When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Screw conveyor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screw_conveyor

    Combine harvesters use both enclosed and open augers to move the unthreshed crop into the threshing mechanism and to move the grain into and out of the machine's hopper. Ice resurfacers use augers to remove loose ice particles from the surface of the ice. An auger is also a central component of an injection molding machine. An auger is used in ...

  3. Auger electron spectroscopy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auger_electron_spectroscopy

    For K-level based transitions, Auger effects are dominant for Z < 15 while for L- and M-level transitions, AES data can be measured for Z ≤ 50. [6] The yield limits effectively prescribe a cutoff for AES sensitivity, but complex techniques can be utilized to identify heavier elements, such as uranium and americium, using the Auger effect. [1]

  4. Drill cuttings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drill_cuttings

    Drill cuttings [1] are broken bits of solid material removed from a borehole drilled by rotary, percussion, or auger methods and brought to the surface in the drilling mud. Boreholes drilled in this way include oil or gas wells , water wells , and holes drilled for geotechnical investigations or mineral exploration.

  5. Pierre Victor Auger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Victor_Auger

    Pierre's father was chemistry professor Victor Auger. Pierre Auger was a student at the École normale supérieure in Paris from 1919 to 1922, the year when he passed the agrégation of physics. He then joined the physical chemistry laboratory of the faculté des sciences of the University of Paris under the direction of Jean Perrin to work ...

  6. Auger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auger

    Auger bit, a drill bit; Auger conveyor, a device for moving material by means of a rotating helical flighting; Auger (platform), the world's first tension leg oil rig; see Big, Bigger, Biggest; Earth auger, a drilling tool or machine used for making holes in the ground; Wood auger, a drill for making holes in wood (or in the ground)

  7. Auger effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auger_effect

    The Auger effect (/ oʊ ˈ ʒ eɪ /; French pronunciation:) or Auger−Meitner effect is a physical phenomenon in which atoms eject electrons. It occurs when an inner-shell vacancy in an atom is filled by an electron, releasing energy that causes the emission of another electron from a different shell of the same atom.

  8. Wood auger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_auger

    Study of a man using an auger, from The Seven Sorrows of the Virgin, by Albrecht Dürer, c. 1496. The classical design has a helical screw blade winding around the bottom end of the shaft. The lower edge of the blade is sharpened and scrapes the wood; the rest of the blade lifts the chips out of the way.

  9. Augury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augury

    An augur with sacred chicken; he holds a lituus, the curved wand often used as a symbol of augury on Roman coins. Augury was a Greco-Roman religion practice of observing the behavior of birds, to receive omens. When the individual, known as the augur, read these signs, it was referred to as