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How to pronounce cryogenics in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms cryogeny
Type of natural philosophy, physics
Derivation cryogenic

Examples of cryogenics

cryogenics
If that doesn't encourage belief in immortal life through cryogenics, what does?
From the time.com
Meanwhile, Iceland may be an alternative venue for the world cryogenics congress.
From the newscientist.com
The use of helium in cryogenics is self-contained, in that the helium is recycled.
From the newscientist.com
How about cryogenics research or the study of extraterrestrial beings?
From the economist.com
Helium at low temperatures is used in cryogenics, and in certain crygenics applications.
From the en.wikipedia.org
He portrayed an ordinary serviceman chosen for a cryogenics project.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Conventional cryogenics chilled the strip to 20 kelvin but cheaper lasers completed the cooling.
From the newscientist.com
Krasin's early experiment in cryogenics could not have succeeded.
From the guardian.co.uk
He's also signed up to appear in Errol Morris's 1960s-set cryogenics tale Freezing People is Easy.
From the independent.co.uk
More examples
  • The branch of physics that studies the phenomena that occur at very low temperatures
  • (cryogenic) of or relating to very low temperatures
  • In physics, cryogenics is the study of the production and behaviour of materials at very low temperatures.
  • (Cryogenic (band)) Cryogenic was an Australian thrash metal/death metal band formed in 1992 in Wetherill Park, a suburb of Sydney, Australia.
  • (Cryogenic (agents)) Extremely low temperature chemicals that are capable of causing acute or long-term freeze burn damage to the body. Example - ammonia used to deep freeze products in the food packaging industry. Important because suit materials act differently in cold environments. ...
  • (Cryogenic) Extremely cold freezing process, using liquid nitrogen or carbon dioxide, often used to freeze high-value items like shrimp or soft-shell crabs.
  • (Cryogenic) The process of freezing things to very low temperatures. Interesting things start to happen to materials that are subjected to temperatures below -190 or so, the atomic structure gets slightly reorganised and small impurities in the structure even out. ...
  • (Cryogenic) The use of extreme cold (within a few degrees of absolute zero). Cryogenic systems often involve the use of liquid helium (4 Kelvin) or liquid nitrogen (77 K). Astro-E uses liquid helium and solid neon (17 K).
  • Cryogenic conditions are conditions where temperatures are low enough for gases to condense to become liquids or solids. For IFE capsules, deuterium and tritium can be frozen to solid, cryogenic form by the boiling of liquid helium.