Suche

Deutsche Quantensprung Synonyme

Fortentwicklung  ÂFortschritt  ÂProgress  ÂQuantensprung  (umgangssprachlich)  ÂVerbesserung  
Weitere Ergebnisse für Quantensprung Synonym nachschlagen

Englische quantum leap Synonyme

quantum  ASA scale  British candle  Hefner candle  Scheiner scale  aggregate  allotment  allowance  amount  amplitude  apportionment  atomerg  big end  bigger half  bit  bite  bougie decimale  budget  bulk  calorie  candle  candle lumen  candle power  candle-foot  candle-hour  candle-meter  chunk  commission  contingent  cut  deal  decimal candle  destiny  dinamode  dividend  dole  dyne  end  energid  equal share  erg  exposure meter  extent  fate  flux  foot-candle  foot-pound  force  half  halver  helping  horsepower-hour  horsepower-year  intensity  interest  international candle  joule  kilogram-meter  kilowatt-hour  lamp-hour  light  light meter  light quantum  lot  lumen  lumen meter  lumen-hour  lumeter  luminous flux  luminous intensity  luminous power  lux  magnitude  mass  matter  measure  measurement  meed  mess  modicum  moiety  numbers  part  percentage  photon  piece  portion  proportion  quantity  quota  rake-off  ration  segment  share  slice  small share  stake  stock  strength  substance  sum  total  unit of flux  unit of light  whole  
quantum mechanics  aeromechanics  animal mechanics  atomic science  atomics  atomistics  atomology  biomechanics  celestial mechanics  electromechanics  fluid mechanics  frequency curve  frequency distribution  game theory  hydromechanics  leverage  mass spectrography  mass spectrometry  mathematical probability  mechanical arts  mechanics  molecular physics  nuclear chemistry  nuclear physics  operations research  predictability  probability theory  probable error  radiology  rational mechanics  servomechanics  standard deviation  statistical mechanics  statistical probability  statistics  thermionics  uncertainty principle  wave mechanics  zoomechanics  

Quantensprung Definition

Leap
(n.) A basket.
Leap
(n.) A weel or wicker trap for fish.
Leap
(v. i.) To spring clear of the ground, with the feet
Leap
(v. i.) To spring or move suddenly, as by a jump or by jumps
Leap
(v. t.) To pass over by a leap or jump
Leap
(v. t.) To copulate with (a female beast)
Leap
(v. t.) To cause to leap
Leap
(n.) The act of leaping, or the space passed by leaping
Leap
(n.) Copulation with, or coverture of, a female beast.
Leap
(n.) A fault.
Leap
(n.) A passing from one note to another by an interval, especially by a long one, or by one including several other and intermediate intervals.
Leap year
() Bissextile
Quantum
(n.) Quantity
Quantum
(n.) A definite portion of a manifoldness, limited by a mark or by a boundary.

quantum leap / quantum leaps Bedeutung

leap
leaping
spring
saltation
bound
bounce
a light, self-propelled movement upwards or forwards
leap the distance leaped (or to be leaped), a leap offeet
quantum (physics) the smallest discrete quantity of some physical property that a system can possess (according to quantum theory)
quantum a discrete amount of something that is analogous to the quantities in quantum theory
quantum physics the branch of physics based on quantum theory
quantum theory (physics) a physical theory that certain properties occur only in discrete amounts (quanta)
quantum mechanics the branch of quantum physics that accounts for matter at the atomic level, an extension of statistical mechanics based on quantum theory (especially the Pauli exclusion principle)
quantum field theory the branch of quantum physics that is concerned with the theory of fields, it was motivated by the question of how an atom radiates light as its electrons jump from excited states
quantum electrodynamics
QED
a relativistic quantum theory of the electromagnetic interactions of photons and electrons and muons
quantum chromodynamics
QCD
a theory of strong interactions between elementary particles (including the interaction that binds protons and neutrons in the nucleus), it assumes that strongly interacting particles (hadrons) are made of quarks and that gluons bind the quarks together
leap
jump
saltation
an abrupt transition, a successful leap from college to the major leagues
quantum leap
quantum jump
a sudden large increase or advance, this may not insure success but it will represent a quantum leap from last summer
quantum jump (physics) an abrupt transition of an electron or atom or molecule from one quantum state to another with the emission or absorption of a quantum
jump leap a sudden and decisive increase, a jump in attendance
leap day
bissextile day
February
the name of the day that is added during a leap year
leap year
intercalary year
days
bissextile year
in the Gregorian calendar: any year divisible by except centenary years divisible by
leap second a second (as measured by an atomic clock) added to or subtracted from Greenwich Mean Time in order to compensate for slowing in the Earth's rotation
leap
jump
pass abruptly from one state or topic to another, leap into fame, jump to a conclusion, jump from one thing to another
jump
leap
bound spring
move forward by leaps and bounds, The horse bounded across the meadow, The child leapt across the puddle, Can you jump over the fence?
jump leap cause to jump or leap, the trainer jumped the tiger through the hoop
leap out
rush out
sally out
burst forth
jump out from a hiding place and surprise (someone), The attackers leapt out from the bushes
jump b leap b jump off jump down from an elevated point, the parachutist didn't want to jump, every year, hundreds of people jump off the Golden Gate bridge, the widow leapt into the funeral pyre
leap out
jump out
jump
stand out stick out
be highly noticeable
Ergebnisse der Bewertung:
106 Bewertungen 5

 

Einfach einen Begriff in der Tabelle rechts anklicken um weitere Übersetzungen in dieser Sidebar zu erhalten.

Ein Quantensprung ist der Ãœbergang von einem quantenmechanischen Zustand in einen anderen. Der Begriff wurde im frühen 20. Jahrhundert geprägt. Hintergrund war die Entdeckung, dass sich fundamentale Widersprüche der damaligen Physik mit der Annahme auflösen lassen, dass manche physikalische Systeme nur diskrete Zustände annehmen können. Da Zwischenzustände nicht erlaubt sind, muss der Wechsel eines solchen Systems von einem Zustand in einen anderen direkt, ?sprunghaft?, erfolgen. Diese Entdeckung stand in völligem Widerspruch zur damaligen Vorstellung, dass in der Natur alle Abläufe kontinuierlich seien .

Vokabelquiz per Mail: