dewar

listen to the pronunciation of dewar
English - Turkish
termos
dewar flask
termos
dewar vessel
Dewar damar
Turkish - Turkish
Zerdüştiler'de yargıç
English - English
A glass or metal double-walled flask for holding a liquid without much loss or gain of heat; a vacuum bottle or thermos. Generally used for scientific purposes and in particular for cryogenic work
A vacuum flask; a vessel which keeps its contents hotter or cooler than their environment without the need to modify the pressure, by interposing an evacuated region to provide thermal insulation between the contents and the environment
The Dewar is a thermos-like container used to store protein samples and keep them frozen until the liquid nitrogen thaws
A double-walled vessel for holding liquid Nitrogen (LN2) used to cool the detector chip RÖNTEC UHV dewars are constructed with multiple walls and vacuum chambers to provide excellent thermal isolation and low LN2 boil off rates
small container (less than 25 gallons) used for temporary storage or handling of cryogenic liquids
–A "thermos bottle" that allows astronomical detectors to be cooled down to extremely low temperatures, where they operate most efficiently
vacuum flask that holds liquid air or helium for scientific experiments
A double-walled flask with a vacuum between the walls that are silvered on the inside, used specifically for the storage of liquified gases
Scottish chemist and physicist noted for his work in cryogenics and his invention of the Dewar flask (1842-1923)
Vacuum flask
CCDs operate at their optimum when cold Dewars are made for just that purpose Astronomers want only optimized equipment to collect the most light possible from distant objects For the CCD to run at its best, it needs to be cold--as cold as liquid nitrogen (77 Kelvin/-321°F/-196°C) CCDs generate electrons just from being warm (by warm, we mean room temperature), without exposure to light Also, the chamber where the CCD resides needs to be under vacuum The CCD will be below the freezing point of water, once cooled Water vapor in the atmosphere would condense on the surface of the device (frost!), if the atmospheric air was not removed, and affect the images
thermos container to retain liquid gases, such as helium, at low temperatures (after Sir Janner Dewar)
Dewar flask
A type of double-walled vacuum flask with silver lining
Dewar flasks
plural form of Dewar flask
Dewar vessel
A type of double-walled vacuum flask with silver lining
Dewar vessels
plural form of Dewar vessel
Dewar flask
An insulated container used especially to store liquefied gases, having a double wall with a vacuum between the walls and silvered surfaces facing the vacuum
dewar flask
vacuum flask that holds liquid air or helium for scientific experiments
dewar vessel
A double-walled glass vessel for holding liquid air, etc
dewar vessel
having the space between the walls exhausted so as to prevent conduction of heat, and sometimes having the glass silvered to prevent absorption of radiant heat; called also, according to the particular shape, Dewar bulb, Dewar tube, etc
Dewars
plural of Dewar
Sir James Dewar
born Sept. 20, 1842, Kincardine-on-Forth, Scot. died March 27, 1923, London, Eng. British chemist and physicist. In 1891 he built a machine for producing liquid oxygen in quantity. His Dewar flask for storing liquefied gases a double-walled flask has insulating vacuum between the inner and outer walls became essential in low-temperature scientific work; its principle is used in the Thermos bottle. Dewar was the first to liquefy and solidify hydrogen, and his 1905 discovery that cooled charcoal can help create high vacuums was useful in atomic physics
dewar
Favorites