ns]
| 1. | the state or quality of being resonant. |
| 2. | the prolongation of sound by reflection; reverberation. |
| 3. | Phonetics.
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| 4. | Physics.
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| 5. | Electricity. that condition of a circuit with respect to a given frequency or the like in which the net reactance is zero and the current flow a maximum. |
| 6. | Also called mesomerism. Chemistry. the condition exhibited by a molecule when the actual arrangement of its valence electrons is intermediate between two or more arrangements having nearly the same energy, and the positions of the atomic nuclei are identical. |
| 7. | Medicine/Medical. (in percussing for diagnostic purposes) a sound produced when air is present. |
resonance res·o·nance (rěz'ə-nəns)
n.
The sound produced by diagnostic percussion of the normal chest.
Intensification of vocal tones during articulation, as by the air cavities of the mouth and nasal passages.
Intensification and prolongation of sound produced by sympathetic vibration.
The property of a compound having simultaneously the characteristics of two or more structural forms that differ only in the distribution of electrons.
| resonance (rěz'ə-nəns) Pronunciation Key
Oscillation induced in a physical system when it is affected by another system that is itself oscillating at the right frequency. For example, a swing will swing to greater heights if each consecutive push on it is timed to be in rhythm with the initial swing. Radios are tuned to pick up one radio frequency rather than another using a resonant circuit that resonates strongly with the incoming signal at only a narrow band of frequencies. The soundboards of musical instruments, contrastingly, are designed to resonate with a large range of frequencies produced by the instrument. See also harmonic motion. |