- Radcliffe, Daniel (British actor)
Daniel Radcliffe is a British actor best known for his on-screen portrayal of the boy wizard Harry Potter in a series of blockbuster films. Radcliffe later was noted for seeking out unconventional roles. In 2024 he won a Tony Award for his performance in Merrily We Roll Along. Radcliffe began
- Radcliffe, Daniel Jacob (British actor)
Daniel Radcliffe is a British actor best known for his on-screen portrayal of the boy wizard Harry Potter in a series of blockbuster films. Radcliffe later was noted for seeking out unconventional roles. In 2024 he won a Tony Award for his performance in Merrily We Roll Along. Radcliffe began
- Radcliffe, Paula (British distance runner)
Paula Radcliffe is a British distance runner who set world records in the marathon. Radcliffe was born into an athletic family. Her great-aunt Charlotte Radcliffe won an Olympic silver medal in the 4 × 100-metre freestyle swimming relay in 1920, and Paula cheered on her father, a recreational
- Radcliffe, Sir Cyril (British colonial official)
Boundary Commission: …League and was chaired by Sir Cyril Radcliffe.
- Radcliffe, Ted (American baseball player)
Ted Radcliffe was an American baseball player who was a pitcher and catcher in the Negro leagues. Radcliffe was known for his strong throwing arm and, later, for his expansive storytelling. Radcliffe was raised in Mobile, Alabama, and he and his brother Alec, also later a Negro league player,
- Radcliffe, Theodore Roosevelt (American baseball player)
Ted Radcliffe was an American baseball player who was a pitcher and catcher in the Negro leagues. Radcliffe was known for his strong throwing arm and, later, for his expansive storytelling. Radcliffe was raised in Mobile, Alabama, and he and his brother Alec, also later a Negro league player,
- Radcliffe, Thomas (governor of Ireland)
Thomas Radcliffe, 3rd earl of Sussex was an English lord lieutenant of Ireland who suppressed a rebellion of the Roman Catholics in the far north of England in 1569. He was the first governor of Ireland to attempt, to any considerable extent, enforcement of English authority beyond the Pale
- Radcliffe, William (English inventor)
William Radcliffe was an English inventor who was especially known for his innovations to power looms. Radcliffe was the son of a weaver, and in 1789 he set up his own spinning and weaving business in Stockport. His name is principally linked to the dressing (i.e., starching) machine, actually
- Radcliffe-Brown, A.R. (British anthropologist)
A.R. Radcliffe-Brown was an English social anthropologist of the 20th century who developed a systematic framework of concepts and generalizations relating to the social structures of preindustrial societies and their functions. He is widely known for his theory of functionalism and his role in the
- Radcliffe-Brown, Alfred Reginald (British anthropologist)
A.R. Radcliffe-Brown was an English social anthropologist of the 20th century who developed a systematic framework of concepts and generalizations relating to the social structures of preindustrial societies and their functions. He is widely known for his theory of functionalism and his role in the
- Radclyffe-Hall, Marguerite (British author)
Radclyffe Hall was an English writer whose novel The Well of Loneliness (1928) created a scandal and was banned for a time in Britain for its treatment of lesbianism. Hall was educated at King’s College, London, and then attended school in Germany. She began her literary career by writing verses,
- Raddall, Thomas Head (Canadian author)
Thomas Head Raddall was an English-Canadian novelist, who accurately depicted the history, manners, and idiom of Nova Scotians. Raddall immigrated to Nova Scotia with his family in 1913 after his father, a military officer, was transferred to Halifax. The younger Raddall was briefly employed as a
- Raddatz, Alexander (German-French mathematician)
Alexandre Grothendieck was a German French mathematician who was awarded the Fields Medal in 1966 for his work in algebraic geometry. After studies at the University of Montpellier (France) and a year at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris, Grothendieck received his doctorate from the University
- Radding, Charles (American geneticist)
Matthew Meselson: …Meselson, along with American geneticist Charles Radding, proposed a revised model of genetic recombination that accounted for the formation of an asymmetric heteroduplex; the model was known as the Meselson-Radding model. Meselson’s later work concentrated on the anomalous evolutionary success of bdelloid rotifers, a type of invertebrate that reproduces solely…
- Rade (people)
Vietnam: Languages: …peoples—such as the Rade (Rhade), Jarai, Chru, and Roglai—speak Austronesian languages, linking them to the Cham, Malay, and Indonesian peoples; others—including the Bru, Pacoh, Katu, Cua, Hre, Rengao
- Rade, Marin de (Spanish friar)
Cathay: …until the Spanish Augustinian friar Marin de Rade, in 1575, and the Jesuit Matteo Ricci, in 1607, recorded the fact when they proved that China could be reached by following Marco Polo’s land route across Central Asia.
