Advertisement

Advertisement

photoionization

[foh-toh-ahy-uh-nuh-zey-shuhn]

noun

Physics.
  1. the phenomenon in which the absorption of electromagnetic radiation by an atom in a gas induces the atom to emit a bound electron and thereby become ionized.



Discover More

Word History and Origins

Origin of photoionization1

First recorded in 1910–15; photo- + ionization ( def. )
Discover More

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

They examine loss by mechanisms like Jeans escape, hydrodynamic escape, stellar winds, impact erosion, photoionization and photodissociation.

Read more on Scientific American

Photoionization instability of the Fe K absorbing plasma in the neutron star transient AX J1745.6−2901.

Read more on Nature

Elias Burstein, one of the pioneers in the optical physics of solids, whose research into the photoionization of impurities in silicon helped pave the way for the development of silicon semiconductors, died June 17 at his home in Bryn Mawr, Pa. He was 99.

Read more on New York Times

For tens to hundreds of dollars, electrochemical or photoionization detection can notionally observe particular compounds or classes.

Read more on Nature

We have indirectly tested this possibility by producing a single, non-laser-cooled Mg ion with a kinetic energy of several electronvolts by means of isotope-selective photoionization, and sympathetically crystallizing it with a single, laser-cooled Mg ion in the presence of the He buffer gas.

Read more on Nature

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


photoinducedphotoisomerization