Definitionn. the phenomenon of light emission by a body as its temperature is raised
Last update: October 15, 2015
0
Bunsen, and its application to the detection and the characterization of elements when in a state of incandescence, rapidly led to the discovery of many hitherto unknown elements. [Please select]
0
"Lights," commanded Master Freddie; and the butler pressed a button, and a flood of brilliant incandescence streamed from above, half-blinding Jurgis. [Please select]
0
If sufficiently intense, it jumps any gap in the secondary circuit, heating the intermediate air to a state of incandescence. [Please select]
0
No arc would be formed unless the carbons were first touched to start incandescence. [Please select]
0
Incandescence, A conductor heated up by a current so it will Electric. [Please select]
0
It became luminous, as though the ghosts of the ancient days of incandescence had revisited the calendar. [Please select]
0
In the heating of solid bodies to incandescence, this non-visual emission is the necessary basis of the visual. [Please select]
0
Its higher levels were dense with clouds, from which a hot rain fell towards the rocks below, to be converted again into steam long before it reached their incandescence. [Please select]
0
A man with a volcanic incandescence within him such as was now afire in Rose, is utterly useless until it subsides--totally incapable, at least, of any sort of creative or imaginative work. [Please select]
Do you have a better example in your mind? Please submit your sentence!