- Rade, Paul Martin (German theologian)
Christianity: Theological and humanitarian motivations: …German Protestant theologians, such as Paul Martin Rade (1857–1940) of Marburg. The basic idea of the Social Gospel—i.e., the emphasis on the social-ethical tasks of the church—gained widespread influence within the ecumenical movement and especially affected Christian world missions. In many respects modern economic and other forms of aid to…
- Radegonde, Sainte (Merovingian queen)
St. Radegunda ; feast day August 13) was the queen of the Merovingian king Chlotar I, who left her husband to become a nun and later founded a monastery at Poitiers. She was one of the first of the Merovingian saints. A Thuringian princess, Radegunda was captured about 531 by Chlotar I during an
- Radegund, St. (Merovingian queen)
St. Radegunda ; feast day August 13) was the queen of the Merovingian king Chlotar I, who left her husband to become a nun and later founded a monastery at Poitiers. She was one of the first of the Merovingian saints. A Thuringian princess, Radegunda was captured about 531 by Chlotar I during an
- Radegunda, St. (Merovingian queen)
St. Radegunda ; feast day August 13) was the queen of the Merovingian king Chlotar I, who left her husband to become a nun and later founded a monastery at Poitiers. She was one of the first of the Merovingian saints. A Thuringian princess, Radegunda was captured about 531 by Chlotar I during an
- Radegundis, St. (Merovingian queen)
St. Radegunda ; feast day August 13) was the queen of the Merovingian king Chlotar I, who left her husband to become a nun and later founded a monastery at Poitiers. She was one of the first of the Merovingian saints. A Thuringian princess, Radegunda was captured about 531 by Chlotar I during an
- Radek, Karl (Soviet official)
Karl Radek was a communist propagandist and early leader of the Communist International who fell victim to Joseph Stalin’s Great Purge of the 1930s. A member of a Galician Jewish family, Radek attended the universities of Kraków and Bern. Having joined the Social Democratic Party of Poland and
- Radek, Karl Bernhardovich (Soviet official)
Karl Radek was a communist propagandist and early leader of the Communist International who fell victim to Joseph Stalin’s Great Purge of the 1930s. A member of a Galician Jewish family, Radek attended the universities of Kraków and Bern. Having joined the Social Democratic Party of Poland and
- raden (Japanese art)
raden, Japanese decorative technique used for lacquerware and woodenware, in which linings of mother-of-pearl or of abalone shells are cut into designs and either glued onto or inserted into the surface of the lacquer or wood. There are several varieties of raden lacquerware. Atsugai-hō, a
- Raden Haji Oma Irama (Indonesian musician)
Rhoma Irama is an Indonesian popular musician who was in large part responsible for the creation of dangdut dance music, a blend of Indonesian, Indian, Middle Eastern, and Western styles that amassed a tremendous following in Indonesia in the late 20th century. Born to a lower-middle-class family
- Raden Mas Ontowirjo (Javanese leader)
Diponegoro was a Javanese leader in the 19th-century conflict known to the West as the Java War and to Indonesians as Diponegoro’s War (1825–30). During those five years, Diponegoro’s military accomplishments severely crippled the Dutch and earned for him a prominent place in the Indonesian
- Raden Mas Said (Southeast Asian ruler)
Gianti Agreement: He was thenceforth known as Mangkunegara I.
