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III . scat·ter [ˈskætəʳ] N

1. scatter (small amount):

2. scatter no pl PHYS:

ˈscat·ter cush·ion N Brit Aus

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
The parameters of photon transport, including the step size and deflection angle due to scattering, are determined by random sampling from probability distributions.
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Opacity results from the incoherent scattering of light at surfaces and interfaces.
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The female has a habit of scattering the food to make sure that no morsel of food is missed as it is foraging.
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Since its development in the 1950s, muon tomography has taken many forms, the most important of which are muon transmission radiography and muon scattering tomography.
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Some of the electrons will undergo inelastic scattering, which means that they lose energy and have their paths slightly and randomly deflected.
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The probability of Compton scattering decreases with increasing photon energy.
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In inelastic scattering, an absorbed photon is re-emitted with lower energy.
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In addition, intense gamma radiation from large nuclear explosions may develop intensely charged regions in the surrounding air through Compton scattering.
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The story is that her husband died in the war and every night she walks the meadows scattering flowers for her lost loved one.
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The ultramicroscope system is based on light scattering, not light reflection.
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