localized charge

  • 1Charge ordering — (CO) is a (first or second order) phase transition occurring mostly in strongly correlated materials such as transition metal oxides or organic conductors. Due to the strong interaction, the charge is localized on different sites leading to a… …

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  • 2electric charge — noun the quantity of unbalanced electricity in a body (either positive or negative) and construed as an excess or deficiency of electrons the battery needed a fresh charge • Syn: ↑charge • Derivationally related forms: ↑charge (for: ↑charge) …

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  • 3space charge — noun The localized excess electric charge in a specific volume; especially such a negative charge …

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  • 4Multipole moments — are the coefficients of a series expansion of a potential due to continuous or discrete sources (e.g., an electric charge distribution). A multipole moment usually involves powers (or inverse powers) of the distance to the origin, as well as some …

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  • 5Multipole moment — In mathematics, especially as applied to physics, multipole moments are the coefficients of a series expansion of a potential due to continuous or discrete sources (e.g., an electric charge distribution). A multipole moment usually involves… …

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  • 6Plasma (physics) — For other uses, see Plasma. Plasma lamp, illustrating some of the more complex phenomena of a plasma, including filamentation. The colors are a result of relaxation of electrons in excited states to lower energy states after they have recombined… …

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  • 7Oxo ligand — In coordination chemistry, an oxo ligand is an oxygen atom bound only to one or more metal centers. These ligands can exist as terminal or (most commonly) as bridging atom (Fig. 1). Oxo ligands stabilize high oxidation states of a metal.[1] Fig.… …

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  • 8Inhomogeneous electromagnetic wave equation — Localized time varying charge and current densities can act as sources of electromagnetic waves in a vacuum. Maxwell s equations can be written in the form of a inhomogeneous electromagnetic wave equation (or often nonhomogeneous electromagnetic… …

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  • 9geomagnetic field — Magnetic field associated with the Earth. It is essentially dipolar (i.e., it has two poles, the northern and southern magnetic poles) on the Earth s surface. Away from the surface, the field becomes distorted. Most geomagnetists explain the… …

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  • 10Resonance (chemistry) — For other uses, see Resonance (disambiguation). Two of the contributing structures of nitrogen dioxide In chemistry, resonance or mesomerism [1] is a way of describing delocalized electrons within certain molecules or …

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