- RADEPA (Bolivian military group)
Bolivia: The rise of new political groups and the Bolivian National Revolution: …by a secret military group, Reason for the Fatherland (Razón de Patria; RADEPA). RADEPA allied itself with the MNR and tried to create a new-style government under Colonel Gualberto Villaroel (1943–46), but little was accomplished except for the MNR’s political mobilization of the Indian peasants. Opposed as fascist-oriented by the…
- Rader, Dennis (American serial killer)
Dennis Rader is an American serial killer who murdered 10 people over a span of three decades before his arrest and confession in 2005. He called himself BTK because he bound, tortured, and killed his victims. Rader was raised in Wichita, Kansas. He later claimed that as a youth he had killed
- Rader, Dennis Lynn (American serial killer)
Dennis Rader is an American serial killer who murdered 10 people over a span of three decades before his arrest and confession in 2005. He called himself BTK because he bound, tortured, and killed his victims. Rader was raised in Wichita, Kansas. He later claimed that as a youth he had killed
- Rădescu, Nicolae (prime minister of Romania)
Nicolae Rădescu was a Romanian army officer and prime minister of Romania (December 1944–March 1945). During World War I, Rădescu fought in the Romanian army and in the 1920s served as military attaché in London. He resigned from the army in 1933 to protest the dictatorial policies of King Carol
- Radetzky March (work by Strauss I)
Joseph, Graf Radetzky: …the Elder wrote the popular Radetzky March in his honour but was reproached by liberal critics for having done so.
- Radetzky March (novel by Roth)
Joseph Roth: …several novels, including Radetzkymarsch (1932; Radetzky March), considered his best novel, an excellent portrait of the latter days of the monarchy. Roth was concerned with the dilemma of individual moral heroes in a time of decadence and moribund traditions. A number of his plots treat the difficulties of the father-son…
- Radetzky von Radetz, Johann Joseph Wenzel Anton Franz Karl, Graf (Austrian military reformer)
Joseph, Graf Radetzky was an Austrian field marshal and military reformer whose long record of victorious campaigns made him a national hero. Radetzky joined the Austrian army in 1784 and served in the Turkish War of 1787–92 and in the Low Countries in the first years of the French Revolutionary
- Radetzky, Joseph, Graf (Austrian military reformer)
Joseph, Graf Radetzky was an Austrian field marshal and military reformer whose long record of victorious campaigns made him a national hero. Radetzky joined the Austrian army in 1784 and served in the Turkish War of 1787–92 and in the Low Countries in the first years of the French Revolutionary
- Radetzkymarsch (novel by Roth)
Joseph Roth: …several novels, including Radetzkymarsch (1932; Radetzky March), considered his best novel, an excellent portrait of the latter days of the monarchy. Roth was concerned with the dilemma of individual moral heroes in a time of decadence and moribund traditions. A number of his plots treat the difficulties of the father-son…
- Radewijns, Florens (Dutch theologian)
Florentius Radewyns was a Dutch Roman Catholic theologian, successor to Geert Groote as leader of the Brethren of the Common Life, a community of laymen dedicated to the care and education of the poor, and founder of the monastic Congregation of Windesheim. Following his education at the University
- Radewyns, Florentius (Dutch theologian)
Florentius Radewyns was a Dutch Roman Catholic theologian, successor to Geert Groote as leader of the Brethren of the Common Life, a community of laymen dedicated to the care and education of the poor, and founder of the monastic Congregation of Windesheim. Following his education at the University
- Radha (dance by Saint Denis)
Ruth St. Denis: … of her first dance work, Radha (based on the milkmaid Radha who was an early consort of the Hindu god Krishna), together with such shorter pieces as The Cobra and The Incense. A three-year European tour followed. She was particularly successful in Vienna, where she added The Nautch and The…
- Radha (Hindu mythology)
Radha, in Hinduism, the gopi (milkmaid) who became the beloved of the god Krishna during that period of his life when he lived among the gopas (cowherds) of Vrindavan. Radha was the wife of another gopa but was the dearest of Krishna’s consorts and his constant companion. In the bhakti (devotional)
- Radha and Krishna (ballet)
South Asian arts: Modern Indian dance: …her partner in the ballet Radha and Krishna. Young Shankar returned to India fired with enthusiasm. After studying the essentials of the four major styles of classical dance, he created new ballets with complex choreography and music, mixing the sounds from wooden clappers and metal cymbals with those of traditional…
