English to Spanish Dictionary accelerate

accelerate

acelerar
definition
verb
the car accelerated toward her
(of a vehicle or other physical object) begin to move more quickly.
translation of 'accelerate'
verb
aumentar de velocidad,
acelerar,
precipitar
example
According to Al Smith, much current research is focused on the use of lasers to 'accelerate' protons, rather than using existing cyclotron and synchrotron sources.
inflation started to 'accelerate'
This contribution is expected to increase as melting rates 'accelerate' , though ultimately the added runoff is predicted to disappear as glaciers decline many decades from now.
Biotechnology will continue to advance and its rate of advance will 'accelerate' .
Why is it easier to 'accelerate' an electron to a speed that is close to the speed of light, compared to accelerating a proton to the same speed?
The need for water investment keeps inexorably increasing and tends to 'accelerate' as the deterioration of these systems advance.
Then, Spinella says, the shift into hybrids and smaller vehicles would 'accelerate' .
A sufficiently strong electric field can further 'accelerate' these electrons.
This action causes the solar atmosphere to sizzle with high-energy X-rays and gamma rays and 'accelerate' proton and electron particles into the solar system.
inflation started to 'accelerate'
I can't believe how fast these cars 'accelerate' out of the corner.
The synchrotron can 'accelerate' electrons from a mere walking pace up to almost the speed of light.
The average F1 car can 'accelerate' faster than most other race cars, aside from drag racing and rally cars that is.
The rate of advance of biotech is likely to 'accelerate' to such an extent that many people who are alive right now will live to see aging become at first partially reversible.
These electrons 'accelerate' in the electric field of the wake.
The principle of the cyclotron fails as particles 'accelerate' close to the speed of light.
It's more of the same only faster and faster because the future's now coming at the speed of light and change is 'accelerating' at an exponential rate.
They watched as the silvery vehicle 'accelerated' into the fast lane and then disappeared in a bright flash.
The development and implementation of instructional practices capable of producing these 'accelerative' effects needs to be studied.
Most of the energy invested in 'accelerating' the electrons is recouped in the cavities as the returning beam decelerates.
There remains some 'accelerative' ability, though, and cruising is quiet when our laughable legal motorway limit represents under 2, 000rpm.
The electron beam gun emits electrons, 'accelerates' the beam of electrons, and focuses it on the work piece.
The vehicle 'accelerates' from 0 to 60 mph in roughly 16 seconds.
X rays emerge when the electrons, 'accelerated' by a strong electric field, slam into a tungsten target.
The direction in which an 'accelerative' force acts is described by the use of a three axis co-ordinate system (X, Y, and Z) in which the vertical axis is parallel to the long axis of the body.
Observations of change over the past century indicate that technology is evolving exponentially, which means change is 'accelerating' or the rate of change is increasing.
Why is that electrons radiate electromagnetic energy when they are 'accelerated' ?
All of the northern regions of England and Wales showed prices rising, with the pace of increase 'accelerating' in Yorkshire and the Humber for the first time since last October.
The pullaway factor provided by the significant torque from the motor makes some 'accelerative' exhilaration possible even in these speed-straitened times we drive in.
As you can see, not only is the total increasing, the rate of that increase also has been 'accelerating' steadily for the past three years.
Credits: Google Translate
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