Definition of Megadynes

1. Noun. (plural of megadyne) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Megadynes

1. megadyne [n] - See also: megadyne

Lexicographical Neighbors of Megadynes

megadevelopers
megadevelopment
megadevelopments
megadolichocolon
megadollar
megadollars
megadont
megadontia
megadontism
megadose
megadoses
megadosing
megadrought
megadroughts
megadyne
megadynes (current term)
megaelectron volt
megaelectron volts
megaelectronvolt
megaelectronvolts
megaesophagus
megafan
megafans
megafarad
megafarm
megafarms
megafauna
megafaunae
megafaunal
megafaunas

Literary usage of Megadynes

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

1. A Collection of Mathematical and Physical Tables from A Course of by Harold Whiting (1892)
"Reduction of Mercurial Centimetres to megadynes per gq.ctu. к ОКО. cm .0 .1 .2 .3 .4 .5 .6 .7 .8 .9 Dif. 70 0.9327 0.9340 0.9354 0.9367 0.9380 0.9393 0.9407 ..."

2. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for by American Philosophical Society (1916)
"... the resonant frequency /0 was 958 >-', the damping coefficient A, 245 hyperbolic radians per second, the force constant A, 5.49 megadynes per ..."

3. Geology by Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin, Rollin D. Salisbury (1904)
"It assumes that whenever the interior heat raised any constituent of the interior matter above its fusing-point under the Pressures in Million megadynes. ..."

4. A College Text-book of Geology by Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin, Rollin D. Salisbury (1909)
"Pressures in million megadynes. Temperatures in degrees C. 3.1, , 32000 .6 Fig. ... The vertical divisions represent both pressure in megadynes per sq. cm., ..."

5. Physics: Advanced Course by George Frederick Barker (1893)
"Let the temperature of this air be raised 273°; its volume will be doubled, the piston will be raised one meter, and so will do 10000 ineter- megadynes (ie, ..."

6. A Text-book of Physics, Largely Experimental: Including the Harvard College by Edwin Herbert Hall, Joseph Young Bergen (1903)
"To find, approximately, the pressure in centimeters of mercury column, multiply the pressure in megadynes per square centimeters by 75. ..."

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