- Radha Soami Satsang (Indian religious group)
Radha Soami Satsang, esoteric religious sect of India that has followers among both Hindus and Sikhs. The sect was founded in 1861 by Shiva Dayal Saheb (also called Shivdayal), a Hindu banker of Agra, who believed that human beings could perfect their highest capabilities only through repetition of
- Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli (president of India)
Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan was a scholar and statesman who was president of India from 1962 to 1967. He served as professor of philosophy at Mysore (1918–21) and Calcutta (1921–31; 1937–41) universities and as vice chancellor of Andhra University (1931–36). He was professor of Eastern religions and
- Radhasvami Satsang (Indian religious group)
Radha Soami Satsang, esoteric religious sect of India that has followers among both Hindus and Sikhs. The sect was founded in 1861 by Shiva Dayal Saheb (also called Shivdayal), a Hindu banker of Agra, who believed that human beings could perfect their highest capabilities only through repetition of
- Rådhuspladsen (square, Copenhagen, Denmark)
Copenhagen: …of the city is the Rådhuspladsen (“Town Hall Square”). From the square, an old crooked shopping street leads northeast to the former centre of the city, Kongens Nytorv (“King’s New Square”), laid out in the 17th century. Buildings there include the Thott Palace (now the French Embassy) and the Charlottenborg…
- radial artery (anatomy)
human cardiovascular system: The aorta and its principal branches: …into two terminal branches, the radial and ulnar arteries, the radial passing downward on the distal (thumb) side of the forearm, the ulnar on the medial side. Interconnections (anastomoses) between the two, with branches at the level of the palm, supply the hand and wrist.
- radial distribution function (physics)
liquid: Molecular structure of liquids: …potential function, u, and the radial distribution function, g. The pair potential gives information about the energy due to the interaction of a pair of molecules and is a function of the distance r between their centres. Information about the structure or the distances between pairs of molecules is contained…
- radial drainage pattern
river: Drainage patterns: Radial drainage is typical of volcanic cones, so long as they remain more or less intact. Erosion to the skeletal state often leaves the plug standing in high relief, ringed by concentric valleys developed in thick layers of ash.
- radial engine
radial engine, Type of internal-combustion engine used mainly in small airplanes, in which the cylinders (ranging from five to as many as 28, depending on engine size) are mounted in a circle around the crankshaft, sometimes in banks of two or more. Once the dominant piston-engine type, radials are
- radial gate (engineering)
dam: Gates: Radial, or tainter, gates are similar in principle but are curved in vertical section to better resist water pressure. Tilting gates consist of flaps held by hinges along their lower edges that permit water to flow over the top when they are lowered.
- radial keratotomy (surgical procedure)
radial keratotomy (RK), a surgical procedure to correct nearsightedness (myopia). The technique was first developed by Russian eye surgeon Svyatoslav Nikolay Fyodorov in the 1970s. In the 1980s and early 1990s, RK was a widespread procedure for correcting nearsightedness, with several hundred
- radial nerve (anatomy)
human nervous system: Brachial plexus: The radial nerve innervates the triceps, anconeus, and brachioradialis muscles, eight extensors of the wrist and digits, and one abductor of the hand; it is also sensory to part of the hand. The median nerve branches in the forearm to serve the palmaris longus, two pronator…
- radial symmetry (biology)
symmetry: Symmetry in animals: In radial symmetry the body has the general form of a short or long cylinder or bowl, with a central axis from which the body parts radiate or along which they are arranged in regular fashion. The main axis is heteropolar—i.e., with unlike ends, one of…
- radial system (plant anatomy)
tree: The anatomy and organization of wood: The radial system functions primarily in the transport of carbohydrates from the inner bark to the wood; there are some food-storage cells in this system as well, and water movement through the rays is possible. Ray cells interrupt the interconnections of the tracheids or fibres; hence,…
- radial tire
tire: Pneumatic tire structures: A radial-ply belted tire also has a belt running around the entire tire, but the cords are typically made of steel wire-mesh, hence the term “steel-belted radial” tire.
