Primary dispersion halo and secondary dispersion halo.
the three types of dispersion are: 1. Intermodal Dispersion 2. Chromatic Dispersion 3. Waveguide Dispersion
That's " dispersion ".
Dispersion
Dispersion is due to refraction. In optics, dispersion is a phenomenon that causes the separation of a wave into spectral components with different wavelengths, due to a dependence of the wave's speed on its wavelength. It is most often described in light waves, but it may happen to any kind of wave that interacts with a medium or can be confined to a waveguide, such as sound waves. Dispersion is sometimes called chromatic dispersion to emphasize its wavelength-dependent nature. There are generally two sources of dispersion: material dispersion, which comes from a frequency-dependent response of a material to waves; and waveguide dispersion, which occurs when the speed of a wave in a waveguide depends on its frequency. The transverse modes for waves confined laterally within a finite waveguide generally have different speeds (and field patterns) depending upon the frequency (that is, on the relative size of the wave, the wavelength, compared the size of the waveguide). Dispersion in a waveguide used for telecommunication results in signal degradation, because the varying delay in arrival time between different components of a signal "smears out" the signal in time. A similar phenomenon is modal dispersion, caused by a waveguide having multiple modes at a given frequency, each with a different speed. A special case of this is polarization mode dispersion (PMD), which comes from a superposition of two modes that travel at different speeds due to random imperfections that break the symmetry of the waveguide.
dispersion of water waves generally refers to frequency dispersion, which means that waves of different wavelengths travel at different phase speeds. Water waves, in this context, are waves propagating on the water surface, and forced by gravity and surface tension.
the three types of dispersion are: 1. Intermodal Dispersion 2. Chromatic Dispersion 3. Waveguide Dispersion
the three types of dispersion are: 1. Intermodal Dispersion 2. Chromatic Dispersion 3. Waveguide Dispersion
Cirrostratus.
That's " dispersion ".
random, clumping and uniform
Clumped,uniform,and random
Dispersion
London Dispersion Fores, as C2H4 is Non Polar...
There is no such thing as dispersion in physics. There is a such thing as depression and dispersion of light by prisms. Dispersion is the separation of visible light into its different colors.
The Black Halos ended in 2009.
It depends which version of Halo you mean. I have 3 different Halos on my ipod.
LiF - dispersion force and ionic bonding BeF_2 - dispersion force and ionic bonding BF_3 - dispersion force CF_4 - dispersion force NF_3 - dispersion force and diople-diople interaction OF_2 - dispersion force and diople-diople interaction F_2 - dispersion force They all have at least dispersion force