Ferromagnetic vs Saturation - What's the difference?
ferromagnetic | saturation |
the act of saturating or the process of being saturated
(physics) the condition in which, after a sufficient increase in a causal force, no further increase in the resultant effect is possible; e.g. the state of a ferromagnetic material that cannot be further magnetized
(chemistry) the state of a saturated solution
(chemistry) the state of an organic compound that has no double or triple bonds
(meteorology) the state of the atmosphere when it is saturated with water vapour; 100% humidity
(art) the intensity or vividness of a colour
intense bombing of a military target with the aim of destroying it
the flooding of a market with all of a product that can be sold
(music) an effect on the sound of an electric guitar, used primarily in heavy metal music
The condition at which a component of the system has reached its maximum traffic-handling capacity, i.e. one erlang per circuit.
The point at which the output of a linear device, such as a linear amplifier, deviates significantly from being a linear function of the input when the input signal is increased.
In context|physics|lang=en terms the difference between ferromagnetic and saturation
is that ferromagnetic is (physics) of a material, such as iron or nickel, that is easily magnetized while saturation is (physics) the condition in which, after a sufficient increase in a causal force, no further increase in the resultant effect is possible; eg the state of a ferromagnetic material that cannot be further magnetized.As a adjective ferromagnetic
is (physics) of a material, such as iron or nickel, that is easily magnetized.As a noun saturation is
the act of saturating or the process of being saturated.ferromagnetic
English
(wikipedia ferromagnetic)Derived terms
* antiferromagnetic * ferromagnetSee also
* hard * soft * coercivity * permeabilitysaturation
English
Noun
(wikipedia saturation) (en-noun)- Modulation often requires that amplifiers operate below saturation .