¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Microwatts
1. microwatt [n] - See also: microwatt
Lexicographical Neighbors of Microwatts
Literary usage of Microwatts
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Text-book on Wireless Telegraphy by Rupert Stanley (1919)
"power required to produce audible signals in a telephone receiver, and found that
430 microwatts were required at 300 frequency, but only 7'7 microwatts at ..."
2. Telephonic Transmission, Theoretical and Applied by James Greaves Hill (1920)
"177 that the maximum magnification is given when the input is very small, ie
about five microwatts, and that as the input increases from that figure to 40 ..."
3. Enforcement Procedures And Scheduling For Occupational Exposure To Tuberculosisby DIANE Publishing Company by DIANE Publishing Company (1996)
"... proper use of the REL requires that the measured irradiance level (E) in
microwatts per square centimeter (uW/cm2) be multiplied by the relative ..."
4. Directory of Federal Laboratory and Technology Resources: A Guide to (1993)
"It can measure power levels of 20 nW to 100 microwatts at the 3-cm-dia aperture
within an uncertainty of less than I percent. The ACR has a resolution of I ..."
5. Foreign Policies of the Soviet Union by Richard Felix Staar (1991)
"Still unexplained was why the Soviets bombarded the US embassy with low- intensity
microwaves beginning in 1960, intensifying to eighteen microwatts after ..."
6. The Alternate Current Transformer in Theory and Practice by John Ambrose Fleming (1892)
"Table of Eddy Current Loss in Round Iron Wire Cores tn microwatts per cubic
centimetre, reckoned at 0° Centigrade. For a frequency r\j of 100. ..."
7. The Propagation of Electric Currents in Telephone and Telegraph Conductors by John Ambrose Fleming (1911)
"Cohen and Shepherd remark, considerable difficulty.1 This energy is extremely
small, perhaps only a few microwatts, and is always a variable quantity. ..."
8. The Principles of Electric Wave Telegraphy and Telephony by John Ambrose Fleming (1919)
"It is best estimated in microwatts per centimetre cube of the dielectric. In this
manner we have been able to measure for various forms of condenser the ..."