Biochemistry : The study of the chemistry of biological systems and organisms.
👇 ស្វែងរកឯកសាររៀននិងការងារគ្រប់ប្រភេទនៅទីនេះ៖
👇 ស្វែងរកពាក្យផ្សេងទៀតនៅប្រអប់នេះ៖
ACCA, MBA, Tax Agent ជាអ្នកនិពន្ធហើយអាចប្រលងជាប់៖ ACCA រហូត ៤ មុខវិជ្ជាក្នុងពេលតែម្តង, Tax Agent ពិន្ទុខ្ពស់, MBA & BBA ជាប់ជាសិស្សពូកែ និងមានបទពិសោធការងារជាង ១៥ ឆ្នាំ ព្រមទាំងអ្នកនិពន្ធផ្សេងៗ ?ទិញឯកសារហើយ អានមិនយល់អាចសួរបាន
Biochemistry : The study of the chemistry of biological systems and organisms.
Boiling : See vaporization.
Beaker : A cylindrical vessel or container with a flat bottom, most commonly a type of glassware, widely used in laboratories for a variety of purposes, such as preparing, holding, containing, collecting, or volumetrically measuring chemicals, samples, or solutions, or as a chamber in which a chemical reaction occurs. Beakers are distinguished from flasks by having straight rather than sloping sides; most beakers also have a small spout in the rim to aid pouring.
Base anhydride : Oxides of group I and II metal elements.
Base : A substance that accepts a proton and has a pH above 7.0. A common example is sodium hydroxide (NaOH).
Barometer : A device used to measure atmospheric pressure.
Azeotrope : A mixture of liquids whose composition is unchanged by distillation.
Avogadro’s number:
The number of discrete constituent particles (such as molecules, atoms, or ions) in one mole of a substance, defined as exactly 6.02214076×1023 such particles.
Atomic number (Z):
The number of protons found in the nucleus of an atom of a given chemical element. It is identical to the charge number of the nucleus and is used in the periodic table to uniquely identify each chemical element.
Atomic orbital : Any region in which one or more electrons may be found in an individual atom (as opposed to that within a molecule).
Atomic mass unit : See unified atomic mass unit.
Atomic mass : The mass of an atom, typically expressed in unified atomic mass units and nearly equivalent to the mass number.
Atom : A chemical element in its smallest form, made up of protons and neutrons within the nucleus and electrons circling the nucleus.
Aryl : Any functional group or substituent derived from an aromatic ring, such as phenyl or naphthyl. The symbol Ar is often used as a placeholder for a generic aryl group in structural diagrams.
Aqueous solution : A solution in which the solvent is water. It is denoted in chemical equations by appending (aq) to a chemical formula.
Aromaticity : A chemical property of conjugated rings of atoms, such as benzene, which results in unusually high stability. Such rings are said to be aromatic.
Anion : A negatively charged ion. I.e. an atom that has an excess of electrons compared to protons.
Anode : 1. An electrode through which the conventional electric current (the flow of positive charges) enters into a polarized electrical circuit.2. The wire or plate of an electrochemical cell having an excess positive charge. Negatively charged anions always move toward the anode. Contrast cathode.
Analytical chemistry : The branch of chemistry which studies and makes use of instruments and methods to separate, quantify, and identify chemical substances, both by classical wet chemistry techniques such as precipitation, extraction, distillation, and observational analysis, and by modern instrumental techniques such as chromatography, spectroscopy, and electrochemistry.
Amount of substance:
The number of discrete particles (such as molecules, atoms, ions, electrons, or any other atomic-scale entity) in a given sample of matter, divided by the Avogadro constant. The SI base unit for amount of substance is the mole (mol).
Amalgam : Any alloy of mercury with another metal.
Alloy : A mixture of metals or of a metal and another element which in combination exhibit a metallic bonding character. Common examples include bronze, brass, and pewter.
Allotrope : Elements that can have different structures (and therefore different forms), such as carbon (diamonds, graphite, and fullerene).
Allomer : A substance that differs in chemical composition but has the same crystalline structure as another substance.
