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Latent heat   /lˈeɪtənt hit/   Listen
adjective
Latent  adj.  
1.
Not visible or apparent; hidden; concealed; secret; dormant; as, latent springs of action. "The evils latent in the most promising contrivances are provided for as they arise."
2.
(Med.) Existing but not presenting symptoms; dormant or developing; of disease, especially infectious diseases; as, the latent phase of an infection.
Latent buds (Bot.), buds which remain undeveloped or dormant for a long time, but may eventually grow.
Latent heat (Physics), that quantity of heat which disappears or becomes concealed in a body while producing some change in it other than rise of temperature, as fusion, evaporation, or expansion, the quantity being constant for each particular body and for each species of change; the amount of heat required to produce a change of phase.
Latent period.
(a)
(Med.) The regular time in which a disease is supposed to be existing without manifesting itself.
(b)
(Physiol.) One of the phases in a simple muscular contraction, in which invisible preparatory changes are taking place in the nerve and muscle.
(c)
(Biol.) One of those periods or resting stages in the development of the ovum, in which development is arrested prior to renewed activity.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Latent heat" Quotes from Famous Books



... slightly, "I've forgotten. Some principle of latent heat involved, I believe. Ask Webb. If he could live long enough he'd coax from Nature all her secrets. He's the worst Paul Pry into her affairs that I ever knew. So beware, Amy, unless you are more secretive than Nature, which I cannot believe, since ...
— Nature's Serial Story • E. P. Roe

... originality. No one who reads Crabbe's writings will deny him genius; no one who reads them with adequate sympathy and attention will deny that his genius is vital with passion and imagination. Only the latent heat of passion and imagination could save these seemingly bald and monotonous narratives from being as dull as a dictionary. But they are not so; they have an interest which holds the reader with a fixedness of grasp which he cannot loosen. Crabbe's poetry of the ...
— Atlantic Monthly Volume 6, No. 37, November, 1860 • Various

... of optics discovered by Newton, the velocity of sound, the form of its undulations, and from Sauveur to Chladni, from Newton to Bernouilli and Lagrange, the experimental laws and leading theorems of Acoustics, the primary laws of the radiation of heat by Newton, Kraft and Lambert, the theory of latent heat by Black, the proportions of caloric by Lavoisier and Laplace, the first true conceptions of the source of fire and heat, the experiments, laws, and means by which Dufay, Nollet, Franklin, and especially Coulomb explain, manipulate and, for the first time, utilize ...
— The Origins of Contemporary France, Volume 1 (of 6) - The Ancient Regime • Hippolyte A. Taine

... him; in danger and menace, laughing at the whisper of fear. And then, with such a sunny current of true humor and humanity, a free joyful sympathy with so many things; what of fire he had, all lying so beautifully latent, as radical latent heat, as fruitful internal warmth of life; a most robust, healthy man! The truth is, our best definition of Scott were perhaps even this, that he was, if no great man, then something much pleasanter to be, a robust, thoroughly healthy, and withal, very prosperous and victorious man. An eminently well-conditioned ...
— The Best of the World's Classics, Vol. V (of X) - Great Britain and Ireland III • Various

... less than 101 deg. could not cause any such disaster, while the steam going off from the lungs through the arterial system to the capillaries, gradually condenses, warming the body by giving off its latent heat; and the latent heat of vapor is the same however it is formed, and is always 1,114 deg.. What divine wisdom and economy are ...
— Theory of Circulation by Respiration - Synopsis of its Principles and History • Emma Willard



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