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hysteresis
[his-tuh-ree-sis]
noun
the lag in response exhibited by a body in reacting to changes in the forces, especially magnetic forces, affecting it.
the phenomenon exhibited by a system, often a ferromagnetic or imperfectly elastic material, in which the reaction of the system to changes is dependent upon its past reactions to change.
hysteresis
/ ˌhɪstəˈrɛtɪk, ˌhɪstəˈriːsɪs /
noun
physics the lag in a variable property of a system with respect to the effect producing it as this effect varies, esp the phenomenon in which the magnetic flux density of a ferromagnetic material lags behind the changing external magnetic field strength
hysteresis
The dependence of the state of a system on the history of its state. For example, the magnetization of a material such as iron depends not only on the magnetic field it is exposed to but on previous exposures to magnetic fields. This “memory” of previous exposure to magnetism is the working principle in audio tape and hard disk devices. Deformations in the shape of substances that last after the deforming force has been removed, as well as phenomena such as supercooling, are examples of hysteresis.
Other Word Forms
- hysteretic adjective
- hysteresial adjective
- hysteretically adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of hysteresis1
Word History and Origins
Origin of hysteresis1
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