting isotropy, A theoretical "isotrope" is a single point in free space which radiates energy equally in every direction, Having uniform properties in all directions The measured properties of an isotropic material are independent of the axis of testing, Exhibiting properties with the same values in all directions, independent of direction; thus microscale turbulence is nearly isotropic while larger scales are vertically squashed, having the same properties to every direction, A characteristic of a pixel or voxel that is square or cubic respectively Compare to non-isotropic See the Caret (for Pfile/Functional files) and Surefit (for 2D and 3D anatomical files) pages for instructions on converting non-isotropic voxels to isotropic voxels, An antenna that radiates its signal 360 degrees both vertically and horizontally in a perfect sphere, invariant with respect to direction, An antenna (or a theoretic construct of an antenna) that radiates its signal 360 degrees both vertically and horizontally - a perfect sphere, Magnet material with no preferred orientation; can be magnetized in any direction, Exhibiting properties with the same values when measured along axes in all directions Opposite of anisotropic, of equal physical properties along all axes, a situation where a quantity (or its spatial derivatives) are independent of position or direction, Literally the same in all directions Used to describe the pressure of a gas, Having uniform properties in like degree in all directions, In wireless, a theoretical "unity" (0 dB) gain antenna used as a measurement reference Has the assumed characteristic of receiving or transmitting equally well in all directions A dipole antenna roughly approximates an isotropic antenna Back to top kHz Kilohertz, 1,000 Hertz, or one thousand cycles per second Back to top Lavalier Microphone A type of miniature microphone that is usually worn fastened to clothing somewhere near the user's mouth Also referred to as a clip-on or lapel microphone, exhibiting the same property when looking in any given direction, isotropous; having the same properties or characteristics along all axes (Physics); having no predefined axes (Zoology), Having uniform properties in all directions independent of the direction of load application, Equal in all directions Isotropic scattering occurs when light is scattered equally over 4pi steradians Isotropic reflection, in contrast, usually refers to a surface that may have a directional preference, but one that does not depend on the azimuth of the incident vector, Fiber directionality with uniform properties in all directions, independent of the direction of applied load, Same in all directions; the isotropicity of space means that the outcome of an experiment performed on a closed system does not depend on the orientation of the closed system, In general, pertaining to a state in which a quantity or spatial derivatives thereof are independent of direction Also called isotropous, having identical values of a property in all crystallographic directions, The material has no preferred direction of magnetic orientation, which allows magnetization in any direction, Having properties that are the same regardless of the direction of measurement In the isotropic state, all directions are indistinguishable from each other See also anisotropic, Having the same properties in all directions; specifically, equally elastic in all directions,
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Having properties that are identical in all directions; exhibiting isotropy
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A theoretical "isotrope" is a single point in free space which radiates energy equally in every direction
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Having uniform properties in all directions The measured properties of an isotropic material are independent of the axis of testing
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Exhibiting properties with the same values in all directions
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independent of direction; thus microscale turbulence is nearly isotropic while larger scales are vertically squashed
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having the same properties to every direction
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A characteristic of a pixel or voxel that is square or cubic respectively Compare to non-isotropic See the Caret (for Pfile/Functional files) and Surefit (for 2D and 3D anatomical files) pages for instructions on converting non-isotropic voxels to isotropic voxels
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An antenna that radiates its signal 360 degrees both vertically and horizontally in a perfect sphere
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invariant with respect to direction
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An antenna (or a theoretic construct of an antenna) that radiates its signal 360 degrees both vertically and horizontally - a perfect sphere
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Magnet material with no preferred orientation; can be magnetized in any direction
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Exhibiting properties with the same values when measured along axes in all directions Opposite of anisotropic
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of equal physical properties along all axes
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a situation where a quantity (or its spatial derivatives) are independent of position or direction
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Literally the same in all directions Used to describe the pressure of a gas
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Having uniform properties in like degree in all directions
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In wireless, a theoretical "unity" (0 dB) gain antenna used as a measurement reference Has the assumed characteristic of receiving or transmitting equally well in all directions A dipole antenna roughly approximates an isotropic antenna Back to top kHz Kilohertz, 1,000 Hertz, or one thousand cycles per second Back to top Lavalier Microphone A type of miniature microphone that is usually worn fastened to clothing somewhere near the user's mouth Also referred to as a clip-on or lapel microphone
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exhibiting the same property when looking in any given direction
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isotropous; having the same properties or characteristics along all axes (Physics); having no predefined axes (Zoology) sıfat
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Having uniform properties in all directions independent of the direction of load application
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Equal in all directions Isotropic scattering occurs when light is scattered equally over 4pi steradians Isotropic reflection, in contrast, usually refers to a surface that may have a directional preference, but one that does not depend on the azimuth of the incident vector
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Fiber directionality with uniform properties in all directions, independent of the direction of applied load
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Same in all directions; the isotropicity of space means that the outcome of an experiment performed on a closed system does not depend on the orientation of the closed system
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In general, pertaining to a state in which a quantity or spatial derivatives thereof are independent of direction Also called isotropous
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having identical values of a property in all crystallographic directions
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The material has no preferred direction of magnetic orientation, which allows magnetization in any direction
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Having properties that are the same regardless of the direction of measurement In the isotropic state, all directions are indistinguishable from each other See also anisotropic
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Having the same properties in all directions; specifically, equally elastic in all directions
Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada isotropic kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. isotropic kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan isotropic kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.