Definition of Electrodynamic

1. a. Pertaining to the movements or force of electric or galvanic currents; dependent on electric force.

Definition of Electrodynamic

1. Adjective. (physics) that involves the movement or electric charges ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Electrodynamic

1. [adj]

Medical Definition of Electrodynamic

1. Pertaining to the movements or force of electric or galvanic currents; dependent on electric force. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998)

Lexicographical Neighbors of Electrodynamic

electrodermal response
electrodermatome
electrodes
electrodesiccation
electrodiagnosis
electrodiagnostic
electrodiagnostically
electrodialyses
electrodialysis
electrodialytic
electrodiffusion
electrodiffusional
electrodiffusive
electrodisintegration
electrodispersion
electrodynamic (current term)
electrodynamic force
electrodynamical
electrodynamically
electrodynamics
electrodynamometer
electrodynamometers
electroed
electroeluted
electroelution
electroencephalogram
electroencephalograms
electroencephalograph
electroencephalographic

Literary usage of Electrodynamic

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Hermann Von Helmholtz by Leo Koenigsberger (1906)
"According to C. Neumann, and on the hypothesis of Faraday and Clerk Maxwell, which assumes that electrodynamic action at a distance is caused by changes in ..."

2. A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism by Éleuthère Élie Nicolas Mascart, Jules François Joubert (1883)
"electrodynamic UNIT OF INTENSITY.—If, with Ampere, we directly make A=i in formula (13), the strength of the current will be expressed as a function of a ..."

3. Electrical Meters: Prepared in the Extension Division of the University of by Cyril Methodius Jansky (1917)
"electrodynamic Instruments.—The force between two conductors carrying electric currents is called electrodynamic attraction or repulsion. ..."

4. A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism by James Clerk Maxwell (1892)
"... resultant is called by Ampere the directrix of the electrodynamic action. It is evident from the equation, that the force whose components are —j- ds, ..."

5. History of the Inductive Sciences, from the Earliest to the Present Time by William Whewell (1894)
"Applications of electrodynamic Discoveries. The great series of discoveries of which I have had to speak have been applied in many important ways to the ..."

6. Elements of the Theory of the Newtonian Potential Function by Benjamin Osgood Peirce (1902)
"For convenience of reference I have followed Professor Webster's order, and in part his notation in the brief treatment of the electrodynamic Potential ..."

7. Aether and Matter: A Development of the Dynamical Relations of the Aether to by Sir Joseph Larmor (1900)
"... CHAPTER VII IEW OF THE electrodynamic EQUATIONS OF A MATERIAL MEDIUM Exact Dynamical Relations 58. IN each case only one relation typical of the set of ..."

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