(isim) çatlama

listen to the pronunciation of (isim) çatlama
Türkisch - Englisch
cracking
Very, usually associated with praise
You use cracking to describe something you think is very good or exciting. It's a cracking novel = great, brilliant
Illegally gaining entry to a computer or computer network in order to do harm
A process in which molecules are cracked, e g , the oil-refining process in which heavy oils are broken down into hydrocarbons of lower molecular weight by heat or with a catalyst Cracker A unit in an oil refinery in which heavy fractions from crude oil are broken down (cracked), using a catalyst, into lighter distillates
The process of breaking down the larger, heavier and more complex hydrocarbon molecules into simpler and lighter molecules, thus increasing the gasoline yield from crude oil Cracking is done by application of heat and pressure, and in modern time the use of a catalytic agent
The thermal decomposition of a substance, especially that of crude petroleum in order to produce petrol / gasoline
defect of a coating film resulting in breaks in its surface and/or in its depth It can be caused by: - application of coats thicker than specified, - movements of the substrate which the coating film is not able to compensate for, - excess of curing agent resulting in too fast drying and/or too brittle dry film, - some solvent still being present in UV coatings when they are passed under the UV lamps for immediate curing CRATERING: see CISSING
petroleum refining in which large-molecule liquid hydrocarbons are converted to small-molecule, lower-boiling liquids or gases; the liquids leave the reaction vessel as unfinished gasoline, kerosene, and gas oils At the same time, certain unstable, more reactive molecules combine into larger molecules to form tar or coke bottoms The cracking reaction may be carried out under heat and pressure alone (thermal cracking), or in the presence of a catalyst (catalytic cracking)
Enjoyable
the act of cracking something
n The act of breaking into a computer system; what a {cracker} does Contrary to widespread myth, this does not usually involve some mysterious leap of hackerly brilliance, but rather persistence and the dogged repetition of a handful of fairly well-known tricks that exploit common weaknesses in the security of target systems Accordingly, most crackers are only mediocre hackers
A process in which relatively heavy HYDROCARBONs are broken up by heat into lighter products (as gasoline)
The refining process of breaking down the larger, heavier, and more complex hydrocarbon molecules into simpler and lighter molecules
a process whereby large molecules of petrolum components are broken down to smaller ones by breaking carbon-carbon bonds
The process of overcoming a security measure Cracking a key means an attempt to recover the key's value; cracking some ciphertext means an attempt to recover the corresponding plaintext
The production of lighter oils by breaking down heavy oil molecules This process increases the yield of gasoline form crude oil
Refinery process whereby large, heavy, complex hydrocarbon molecules are broken down into simpler and lighter molecules in order to derive a variety of fuel products