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extensity
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The answer EXTENSITY has 0 possible clue(s) in existing crosswords.
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The word EXTENSITY is VALID in some board games. Check EXTENSITY in word games in Scrabble, Words With Friends, see scores, anagrams etc.
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Definitions of extensity in various dictionaries:
The quality of having extension or being extensive.
A specific degree or range of extension.
The attribute of sensation that enables one to perceive space or size.
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Possible Dictionary Clues |
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The quality of having extension or being extensive. |
A specific degree or range of extension. |
The attribute of sensation that enables one to perceive space or size. |
Extensity might refer to |
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Physical properties of materials and systems can often be categorized as being either intensive or extensive quantities, according to how the property changes when the size (or extent) of the system changes. According to IUPAC, an intensive property is one whose magnitude is independent of the size of the system. An extensive property is one whose magnitude is additive for subsystems.Note: The use of the term "intensive" is potentially confusing. The meaning here is not the dictionary one but, instead, inEXtensive, where Extent means "the area, length, or size of something". * An intensive property is a bulk property, meaning that it is a physical property of a system that does not depend on the system size or the amount of material in the system. Examples of intensive properties include temperature, T; refractive index, n; density, ρ; and hardness of an object, η (IUPAC symbols are used throughout this article). When a diamond is cut, the pieces maintain their intrinsic hardness (until the sample reduces to a few atoms thick), so hardness is independent of the size of the system, for larger samples.By contrast, an extensive property is additive for subsystems. This means the system could be divided into any number of subsystems, and the extensive property measured for each subsystem; the value of the property for the system would be the sum of the property for each subsystem. For example, both the mass, m, and the volume, V, of a diamond are directly proportional to the amount that is left after cutting it from the raw mineral. * The ratio of two extensive properties of the same object or system is an intensive property. For example, the ratio of an object's mass and volume, which are two extensive properties, is density, which is an intensive property.The terms intensive and extensive quantities were introduced by Richard C. Tolman in 1917. |