CLAYDEN EFFECT


Meaning of CLAYDEN EFFECT in English

ˈklād ə n- noun

Usage: usually capitalized C

Etymology: after Arthur W. Clayden died 1944 English meteorologist

: partial desensitization of the emulsion layer of a photographic material by an initial high-intensity exposure of very short duration so that a later exposure of lower intensity and longer duration produces less effect than expected from the combined exposures, sometimes resulting in reversal of an image — compare dark lightning

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.