- radial tuberosity (anatomy)
radius: …is a rough projection, the radial tuberosity, which receives the biceps tendon. A ridge, the interosseous border, extends the length of the shaft and provides attachment for the interosseous membrane connecting the radius and the ulna. The projection on the lower end of the radius, the styloid process, may be…
- radial turbine
turbine: History of water turbine technology: …the idea of an inward-flowing radial turbine, the direct precursor of the modern water turbine. This machine had a vertical spindle and a runner with curved blades that was fully enclosed. Water entered radially inward and discharged downward below the spindle.
- radial vein (anatomy)
human cardiovascular system: Superior vena cava and its tributaries: …of the forearm include the radial veins, continuations of deep anastomosing veins of the hand and wrist, and the ulnar veins, both veins following the course of the associated artery. The radial and ulnar veins converge at the elbow to form the brachial vein; this, in turn, unites with the…
- radial velocity (astronomy)
Milky Way Galaxy: Solar motion calculations from radial velocities: For objects beyond the immediate neighbourhood of the Sun, initially it is necessary to choose a standard of rest (the reference frame) from which the solar motion is to be calculated. This is usually done by selecting a particular kind of star or…
- radial-arm saw (tool)
saw: …disk with peripheral teeth, the radial-arm saw is one of the most useful. The motor-driven blade is manually drawn along a horizontally set shaft or pipe, called a radial arm, that is itself supported by a vertical column attached to a heavy base. The motor-blade unit is free to move…
- radian (mathematics)
steradian: …solid and the English word radian, a steradian is, in effect, a solid radian; the radian is an SI unit of plane-angle measurement defined as the angle of a circle subtended by an arc equal in length to the circle’s radius.
- radian measure (mathematics)
steradian: …solid and the English word radian, a steradian is, in effect, a solid radian; the radian is an SI unit of plane-angle measurement defined as the angle of a circle subtended by an arc equal in length to the circle’s radius.
- Radiance of the King, The (work by Laye)
African literature: French: …Le Regard du roi (1954; The Radiance of the King), the story of Clarence, a white man, who, as he moves deeper and deeper into an African forest, is progressively shorn of his Western ways and pride. At his nadir, he begins anew, when, naked and alone, he embraces an…
- radiant (astronomy)
meteor shower: …therein) in which the shower’s radiant is situated—i.e., the point in the sky from which perspective makes the parallel meteor tracks seem to originate. Some showers have been named for an associated comet; e.g., the Andromedids were formerly called the Bielids, after Biela’s Comet. The Cyrillid shower of 1913 had…
- radiant electric resistance heating system
construction: Heating and cooling: Radiant electric resistance heating systems use coils in baseboard units in the rooms, which create convection cycles similar to hot-water radiators, or resistance cables in continuous looped patterns embedded in plaster ceilings. Local temperature control can be much more precise with electric heating, because it…
- radiant energy (physics)
radiant energy, energy that is transferred by electromagnetic radiation, such as light, X-rays, gamma rays, and thermal radiation, which may be described in terms of either discrete packets of energy, called photons, or continuous electromagnetic waves. The conservation of energy law requires that
- radiant heating (technology)
radiant heating, heating system in which heat is transmitted by radiation from a heated surface. Radiant heating systems usually employ either electric-resistance wiring or hot-water heating pipes, which may be embedded in the floor, ceiling, or walls. Panel heating is a form of radiant heating
- radiant hot-water heating system
construction: Heating and cooling: …common heating system is the radiant hot-water type. The heat source is applied to a small boiler, in which water is heated and from which it is circulated by an electric pump in insulated copper pipes similar to a domestic hot-water system. The pipes can be connected to cast-iron or…
- Radiant Way, The (work by Drabble)
English literature: Fiction: …and poor is Margaret Drabble’s The Radiant Way (1987). With less documentary substantiality, Martin Amis’s novels, angled somewhere between scabrous relish and satiric disgust, offer prose that has the lurid energy of a strobe light playing over vistas of urban sleaze, greed, and debasement. Money (1984) is the most effectively…
- Radiata (animal)
animal: Radiata: a tissue level of organization: The two coelenterate phyla (Cnidaria and Ctenophora) advanced in complexity beyond the parazoans by developing incipient tissues—groups of cells that are integrally coordinated in the performance of a certain function. For example, coelenterates have well-defined nerve nets, and their…
