¿Cómo quieres hacer uso de PONS.com?

¿Ya estás suscrito a PONS Pur o a PONS Translate Pro?

PONS con publicidad

Visita PONS.com como acostumbras, con seguimiento de anuncios y publicidad

Encontrarás más detalles sobre el seguimiento en Protección de datos y en Configuración de privacidad.

PONS Pur

Sin publicidad de terceros

Sin seguimiento de anuncios

Suscríbete aquí

Si ya disfrutas de una cuenta de usuario gratuita en PONS.com, suscríbete a PONS Pur .

We process your data to deliver content or advertisements and measure the delivery of such content or advertisements to extract insights about our website. We share this information with our partners on the basis of consent and legitimate interest. You may exercise your right to consent or object to a legitimate interest, based on a specific purpose below or at a partner level in the link under each purpose. These choices will be signaled to our vendors participating in the Transparency and Consent Framework.

Cookies, device or similar online identifiers (e.g. login-based identifiers, randomly assigned identifiers, network based identifiers) together with other information (e.g. browser type and information, language, screen size, supported technologies etc.) can be stored or read on your device to recognise it each time it connects to an app or to a website, for one or several of the purposes presented here.

Advertising and content can be personalised based on your profile. Your activity on this service can be used to build or improve a profile about you for personalised advertising and content. Advertising and content performance can be measured. Reports can be generated based on your activity and those of others. Your activity on this service can help develop and improve products and services.

schwörs
Elektron
elec·tron [ɪˈlektrɒn, ingl. am. -trɑ:n] SUST.
electron
Elektron nt <-s, -tro̱·nen>
elec·tron ˈmicro·scope SUST.
electron microscope
eˈlec·tron tube SUST.
electron tube
elec·tron ac·ˈcel·era·tor SUST. CIENC. NAT.
electron accelerator
eˈlec·tron beam SUST. CIENC. NAT.
electron beam
Elektronenstrahl m <-(e)s, -en>
eˈlec·tron charge SUST. FÍS.
electron charge
Elementarladung f <-, -en>
elec·tron ˈpair bond SUST. QUÍM.
electron pair bond
elec·tron bind·ing ˈen·er·gy SUST. FÍS.
electron binding energy
scan·ning elec·tron ˈmi·cro·scope SUST.
Entrada de OpenDict
electron diffraction SUST.
electron diffraction FÍS.
electron microscope (EM) SUST.
electron microscope (EM)
energised electron
energised electron
angeregtes Elektron (Elektron auf einem höheren Energieniveau)
electron pair
electron pair
electron deficit (oxidised)
electron deficit
Elektronenentzug (oxidiert)
electron carrier SUST.
electron carrier
scanning electron microscope (SEM) SUST.
transmission electron microscope (TEM) SUST.
electron transport chain SUST.
electron transport chain
non-cyclic electron flow SUST.
non-cyclic electron flow
final electron acceptor SUST.
final electron acceptor
PONS OpenDict

¿Quieres añadir alguna palabra, frase o traducción?

Envíanos una nueva entrada para el PONS OpenDict. La redacción de PONS revisará vuestras sugerencias e incluirá los resultados en el diccionario abierto.

Agregar una entrada
Ejemplos de uso en el diccionario PONS (revisados por la redacción)
Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)
Throughout his career, his specialties were photochemistry, electron diffraction, magnetic resonance, solid state physics, and neurochemistry.
en.wikipedia.org
The structure of acetyl cyanide was determined through the joint use of electron diffraction intensities and rotational constants.
en.wikipedia.org
Although this is counterintuitive, the prediction is correct; in particular, electron diffraction and neutron diffraction are well understood and widely used in science and engineering.
en.wikipedia.org
Optical microscope and electron microscope are extensively used in micrography or metallography and are indispensable.
en.wikipedia.org
Electron microscope showed the red-brown form as having long, parallel nanorods with a diameter between 0.34 nm and 0.47 nm.
en.wikipedia.org
Ejemplos de uso procedentes de internet (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)
[...]
Work centers on memory elements based on the transfer of individual electrons between metal electrodes and on the memory effect of semiconductor nano-clusters in SiO & sup2; films.
www.nanotechnology.de
[...]
Schwerpunkt der Arbeiten bilden Speicherelemente, die durch Ladungstransfer einzelner Elektronen zwischen metallischen Bereichen realisiert werden oder die Speichereigenschaften von Halbleiternanoclustern in dünnen SiO & sup2; - Schichten nutzen.
[...]
How strong these fields are in a fully ionised plasma of protons and electrons, has now been calculated by Prof. Schlickeiser, specifically for the gas densities and temperatures that occurred in the plasmas of the early universe.
[...]
aktuell.ruhr-uni-bochum.de
[...]
Wie stark diese Felder in einem vollständig ionisierten Plasma aus Protonen und Elektronen sind, hat Prof. Schlickeiser nun berechnet, und zwar für die Gasdichten und -temperaturen, die in den Plasmen des frühen Universums vorkamen.
[...]
[...]
Dusty plasmas are composed of electrons, positive ions, neutral atoms, and dust grains that are negatively or positively charged.
[...]
aktuell.ruhr-uni-bochum.de
[...]
Staubige Plasmen bestehen üblicherweise aus Elektronen, positiv geladenen Ionen, neutralen Atomen und Staubkörnchen, die negativ oder positiv geladen sind.
[...]
[...]
To understand why superconductors conduct electric current without losses, a theoretical model cannot look at each individual electron.
[...]
www.cui.uni-hamburg.de
[...]
Um zu verstehen, wie beispielsweise Supraleiter entstehen, die Strom verlustfrei leiten, kann ein theoretisches Modell jedoch nicht jedes einzelne Elektron eines Festkörpers individuell betrachten.
[...]
[...]
The galactic cosmic radiation on the other hand is made of atomic nuclei and electrons that are accelerated in the process of a super nova to almost light speed.
[...]
www.ieap.uni-kiel.de
[...]
Die galaktische kosmische Strahlung besteht dagegen aus Atomkernen und Elektronen, die im Verlauf einer Supernova auf nahezu Lichtgeschwindigkeit beschleunigt wurden.
[...]