Of a great magnitude
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 17 answers to crossword clue "Of a great magnitude"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
COSMICOf a great magnitude
HUGENESSGreat magnitude
spikesA sharp increase in the magnitude or concentration of something
anisotropic(of a property or phenomenon) Varying in magnitude according to the direction of measurement
isotropic(of a property or phenomenon) Not varying in magnitude according to the direction of measurement
pseudoscalara variable quantity that has magnitude but not direction and is an odd function of the coordinates
antisymmetricUnaltered in magnitude but changed in sign by exchange of two variables or by a particular symmetry operation
pseudoscalarsPSEUDOSCALAR, a variable quantity that has magnitude but not direction and is an odd function of the coordinates
characteristicsThe whole number or integral part of a logarithm, which gives the order of magnitude of the original number
figuresOne of a specified number of digits making up a larger number, used to give a rough idea of the order of magnitude
momentThe magnitude of such an effect, expressed as the product of the force and the distance from its line of action to a given point
protonsA stable subatomic particle occurring in all atomic nuclei, with a positive electric charge equal in magnitude to that of an electron, but of opposite sign
viscositiesA quantity expressing the magnitude of such friction, as measured by the force per unit area resisting a flow in which parallel layers unit distance apart have unit speed relative to one another
forcesAn influence tending to change the motion of a body or produce motion or stress in a stationary body. The magnitude of such an influence is often calculated by multiplying the mass of the body by its acceleration
phasorvector that represents a sinusoidally varying quantity, as a current or voltage, by means of a line rotating about a point in a plane, the magnitude of the quantity being proportional to the length of the line and the phase of the quantity being equal to
phasorsvector that represents a sinusoidally varying quantity, as a current or voltage, by means of a line rotating about a point in a plane, the magnitude of the quantity being proportional to the length of the line and the phase of the quantity being equal to
magnitudesThe degree of brightness of a star. The magnitude of an astronomical object is now reckoned as the negative logarithm of the brightness; a decrease of one magnitude represents an increase in brightness of 2.512 times. A star with an apparent magnitude of six is barely visible to the naked eye