Home
3D
Stylish English
Comic Cartoon
Curly
Decorative
Dingbats
Dotted
Famous
Fire
Gothic
Groovy
Handwriting
Headline
more
Horror
Ice Snow
Modern
Outline
Russian
Sci Fi
Script
Valentine
Alien
Animals
Army Stencil
Asian
Bitmap Pixel
Black Letter
Blurred
Brush
Celtic Irish
Chalk Crayon
Christmas
Computer
Disney
Distorted
Easter
Fantasy
Fixed Width
Graffiti
Greek Roman
Halloween
Italic
LCD
Medieval
Mexican
Movies Tv
Old English
Old School
Pointed
Retro
Rock Stone
Rounded
School
Scratched
Serif
Square
Trash
Typewriter
USA
Various
Western
English to English Dictionary ⇛
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Definition of refraction
Thanks for using this online dictionary, we have been helping millions of people improve their use of the english language with its free online services. English definition of refraction is as below...
Refraction
(n.) The
change
in the
direction
of a ray of
light,
and,
consequently,
in the
apparent
position
of a
heavenly
body from which it
emanates,
arising
from its
passage
through
the
earth's
atmosphere;
-- hence
distinguished
as
atmospheric
refraction,
or
astronomical
refraction..
Lern More About Refraction
☛ Wiki Definition of Refraction
☛ Wiki Article of Refraction
☛ Google Meaning of Refraction
☛ Google Search for Refraction
Refraction
::
Refraction
(n.) The act of
refracting,
or the state of being
refracted..
Refractometer
::
Refractometer
(n.) A
contrivance
for
exhibiting
and
measuring
the
refraction
of
light.
Refraction
::
Refraction
(n.) The
change
in the
direction
of ray of
light,
heat, or the like, when it
enters
obliquely
a
medium
of a
different
density
from that
through
which it has
previously
moved..
Refraction
::
Refraction
(n.) The
correction
which is to be
deducted
from the
apparent
altitude
of a
heavenly
body on
account
of
atmospheric
refraction,
in order to
obtain
the true
altitude..
Uniaxial
::
Uniaxial
(a.)
Having
but one optic axis, or line of no
double
refraction..
Refraction
::
Refraction
(n.) The
change
in the
direction
of a ray of
light,
and,
consequently,
in the
apparent
position
of a
heavenly
body from which it
emanates,
arising
from its
passage
through
the
earth's
atmosphere;
-- hence
distinguished
as
atmospheric
refraction,
or
astronomical
refraction..
Refractor
::
Refractor
(n.) A
refracting
telescope,
in which the image to be
viewed
is
formed
by the
refraction
of light in
passing
through
a
convex
lens..
Spectrum
::
Spectrum
(n.) The
several
colored
and other rays of which light is
composed,
separated
by the
refraction
of a prism or other
means,
and
observed
or
studied
either
as
spread
out on a
screen,
by
direct
vision,
by
photography,
or
otherwise.
See
Illust.
of
Light,
and
Spectroscope..
Dioptrics
::
Dioptrics
(n.) The
science
of the
refraction
of
light;
that part of
geometrical
optics
which
treats
of the laws of the
refraction
of light in
passing
from one
medium
into
another,
or
through
different
mediums,
as air,
water,
or
glass,
and esp.
through
different
lenses;
--
distinguished
from
catoptrics,
which
refers
to
reflected
light..
Halo
::
Halo (n.) A
luminous
circle,
usually
prismatically
colored,
round the sun or moon, and
supposed
to be
caused
by the
refraction
of light
through
crystals
of ice in the
atmosphere.
Connected
with halos there are often white
bands,
crosses,
or
arches,
resulting
from the same
atmospheric
conditions..
Anaclastic
::
Anaclastic
(a.)
Produced
by the
refraction
of
light,
as seen
through
water;
as,
anaclastic
curves..
Diacaustic
::
Diacaustic
(a.)
Pertaining
to, or
possessing
the
properties
of, a
species
of
caustic
curves
formed
by
refraction.
See
Caustic
surface,
under
Caustic..
Stereoscopic
::
Stereoscope
(n.) An
optical
instrument
for
giving
to
pictures
the
appearance
of solid
forms,
as seen in
nature.
It
combines
in one,
through
a
bending
of the rays of
light,
two
pictures,
taken for the
purpose
from
points
of view a
little
way
apart.
It is
furnished
with two
eyeglasses,
and by
refraction
or
reflection
the
pictures
are
superimposed,
so as to
appear
as one to the
observer..
Catadioptrical
::
Catadioptrical
(a.)
Pertaining
to,
produced
by, or
involving,
both the
reflection
and
refraction
of
light;
as, a
catadioptric
light..
Neurine
::
Neurine
(n.) A
poisonous
organic
base (a
ptomaine)
formed
in the
decomposition
of
protagon
with
boiling
baryta
water,
and in the
putrefraction
of
proteid
matter.
It was for a long time
considered
identical
with
choline,
a
crystalline
body
originally
obtained
from bile.
Chemically,
however,
choline
is
oxyethyl-trimethyl-ammonium
hydroxide,
while
neurine
is
vinyl-trimethyl-ammonium
hydroxide..
Refractive
::
Refractive
(a.)
Serving
or
having
power to
refract,
or turn from a
direct
course;
pertaining
to
refraction;
as,
refractive
surfaces;
refractive
powers..
Iceland Spar
::
Iceland
spar () A
transparent
variety
of
calcite,
the best of which is
obtained
in
Iceland.
It is used for the
prisms
of the
polariscope,
because
of its
strong
double
refraction.
Cf.
Calcite..
Dioptrical
::
Dioptrical
(a.) Of or
pertaining
to
dioptrics;
assisting
vision
by means of the
refraction
of
light;
refractive;
as, the
dioptric
system;
a
dioptric
glass or
telescope..
Argument
::
Argument
(n.) The
quantity
on which
another
quantity
in a table
depends;
as, the
altitude
is the
argument
of the
refraction..
Diacaustic
::
Diacaustic
(n.) That which burns by
refraction,
as a
double
convex
lens, or the sun's rays
concentrated
by such a lens,
sometimes
used as a
cautery..
Random Fonts
Most Popular
Privacy Policy
GDPR Policy
Terms & Conditions
Contact Us