- radiata pine (tree)
Monterey pine, (Pinus radiata), economically important conifer species (family Pinaceae), the most widely planted pine in the world. The tree is endemic to three locations along the central coast of California—including one population on the Monterey peninsula—and to Guadalupe Island and Cedros
- radiate head (plant anatomy)
Asteraceae: Flowers: The radiate head has disk flowers in the centre surrounded by one or more marginal rows of ray flowers, which have an irregular corolla. The corollas are tubular at the base but prolonged on the outer side into a generally flat projection, the ray, or ligule.…
- radiating texture (mineralogy)
mineral: Crystal habit and crystal aggregation: …of slender fibres, parallel or radiating; acicular, slender, needlelike crystals; radiating, individuals forming starlike or circular groups; globular, radiating individuals forming small spherical or hemispherical groups; dendritic, in slender divergent branches, somewhat plantlike; mammillary, large smoothly rounded, masses resembling mammae, formed by radiating crystals;
- radiation (physics)
radiation, flow of atomic and subatomic particles and of waves, such as those that characterize heat rays, light rays, and X rays. All matter is constantly bombarded with radiation of both types from cosmic and terrestrial sources. This article delineates the properties and behaviour of radiation
- radiation (physics)
thermal radiation, process by which energy, in the form of electromagnetic radiation, is emitted by a heated surface in all directions and travels directly to its point of absorption at the speed of light; thermal radiation does not require an intervening medium to carry it. Thermal radiation
- radiation absorbed dose (unit of measurement of radiation)
rad, the unit of absorbed dose of ionizing radiation, defined in 1962 by the International Commission on Radiological Units and Measurements as equal to the amount of radiation that releases an energy of 100 ergs per gram of matter. One rad is equal approximately to the absorbed dose delivered when
- radiation budget (physics)
climate: Average radiation budgets: The difference between the solar radiation absorbed and the thermal radiation emitted to space determines Earth’s radiation budget. Since there is no appreciable long-term trend in planetary temperature, it may be concluded that this budget is essentially zero on a global long-term average.…
- radiation chemistry
radiation: Radiation chemistry: When a target is bombarded by a positive ion such as the hydrogen ion H+ or the deuterium ion D+ from a particle accelerator or the alpha particle 4He2+ from nuclear decay, or indeed any high-energy heavy positive ion, the initial effects differ…
- radiation conductivity (physics)
industrial glass: Heat transfer: On the other hand, the radiation conductivity (thermal conductivity due to photon transport) increases greatly with temperature. Radiation conductivity is also inversely proportional to the absorption coefficient of a glass for specific photon wavelengths. Thus, the rather high radiation conductivity of molten clear glass enables melting to depths of almost…
- Radiation Control for Health and Safety Act (United States legislation)
Food and Drug Administration: …standardized labeling of products; the Radiation Control for Health and Safety Act, which was designed to protect consumers from possible excess radiation generated by X-ray machines, televisions, microwave ovens, and the like; and the Public Health Service Act, which gave the FDA authority over vaccines and serums and justified the…
- radiation damage (crystallography)
radiation damage, change in the ordered structure of crystalline material caused by interaction with radiation such as strong X-rays, gamma rays, fast neutrons, and other energetic subatomic particles. The changes in crystalline structure may result in either beneficial or detrimental modifications
- radiation damping (physics)
damping: In radiation damping, vibrating energy of moving charges, such as electrons, is converted to electromagnetic energy and is emitted in the form of radio waves or infrared or visible light.
- Radiation Effects Research Foundation (research facility)
Hiroshima: …Casualty Commission (since 1975 the Radiation Effects Research Foundation) began to conduct medical and biological research on the effects of radiation in Hiroshima. A number of public hospitals and private clinics give free treatment to victims of the atomic bombing (hibakusha). Hiroshima Castle, destroyed in the bombing, was restored in…
- radiation energy (physics)
radiant energy, energy that is transferred by electromagnetic radiation, such as light, X-rays, gamma rays, and thermal radiation, which may be described in terms of either discrete packets of energy, called photons, or continuous electromagnetic waves. The conservation of energy law requires that
- radiation fog (meteorology)
fog: …sometimes also occur together with radiation fogs.
