discharge+from
91honorable discharge — noun a discharge from the armed forces with a commendable record • Hypernyms: ↑dismissal, ↑dismission, ↑discharge, ↑firing, ↑liberation, ↑release, ↑sack, ↑sacking …
92brush discharge — noun a broad electrical discharge from a conductor occurring when the potential difference is high but not sufficient for a spark or arc …
93glow discharge — noun a luminous sparkless electrical discharge from a pointed conductor in a gas at low pressure …
94supervised discharge — (in England and Wales) discharge from a psychiatric hospital of a patient who has been admitted under Section 3 of the Mental Health Act 1983. Under Section 25 of the Act, it requires the discharged patient to comply with a stipulated care plan;… …
95blue discharge — A discharge from military service which is neither honorable nor dishonorable. Longernecker v Highley, 97 App DC 144, 229 F2d 27 …
96Electrical discharge machining — An electrical discharge machine Electric discharge machining (EDM), sometimes colloquially also referred to as spark machining, spark eroding, burning, die sinking or wire erosion,[1] is a manufacturing process whereby a desired shape is obtained …
97Corona discharge — The corona discharge around a high voltage coil …
98Dielectric barrier discharge — (DBD) is the electrical discharge between two electrodes separated by an insulating dielectric barrier. Originally called silent (inaudible) discharge and also known as ozone production discharge[1] or partial discharge,[2] it was first reported… …
99Townsend discharge — The Townsend discharge is a gas ionization process where an initially very small amount of free electrons, accelerated by a sufficiently strong electric field, give rise to electrical conduction through a gas by avalanche multiplication: when the …
100Conditional discharge — A conditional discharge is a sentence passed by a court whereby the defendant is not punished provided he or she complies with certain conditions. An absolute discharge is unconditional: in some jurisdictions, where no conditions are imposed at… …