Alkyne : An unsaturated hydrocarbon containing at least one pair of triple-bonded carbons.
Alkyl group : A functional group consisting of an alkane missing a hydrogen atom.
Alkaline earth metal : Any of the metallic elements belonging to Group 2 of the periodic table: beryllium (Be), magnesium (Mg), calcium (Ca), strontium (Sr), barium (Ba), and radium (Ra).
Alkane : Any saturated acyclic hydrocarbon.
Aldehyde : Any organic compound consisting of a carbonyl group attached to a hydrogen atom and any other R-group.
Alkali metal : Any of the metallic elements belonging to Group 1 of the periodic table: lithium (Li), sodium (Na), potassium (K), rubidium (Rb), caesium (Cs), and francium (Fr).
Aeration : The mixing of air into a liquid or a solid.
Alcohol : Any organic compound consisting of a hydroxyl functional group attached to a saturated carbon atom.
Adsorption : The chemical adhesion of atoms, ions, or molecules of one substance (either a gas, liquid, or dissolved solid) to the surface of another substance, resulting in a film of the first substance being weakly bonded to the interface between the two substances. Adsorption differs from absorption in that it is exclusively a surface phenomenon, while absorption involves entire volumes of materials.
Adhesion : The tendency of dissimilar particles or surfaces to cling to one another as a result of intermolecular forces. Contrast cohesion.
Addition reaction : In organic chemistry, when two or more molecules combine to make a larger one.
Acyclic : Containing only linear structures of atoms (particularly in hydrocarbons).
Activation energy : The minimum energy which must be available to a chemical system with potential reactants in order to result in a chemical reaction.
Activity series : See reactivity series.
Activated complex : A structure that forms because of a collision between molecules while new bonds are formed.
Actinides:
The periodic series of metallic elements with atomic numbers 89 to 103, from actinium through lawrencium.
Acid anhydride : A compound with two acyl groups bound to a single oxygen atom.
Acid dissociation constant (Ka) :
A quantitative measure of the strength of an acid in solution expressed as an equilibrium constant for a chemical dissociation reaction in the context of acid-base reactions. It is often given as its base-10 cologarithm, pKa.
Accuracy : How close a measured value is to the actual or true value. Compare precision.
Acid : A compound which, when dissolved in water, gives a pH of less than 7.0, or donates a hydrogen ion.
Absorption: 1. The physical or chemical process by which a substance in one state becomes incorporated into and retained by another substance of a different state. Absorption differs from adsorption in that the first substance permeates the entire bulk of the second substance, rather than just adhering to the surface.2. The process by which matter (typically electrons bound in atoms) takes up the energy of electromagnetic radiation and transforms it into any of various types of internal energy, such as thermal energy. This type of absorption is the principle on which spectrophotometry is based.
Absolute zero : A theoretical condition concerning a system at the lowest limit of the thermodynamic temperature scale, or zero kelvins, at which the system does not emit or absorb energy (i.e. all atoms are at rest). By extrapolating the ideal gas law, the internationally agreed-upon value for absolute zero has been determined as −273.15 °C (−459.67 °F; 0.00 K).
Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory: the standard form of set theory and the most common foundation of modern mathematics, based on a list of nine axioms (usually modified by a tenth, the axiom of choice) about what kinds of sets exist, commonly abbreviated together as ZFC
Zeta function: A function based on an infinite series of reciprocals of exponents (Riemann’s zeta function is the extension of Euler’s simple zeta function into the domain of complex numbers)
Venn diagram: a diagram where sets are represented as simple geometric figures (often circles), and overlapping and similar sets are represented by intersections and unions of the figures
Vector space: a three-dimensional area where vectors can be plotted, or a mathematical structure formed by a collection of vectors
Vector: a physical quantity having magnitude and direction, represented by a directed arrow indicating its orientation in space
Type theory: an alternative to naive set theory in which all mathematical entities are assigned to a type within a hierarchy of types, so that objects of a given type are built exclusively from objects of preceding types lower in the hierarchy, thus preventing loops and paradoxes
Trinomial: an algebraic equation with 3 terms, e.g. 3x + 5y + 8z; 3x3 + 2x2 + x; etc
Trigonometry: the branch of mathematics that studies the relationships between the sides and the angles of right triangles, and deals with and with the trigonometric functions (sine, cosine, tangent and their reciprocals)
Triangular number: a number which can be represented as an equilateral triangle of dots, and is the sum of all the consecutive numbers up to its largest prime factor – it can also be calculated as n(n + 1)⁄2, e.g. 15 = 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 + 5 = 5(5 + 1)⁄2
Transfinite numbers: cardinal numbers or ordinal numbers that are larger than all finite numbers, yet not necessarily absolutely infinite
Transcendental number: an irrational number that is “not algebraic”, i.e. no finite sequence of algebraic operations on integers (such as powers, roots, sums, etc.) can be equal to its value, examples being π and e. For example, √2 is irrational but not transcendental because it is the solution to the polynomial x2 = 2.