- radiation frost (meteorology)
agricultural technology: Frost: …of frost are recognized: (1) radiation frost, which occurs on clear nights with little or no wind when the outgoing radiation is excessive and the air temperature is not necessarily at the freezing point, and (2) wind, or advection, frost, which occurs at any time, day or night, regardless of…
- radiation injury (pathology)
radiation injury, tissue damage or changes caused by exposure to ionizing radiation—namely, gamma rays, X-rays, and high-energy particles such as neutrons, electrons, and positrons. Sources of ionizing radiation may be natural (e.g., radioactive substances such as the element radium or the
- radiation jet (astronomy)
radio jet, material spewing from the centres of some galaxies at close to the speed of light and emitting strong radio waves. The most powerful extragalactic sources of radio waves are double-lobed sources (or “dumbbells”) in which two large regions of radio emission are situated in a line on
- radiation laws (physics)
heat: Heat transfer: …Germany, Gustav Robert Kirchhoff, presented his law of radiation, relating emissive power to absorptivity. An Austrian, Josef Stefan, established the relationship (now called the Stefan-Boltzmann law) between the energy radiated by a blackbody and the fourth power of its temperature. Ludwig Boltzmann established the mathematical basis for this law of…
- radiation laws (physics)
Planck’s radiation law, a mathematical relationship formulated in 1900 by German physicist Max Planck to explain the spectral-energy distribution of radiation emitted by a blackbody (a hypothetical body that completely absorbs all radiant energy falling upon it, reaches some equilibrium
- radiation measurement (technology)
radiation measurement, technique for detecting the intensity and characteristics of ionizing radiation, such as alpha, beta, and gamma rays or neutrons, for the purpose of measurement. The term ionizing radiation refers to those subatomic particles and photons whose energy is sufficient to cause
- radiation oncology
radiation therapy, the use of ionizing radiation (high-energy radiation that displaces electrons from atoms and molecules) to destroy cancer cells. Radiation has been present throughout the evolution of life on Earth. However, with the discovery of X-rays in 1895 by German physicist Wilhelm Conrad
- radiation pressure (physics)
radiation pressure, the pressure on a surface resulting from electromagnetic radiation that impinges on it, which results from the momentum carried by that radiation; radiation pressure is doubled if the radiation is reflected rather than absorbed. Although the pressure of solar radiation is
- radiation processing (industry)
radiation: High-energy radiation: …and synthesizing materials, known as radiation processing, represents a minor yet significant technology. It involves irradiating materials either with a beam of electrons produced by a high-voltage particle accelerator or with gamma rays emitted by the radioisotope cobalt-16 or, in a few cases, cesium-137. The electrons are generally accelerated to…
- radiation sickness
ionizing radiation injury, tissue destruction or changes caused by deeply penetrating electromagnetic waves of high frequency or subatomic particles that form positively and negatively charged particles in the tissues, including individual cells that receive the radiation. Sources for radiation may
- radiation sterilization (food processing)
food preservation: Food irradiation: Food irradiation involves the use of either high-speed electron beams or high-energy radiation with wavelengths smaller than 200 nanometres, or 2000 angstroms (e.g., X-rays and gamma rays). These rays contain sufficient energy to break chemical bonds and ionize molecules that lie in their path.…
- radiation therapy
radiation therapy, the use of ionizing radiation (high-energy radiation that displaces electrons from atoms and molecules) to destroy cancer cells. Radiation has been present throughout the evolution of life on Earth. However, with the discovery of X-rays in 1895 by German physicist Wilhelm Conrad
- radiation, gravitational (physics)
gravitational wave, the transmission of variations in the gravitational field as waves. According to general relativity, the curvature of space-time is determined by the distribution of masses, while the motion of masses is determined by the curvature. In consequence, variations of the
- radiation-damage dating (paleontology)
radiation-damage dating, method of age determination that makes use of the damage to crystals and the radiation from radioactive substances caused by storage of energy in electron traps. In the mineral zircon, for example, radiation damage results in a change in colour, the storage of energy in
- radiative capture (physics)
neutron capture, type of nuclear reaction in which a target nucleus absorbs a neutron (uncharged particle), then emits a discrete quantity of electromagnetic energy (gamma-ray photon). The target nucleus and the product nucleus are isotopes, or forms of the same element. Thus phosphorus-31, on