亚洲网紅露点

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seismograph

[ sahyz-muh-graf, -grahf, sahys- ]

noun

  1. any of various instruments for measuring and recording the vibrations of earthquakes.


seismograph

/ sa瑟z藞m蓲伞r蓹f蓹; 藞sa瑟zm蓹藢伞r蓱藧f; 藢sa瑟zm蓹藞伞r忙f瑟k; -藢伞r忙f /

noun

  1. an instrument that registers and records the features of earthquakes. A seismogram ( 藞蝉补瑟锄尘蓹藢伞谤忙尘 ) is the record from such an instrument Also calledseismometer
鈥淐ollins English Dictionary 鈥 Complete & Unabridged鈥 2012 Digital Edition 漏 William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 漏 HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

seismograph

  1. An instrument that detects and records vibrations and movements in the Earth, especially during an earthquake. Most seismographs employ a pendulum mounted within a rigid framework and connected to a mechanical, optical, or electromagnetic recording device. When the Earth vibrates or shakes, inertia keeps the pendulum steady with respect to the movements of the frame, producing a graphic record of the duration and intensity of the Earth's movements. Separate instruments are needed to record the north-south horizontal, east-west horizontal, and vertical components of a tremor. By comparing the records produced by seismographs located in three or more locations across the Earth, the location and strength of an earthquake can be determined.
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Derived Forms

  • seismographic, adjective
  • 蝉别颈蝉藞尘辞驳谤补辫丑测, noun
  • seismographer, noun
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Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms

  • 蝉别颈蝉路尘辞路驳谤补辫丑路颈肠 [sahyz-m, uh, -, graf, -ik, sahys-], 蝉别颈蝉顎卪辞路驳谤补辫丑顎僫路肠补濒 adjective
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of seismograph1

First recorded in 1855鈥60; seismo- + -graph
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

When a patient is having a seizure, these lines jump up and down dramatically like a seismograph during an earthquake -- a signal that is easy to recognize.

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When the edge of two tectonic plates shift to produce an earthquake, the seismic waves it emits are measured by seismographs all over the world.

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These anomalies can be observed when seismographs pick up signals from earthquakes.

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Eventually, the researchers want to integrate the system with physics-based models, which could be important where data is poor, or places such as Cascadia, where the last major earthquake happened hundreds of years before seismographs.

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The technology might bear little resemblance to Palmieri鈥檚 electromagnetic seismograph, and his heroics are no longer needed in a world where scientists can monitor volcanoes safely from afar.

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seismogramseismography