ACHROMATIC vs ISOCHROMATIC: ADJECTIVE
- Being of the achromatic color of maximum darkness; having little or no hue owing to absorption of almost all incident light
- Designating color perceived to have zero saturation and therefore no hue, such as neutral grays, white, or black.
- Refracting light without spectral color separation.
- Difficult to stain with standard dyes. Used in reference to cells or tissues.
- Having only the diatonic tones of the scale.
- Free from color; transmitting light without decomposing it into its primary colors.
- Uncolored; not absorbing color from a fluid; -- said of tissue.
- A lens composed usually of two separate lenses, a convex and concave, of substances having different refractive and dispersive powers, as crown and flint glass, with the curvatures so adjusted that the chromatic aberration produced by the one is corrected by other, and light emerges from the compound lens undecomposed.
- See Prism.
- Having no hue
- Containing components such as achromatic lenses and prisms, designed to prevent color-related distortion.
- Having only the diatonic notes of the scale; not modified by accidentals.
- Being achromatic in subject
- One in which the chromatic aberration is corrected, usually by means of a compound or achromatic object glass, and which gives images free from extraneous color.
- Having the same color or wavelength. Used of light.
- Orthochromatic.
- Having the same color; connecting parts having the same color, as lines drawn through certain points in experiments on the chromatic effects of polarized light in crystals.
- Having the same colour or wavelength.
- Of or corresponding to constant colour.
- Of uniform colour.
ACHROMATIC vs ISOCHROMATIC: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Destitute of color; free from coloration; transmitting light without decomposing it into its constituent colors: as, an achromatic lens or telescope.
- In biology: Colorless; hyaline.
- In phytog., same as orthochromatic.
- Having the same color: said of the two series of oval curves of the interference figures of biaxial crystals.
ACHROMATIC vs ISOCHROMATIC: RELATED WORDS
- Whitish, Argent, Black, Black, Ebony, Blackish, Silvery, Inky, Pearly, White, White, Gray, Colorless, Greyish, Grayish
- Exposure meter, Caesious, Colour television, Luminous energy, Teinoscope, Achromatic lens, Spectral type, Unicolorous, Optical phenomenon, Achromic, Absorption band, Chromascope, Hueless, Photovisual, Allochromatic
ACHROMATIC vs ISOCHROMATIC: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Whitish, Argent, Black, Black, Ebony, Blackish, Silvery, Inky, Pearly, White, White, Gray, Colorless, Greyish, Grayish
- Exposure meter, Caesious, Colour television, Luminous energy, Teinoscope, Achromatic lens, Spectral type, Unicolorous, Optical phenomenon, Achromic, Absorption band, Chromascope, Hueless, Photovisual, Allochromatic
ACHROMATIC vs ISOCHROMATIC: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Wash the stained acetate cellulose strip with water until achromatic bands appear on a blue background.
- PMS solution to reveal achromatic ARGK bands on a blue background of the gel.
- PAG as dark bands that interfere with or completely mask achromatic zones of UK.
- Fields notice senpai come from one of his attention by achromatic, but as time!
- These achromatic ideologies can be found on both sides of the theological aisle.
- PMS solution to obtain achromatic ARGK bands on a blue gel background.
- The achromatic band corresponding to GPX activity appears on a blue background.
- Usually, such doublets are designed to be both aspheric and achromatic.
- The achromatic locus: Effect of navigation direction in color space.
- The 'K' component absorbs all wavelengths and is therefore achromatic.
- N/A
ACHROMATIC vs ISOCHROMATIC: QUESTIONS
- How do you find achromatic behaviour from focal lengths?
- Why choose the Explore Scientific ar127 127mm achromatic telescope?
- What are the achromatic and superachromatic wave plates available?
- What are the characteristics of an achromatic refractor?
- What are the luminance values for achromatic stimuli?
- How good is the Skywatcher achromatic 9x50 finderscope?
- N/A