thermophoresis
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thermophoresis
Summary
thermophoresis is a physical phenomenon[1]. thermophoresis draws 57 Wikipedia views per month (physical_phenomenon category, ranking #88 of 138).[2]
Key Facts
- thermophoresis's instance of is recorded as physical phenomenon[3].
- Charles Soret is named after thermophoresis[4].
- Carl Ludwig is named after thermophoresis[5].
- thermophoresis's opposite of is recorded as Dufour effect[6].
- thermophoresis's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0h7xxy[7].
- thermophoresis's described by source is recorded as Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia[8].
- thermophoresis's has immediate cause is recorded as gravity[9].
- thermophoresis's has immediate cause is recorded as concentration[10].
- thermophoresis's has immediate cause is recorded as temperature gradient[11].
- thermophoresis's studied by is recorded as thermodynamics[12].
- thermophoresis's Treccani ID is recorded as termodiffusione[13].
- thermophoresis's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as thermophoresis[14].
- thermophoresis's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as termodiffusjon[15].
- thermophoresis's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 15401063[16].
- thermophoresis's Online PWN Encyclopedia ID is recorded as 3986668[17].
- thermophoresis's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C15401063[18].
- thermophoresis's Great Russian Encyclopedia portal ID is recorded as termodiffuziia-7a33c1[19].
Why It Matters
thermophoresis draws 57 Wikipedia views per month (physical_phenomenon category, ranking #88 of 138).[2] thermophoresis has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20] thermophoresis is known by 12 alternative names across languages and contexts.[21]