Topology: the field of mathematics concerned with spatial properties that are preserved under continuous deformations of objects (such as stretching, bending and morphing, but not tearing or gluing)
Term: in an algebraic expression or equation, either a single number or variable, or the product of several numbers and variables separated from another term by a + or – sign, e.g. in the expression 3 + 4x + 5yzw, the 3, the 4x and the 5yzw are all separate terms
Theorem: a mathematical statement or hypothesis which has been proved on the basis of previously established theorems and previously accepted axioms, effectively the proof of the truth of a statement or expression
Tensor: a collection of numbers at every point in space which describe how much the space is curved, e.g. in four spatial dimensions, a collection of ten numbers is needed at each point to describe the properties of the mathematical space or manifold, no matter how distorted it may be
Symmetry: the correspondence in size, form or arrangement of parts on a plane or line (line symmetry is where each point on one side of a line has a corresponding point on the opposite side, e.g. a picture a butterfly with wings that are identical on either side; plane symmetry refers to similar figures being repeated at different but regular locations on the plane)
Subset: a subsidiary collection of objects that all belong to, or is contained in, an original given set, e.g. subsets of {a, b} could include: {a}, {b}, {a, b} and {}
Surd: the n-th root a number, such as √5, the cube root of 7, etc
Spherical geometry: a type of non-Euclidean (elliptic) geometry using the two-dimensional surface of a sphere, where a curved geodesic (not a straight line) is the shortest paths between points
Spherical trigonometry: a branch of spherical geometry which deals with polygons (especially triangles) on the sphere, and the relationships between their sides and angles
Simultaneous equations: a set or system of equations containing multiple variables which has a solution that simultaneously satisfies all of the equations (e.g. the set of simultaneous linear equations 2x + y = 8 and x + y = 6, has a solution x = 2 and y = 4)
Slope: the steepness or incline of a line, determined by reference to two points on the line, e.g. the slope of the line y = mx + b is m, and represents the rate at which y is changing per unit of change in x
Significant digits: the number of digits to consider when using measuring numbers, those digits that carry meaning contributing to its precision (i.e. ignoring leading and trailing zeros)
Set: a collection of distinct objects or numbers, without regard to their order, considered as an object in its own right
Sequence: an ordered set whose elements are usually determined based on some function of the counting numbers, e.g. a geometric sequence is a set where each element is a multiple of the previous element; an arithmetic sequence is a set where each element is the previous element plus or minus a number
Self-similarity: object is exactly or approximately similar to a part of itself (in fractals, the shapes of lines at different iterations look like smaller versions of earlier shapes)
Reciprocal: a number which, when multiplied by x yields the multiplicative identity 1, and can therefore be thought of as the inverse of multiplication, e.g. the reciprocal of x is 1⁄x, the reciprocal of 3⁄5 is 5⁄3
Riemannian geometry: a non-Euclidean geometry that studies curved surfaces and differentiable manifolds in higher dimensional spaces
Real numbers: all numbers (including natural numbers, integers, decimals, rational numbers and irrational numbers) which do not involve imaginary numbers (multiples of the imaginary unit i, or the square root of -1), may be thought of as all points on an infinitely long number line
Rational numbers: numbers that can be expressed as a fraction (or ratio) a⁄b of two integers (the integers are therefore a subset of the rationals), or alternatively a decimal which terminates after a finite number of digits or begins to repeat a sequence
