Dispersion
Look up dispersion in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Dispersion may refer to:
- Dispersion (finance), a measure for the statistical distribution of portfolio returns
- Statistical dispersion, a quantifiable variation of measurements of differing members of a population
- Index of dispersion, a normalized measure of the dispersion of a probability distribution
- Price dispersion, a variation in prices across sellers of the same item
- Wage dispersion, the amount of variation in wages encountered in an economy
- Hellenistic Judaism#Hellenism, Jewish communities who lived amongst the gentiles in the first century CE
Sciences
- Biological dispersal, the distribution of animals, spores, fruits and their seeds, etc.
- Dispersion (chemistry), a system in which particles are dispersed in a continuous phase of a different composition
- Dispersion (geology), a process whereby sodic soil disperses when exposed to water
- Dispersion (materials science), the fraction of atoms of a material exposed to the surface
- Velocity dispersion, the statistical variation of velocities about the mean velocity for a group of astronomical objects
Physics
- The dependence of wave velocity on frequency or wavelength:
- Dispersion (optics), for light waves
- Dispersion (water waves)
- Acoustic dispersion, for sound waves
- Dispersion relation, the mathematical description of dispersion in a system
- Modal dispersion, spreading of signals in multimode fibers and waveguides by a distortion mechanism
- Polarization mode dispersion, a form of modal dispersion
- Dielectric dispersion, the dependence of the permittivity of a dielectric material on the frequency of an applied electric field
- Dispersive mass transfer, in fluid dynamics, the spreading of mass from areas of high to low concentration
- Atmospheric dispersion modeling, mathematical simulation of how air pollutants disperse in the ambient atmosphere
- London dispersion force, an instantaneous induced dipole-induced dipole
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.