![]() |
Contemporary College Physics 3/e Jones/Childers | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Online
Learning Center
|
||||||
|
Back emf an induced electromotive
force which is directed in the opposite sense to the applied voltage Balmer series the wavelengths
of the spectrum of hydrogen gas, where the electrons final state is the
n=2 state (see equation 27.1) Barrier penetration the existence of a non-zero probability that a particle will appear outside a barrier that it cannot classically penetrate Baryon a subgroup of hadrons ( particles that interact through the strong nuclear force ) whose decay always conserves barion number Base units units of measurement
that establish a standard (sometimes called fundamental units) Battery a source of electrical energy
consisting of one or more cells Beats variations in amplitude due to
the addition of two waves of different frequencies Becquerel the SI unit of activity, one decay per second Bernoullis equation describes
the relationship of a fluid's pressure, velocity, and height for steady,
non viscous flow of an incompressible fluid (see equation 10.8) Beta minus another name for the
electron Beta plus a particle with the same mass as an electron but one unit (e) of positive electric charge; also called a positron beta rays historically, another name for electrons Big bang term used to describe the origin event of the universe Binding energy the energy
necessary to separate the nucleus into protons and neutrons Blackbody a surface or object that
is a perfect emitter of radiation and a perfect absorber of all radiation
falling on it Bohr magneton - the magnetic moment
of the electron in its lowest angular momentum state Boltzmann constant a constant
of proportionality between the average kinetic energy per molecule and
the absolute temperature (see equation 12.7a) Boyles law states that at a constant
temperature the product of the pressure and volume of an enclosed gas
is a constant (see equation 12.1) Bragg's law defines the relationship
between the observed angles for maximum intensity of x-ray diffraction
and the spacing between the planes of atoms in the crystal (see equation
26.4) Brewster's law gives the condition
for maximum polarization for reflected light, that occurs when the reflected
ray and the refracted ray are at right angles to each other (see equation
24.11) Brownian motion the continual
irregular movement of minute particles suspended in a fluid Buoyant force upward force on an object due to the displacement of a fluid by that object |