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adiabatic

adjective

No English definition recorded for this entry.

L29467 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˌeɪ.dɪəˈbæt.ɪk/ / /ˌæd.ɪəˈbæt.ɪk/ / /ˌeɪ.daɪ.əˈbæt.ɪk/

adj

Etymology: 19th-century coinage (introduced by W. J. M. Rankine in the 1860s) based on Ancient Greek ἀδιάβατος (adiábatos, “impassable”), used of terrain (rivers, forests) by Xenophon, from ἀ- (a-, “not”) + διά (diá, “through”) + βατός (batós, “passable”), from βαίνω (baínō, “to go”).

  1. Without gain or loss of heat (and thus with no change in entropy, in the quasistatic approximation).

    The line drawn on the indicator diagram in the latter case has been named by Professor Rankine an Adiabatic line, because it is defined by the condition that heat is not allowed to pass through (διαβαίνειν) the vessel which confines the substance.

    Talk of dynamic compression and adiabatic gradients didn't carry as much weight as the certainty of its conscious intent.

  2. Involving the slow change of the Hamiltonian of a system from its initial value to a final value.

    In this section we examine the limiting cases when T is very small (sudden change) and very large (adiabatic change).

noun

Etymology: 19th-century coinage (introduced by W. J. M. Rankine in the 1860s) based on Ancient Greek ἀδιάβατος (adiábatos, “impassable”), used of terrain (rivers, forests) by Xenophon, from ἀ- (a-, “not”) + διά (diá, “through”) + βατός (batós, “passable”), from βαίνω (baínō, “to go”).

  1. An adiabatic curve or graph
adiabatic — meaning, definition (adjective) · Vinony