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spectroscopy

/spek-tros-kuh-pee, spek-truh-skoh-pee/US // spɛkˈtrɒs kə pi, ˈspɛk trəˌskoʊ pi //UK // (spɛkˈtrɒskəpɪ) //

光谱学,谱学,摄谱学,光谱

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the science that deals with the use of the spectroscope and with spectrum analysis.

Examples

  • About 600 minerals are confirmed to glow in the dark, says Glen Waychunas, a mineralogist who studies fluorescence and spectroscopy at the California Institute of Technology.

  • It would use radar and near-infrared spectroscopy to peer below the planet’s thick clouds and observe the geology and topography of its surface.

  • It will use spectroscopy to find out what the soil is made of, measure magnetic fields on the ground, and track weather changes like temperature and winds.

  • One of the most fruitful fields for this instrument is undoubtedly stellar spectroscopy.

  • Oscar Brasch has within the last few years studied spectroscopy in relation to the alkaloids and organic poisons.

  • It is to Sir William Huggins, however, that we are indebted for the application of the principle to spectroscopy.

  • In the earliest days of spectroscopy the spectra of the stars were classified according to their visual spectra.

  • The basis of spectroscopy is the prism, which separates sunlight into seven colors and projects a band of light called a spectrum.