According to Wikipedia:
"Thermoluminescence is a form of luminescence that is exhibited by certain crystalline materials, such as some minerals, when previously absorbed energy from electromagnetic radiation or other ionizing radiation is re-emitted as light upon heating of the material."
You can read more about this phenomenon, below.
it mean a person to be beloved
Penatude does not mean anything.
what does he telegraphed his motion mean
v,.m.
Nothing. You probably mean cantilever.
Rodd J. May has written: 'Thermoluminescence dating of Hawaiian basalt' -- subject(s): Basalt, Thermoluminescence dating
J. M. Luthra has written: 'Thermoluminescence trapping parameters in natural calcite' -- subject(s): Calcite, Thermoluminescence
Charles Ke Fitzsimmons has written: 'Measurement of environmental gamma exposure by thermoluminescence dosimetry' -- subject(s): Thermoluminescence
R. Chen has written: 'Thermally and optically stimulated luminescence' -- subject(s): Optically stimulated luminescence dating, Thermoluminescence, Thermoluminescence dosimetry, SCIENCE / Molecular Physics
Shine Way Hwang has written: 'Thermoluminescence dating'
Radiocarbon dating measures the decay of carbon-14 to determine the age of organic materials up to about 50,000 years old, while thermoluminescence dating measures the trapped electrons in soil or pottery to date inorganic materials up to hundreds of thousands of years old. Radiocarbon dating is limited by the availability of organic material, while thermoluminescence dating is limited by the environment in which the artifacts were buried.
Keith Stammers has written: 'Contributions to the technique of dating burned rocks by thermoluminescence'
S. W. S. McKeever has written: 'Thermoluminescence dosimetry materials'
My guess is that it dates back several thousand years. I honestly don't know, as I literally only heard the term today
G.C Nanson has written: 'Comparison of thermoluminescence and radiocarbon age-determination from Late-Pleistocene alluvial deposits near Sydney, Australia'
Paul H. Benoit has written: 'The thermal and radiation exposure history of lunar meteorites' -- subject(s): Meteorites, Lunar surface, Thermoluminescence
There are a few causes of luminescence, but one of the major causes is bioluminescent bacteria. They can be found independently or in a symbiotic relationship with organisms around the world. The other types are luminescence is chemiluminescence, electroluminescence, electrochemiluminescense, photoluminescense, thermoluminescence, and thermoluminescense.