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 helium ['hi:liәm]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n.

[化] 氦

[医] 氦(2号元素)




    helium
    [ noun ]
    a very light colorless element that is one of the six inert gasses; the most difficult gas to liquefy; occurs in economically extractable amounts in certain natural gases (as those found in Texas and Kansas)
    <noun.substance>


    Helium \He"li*um\ (h[=e]"l[i^]*[u^]m), n. [NL., fr. Gr. "h`lios
    the sun.] (Chem.)
    An inert, monoatomic, gaseous element occurring in the
    atmosphere of the sun and stars, and in small quantities in
    the earth's atmosphere, in several minerals and in certain
    mineral waters. It is obtained from natural gas in industrial
    quantities. Symbol, He; atomic number 2; at. wt., 4.0026
    (C=12.011). Helium was first detected spectroscopically in
    the sun by Lockyer in 1868; it was first prepared by Ramsay
    in 1895. Helium has a density of 1.98 compared with hydrogen,
    and is more difficult to liquefy than the latter. Chemically,
    it is an inert noble gas, belonging to the argon group, and
    cannot be made to form compounds. The helium nucleus is the
    charged particle which constitutes alpha rays, and helium is
    therefore formed as a decomposition product of certain
    radioactive substances such as radium. The normal helium
    nucleus has two protons and two neutrons, but an isotope with
    only one neutron is also observed in atmospheric helium at an
    abundance of 0.013 %. Liquid helium has a boiling point of
    -268.9[deg] C at atmospheric pressure, and is used for
    maintaining very low temperatures, both in laboratory
    experimentation and in commercial applications to maintain
    superconductivity in low-temperature superconducting devices.
    Gaseous helium at normal temperatures is used for buoyancy in
    blimps, dirigibles, and high-altitude balloons, and also for
    amusement in party balloons.
    [Webster 1913 Suppl. +PJC]

    Noble \No"ble\, a. [Compar. {Nobler}; superl. {Noblest}.] [F.
    noble, fr. L. nobilis that can be or is known, well known,
    famous, highborn, noble, fr. noscere to know. See {know}.]
    1. Possessing eminence, elevation, dignity, etc.; above
    whatever is low, mean, degrading, or dishonorable;
    magnanimous; as, a noble nature or action; a noble heart.

    Statues, with winding ivy crowned, belong
    To nobler poets for a nobler song. --Dryden.

    2. Grand; stately; magnificent; splendid; as, a noble
    edifice.

    3. Of exalted rank; of or pertaining to the nobility;
    distinguished from the masses by birth, station, or title;
    highborn; as, noble blood; a noble personage.

    Note: Noble is used in the formation of self-explaining
    compounds; as, noble-born, noble-hearted, noble-minded.

    {Noble gas} (Chem.), a gaseous element belonging to group
    VIII of the periodic table of elements, not combining with
    other elements under normal reaction conditions;
    specifically, {helium}, {neon}, {argon}, {krypton},
    {xenon}, or {radon}; also called {inert gas}.

    {Noble metals} (Chem.), silver, gold, and platinum; -- so
    called from their resistance to oxidation by air and to
    dissolution by acids. Copper, mercury, aluminium,
    palladium, rhodium, iridium, and osmium are sometimes
    included.

    Syn: Honorable; worthy; dignified; elevated; exalted;
    superior; sublime; great; eminent; illustrious;
    renowned; stately; splendid; magnificent; grand;
    magnanimous; generous; liberal; free.

    1. Today's blimps use inert helium instead of the highly flammable hydrogen that destroyed the famous Hindenburg dirigible in New Jersey in 1937.
    2. Cryodynamics Inc. of Mountainside, N.J., which has been building cooling devices for spacecraft, says it is using that space technology to develop a small home refrigerator that uses inert helium or nitrogen.
    3. He disputed their claims that their device produced excess heat, or that it yielded byproducts of fusion, including helium, tritium, neutrons and gamma rays.
    4. For me, it was exotic to move into helium balloons two months ago."
    5. The plant generated electricity briefly this summer and was given NRC approval to go to 82% power shortly before being closed in July to replace a helium pump.
    6. Tritium decays fairly rapidly _ 5.5 percent of any starting amount turns into inert helium in a year _ and must be replenished in the nation's nuclear weapons from time to time.
    7. Even with a severe helium loss, the blimp would slowly descend rather than crash, Airship said.
    8. The pigeons ignored plastic owls, traps and helium balloons; they were unruffled by high-frequency sound waves.
    9. A familiar but exhilarating sight: billowing thousands of brightly colored helium balloons soar into the air, get caught by the wind, disappear into tiny points against the sky.
    10. Some preferred filling the domed stadium with helium gas and letting it float the 40 yards.
    11. He lost out on the first successful trans-Atlantic helium balloon crossing when his craft ditched 108 miles off the western French coast.
    12. The postponements were caused by a helium leak, bad weather and a corroded power transfer switch in the rocket.
    13. A dust devil, or mini tornado, struck the helium balloon, which has sophisticated look-down radar, he said.
    14. Crews worked Saturday to repair a helium leak that forced the postponement of the launch of an Atlas rocket, but a spokesman said the problem will be fixed in time for a Sunday blastoff.
    15. IBM and most other U.S. companies abandoned research in 1983 on the chips, called Josephson Junction devices, partly because of the complications of cooling with helium.
    16. After the unscheduled break, Miss Foran testified that her head was resting on a plastic helium balloon that blew up in her face after the crash.
    17. A Josephine computer is one in which high speed is achieved by using circuits supercooled by liquid helium to achieve superconductivity.
    18. The entire set of four liquid helium vent ducts was replaced Saturday.
    19. A lunar resource of potentially great commercial value is helium-3, an isotope of helium with three atomic nuclei instead of the more common two.
    20. Its use represents a big improvement over the more costly and formerly required liquid helium, which boils at about minus 452 degrees Fahrenheit.
    21. Red and silver helium balloons bearing the same message bobbed among the well-wishers.
    22. A gas-cooled reactor, for example, uses helium as a coolant instead of water and its core is encased in graphite.
    23. In one type of fusion reaction, two deuterium nuclei fuse to form helium.
    24. "We have no reason to believe we have a generic problem," NASA spokeswoman Lisa Malone said. "All leak tests (with helium) have passed.
    25. Also in Sunday's kickoff ceremonies, a red and yellow helium balloon took flight at Paris' Tuileries Gardens carrying a man dressed in a wig and period costume.
    26. Col. Ron Rand, an Air Force spokesman, said the culprit was a faulty helium pressure regulator.
    27. Race officials said they regretted delaying the launch to morning because balloonists were forced to blow out precious helium that expanded in the warmer daytime air.
    28. The pipes and valves on Columbia and Atlantis had passed the nitrogen and helium tests.
    29. The fuel transfer system also includes a four-inch pipe used to pressurize the tank and a two-inch line that pumps helium early in the fueling process.
    30. Fusion is the merger of hydrogen atoms into helium with the release of substantial energy.
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