Quintic equation: a polynomial having a degree of 5 (i.e. the highest power is 5), of the form ax5 + bx4 + cx3 + dx2 + ex + f = 0, not solvable by factorization into radicals for all rational numbers
Quaternions: a number system that extends complex numbers to four dimensions (so that an object is described by a real number and three complex numbers, all mutually perpendicular to each other), which can be used to represent a three-dimensional rotation by just an angle and a vector
Quartic equation: a polynomial having a degree of 4 (i.e. the highest power is 4), of the form ax4 + bx3 + cx2 + dx + e = 0, the highest order polynomial equation that can be solved by factorization into radicals by a general formula
Quadrature: the act of squaring, or finding a square equal in area to a given figure, or finding the area of a geometrical figure or the area under a curve (such as by a process of numerical integration)
Quadratic equation: a polynomial equation with a degree of 2 (i.e. the highest power is 2), of the form ax2 + bx + c = 0, which can be solved by various methods including factoring, completing the square, graphing, Newton’s method and the quadratic formula
Pythagorean triples: groups of three positive integers a, b and c such that the a2 + b2 = c2 equation of Pythagoras’ theorem, e.g. ( 3, 4, 5), ( 5, 12, 13), ( 7, 24, 25), ( 8, 15, 17), etc
Pythagoras’ (Pythagorean) theorem: the square of the hypotenuse of a right angled triangle is equal to the sum of the squares of the two sides (a2 + b2 = c2)
Probability theory: the branch of mathematics concerned with analysis of random variables and events, and with the interpretation of probabilities (the likelihood of an event happening)
Plane: a flat two-dimensional surface (physical or theoretical) with infinite width and length, zero thickness and zero curvature
Prime numbers: integers greater than 1 which are only divisible by themselves and 1
Projective geometry: a kind of non-Euclidean geometry which considers what happens to shapes when they are projected on to a non-parallel plane, e.g. a circle may be projected into an ellipse or a hyperbola
Polar coordinates: a two-dimensional coordinate system in which each point on a plane is determined by its distance r from a fixed point (e.g. the origin) and its angle θ (theta) from a fixed direction (e.g the x axis)
Polynomial: an algebraic expression or equation with more than one term, constructed from variables and constants using only the operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication and non-negative whole-number exponents, e.g. 5x2 – 4x + 4y + 7
Place value: positional notation for numbers, allowing the use of the same symbols for different orders of magnitude, e.g. the “one’s place”, “ten’s place”, “hundred’s place”, etc
Platonic solids: the five regular convex polyhedra (symmetrical 3-dimensional shapes): the tetrahedron (made up of 4 regular triangles), the octahedron (made up of 8 triangles), the icosahedron (made up of 20 triangles), the cube (made up of 6 squares) and the dodecahedron (made up of 12 pentagons)
Permutation: a particular ordering of a set of objects, e.g. given the set {1, 2, 3}, there are six permutations: {1, 2, 3}, {1, 3, 2}, {2, 1, 3}, {2, 3, 1}, {3, 1, 2}, and {3, 2, 1}
Pi (π): the ratio of a circumference of a circle to its diameter, an irrational (and transcendental) number approximately equal to 3.141593…
Periodic function: a function that repeats its values in regular intervals or periods, such as the trigonometric functions of sine, cosine, tangent, etc
Perfect number: a number that is the sum of its divisors (excluding the number itself), e.g. 28 = 1 + 2 + 4 + 7 + 14
Pascal’s Triangle: a geometrical arrangement of the coefficients of the polynomial expansion of a binomial power of the form (x + y)n as a symmetrical triangle of numbers
Partial differential equation: a relation involving an unknown function with several independent variables and its partial derivatives with respect to those variables
Paradox: a statement that appears to contradict itself, suggesting a solution which is actually impossible
Parabola: a type of conic section curve, any point of which is equally distant from a fixed focus point and a fixed straight line