
Accelerator | Toaru Majutsu no Index Wiki | Fandom
Accelerator (一方通行 アクセラレータ Ippō Tsūkō (Akuserarēta)?, lit. "One-Way Road") is the 1st-ranked Level 5 and the strongest esper currently residing in Academy City. He is the …
ACCELERATOR Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of ACCELERATOR is one that accelerates. How to use accelerator in a sentence.
Accelerator - Wikipedia
Download accelerator, or download manager, software dedicated to downloading Hardware acceleration, the use of dedicated hardware to perform functions faster than a CPU
ACCELERATOR | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
ACCELERATOR definition: 1. the pedal (= a part that you push with your foot) in a vehicle that makes it go faster 2. in…. Learn more.
Accelerator - Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | Vocabulary.com
An accelerator makes things go, or accelerate. The gas pedal on a car is an accelerator, but so is a machine that scientists use to speed particles up and smash them.
ACCELERATOR definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
The accelerator in a vehicle is the pedal that controls the flow of gasoline to the engine, which you press with your foot in order to make the vehicle go faster. He eased his foot off the …
What does ACCELERATOR mean? - Definitions.net
An accelerator is a device, mechanism or a substance that increases the speed or rate of a process, activity or reaction. In physics, an accelerator is a machine that propels charged …
How an accelerator works - CERN
An accelerator comes either in the form of a ring (a circular accelerator), where a beam of particles travels repeatedly round a loop, or in a straight line (a linear accelerator), where the …
Accelerator Definition & Meaning | YourDictionary
Accelerator definition: A device, especially the gas pedal of a motor vehicle, for increasing speed.
accelerator - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jan 9, 2025 · (physics) A device that accelerates charged subatomic particles; a particle accelerator. (physiology, medicine) A muscle or nerve that speeds the performance of an action.
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