Find the word definition

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Dipolar

Dipolar \Di*po"lar\, a. [Pre. di- + polar. Cf. Bipolar.] Having two poles, as a magnetic bar.

Wiktionary
dipolar

a. 1 (context physics English) having north and south magnetic poles 2 (context physics chemistry English) possessing a dipole

WordNet
dipolar

adj. having equal and opposite electric charges or magnetic poles having opposite signs and separated by a small distance

Usage examples of "dipolar".

Now tell me everything you know about dipolar computers and transitive circuits.

Its looping, dipolar pattern was a brittle blue, laced with flickering orange and yellow spikes as electrody-namic forces worked through it.

She cared nothing for the dipolar computers, or the doors, or the Beams, or the Dark Tower which stood at the center of everything.

As technology went, Eddie didn’t think it was such of a much—certainly not compared to Blaine the Mono, or the dipolar computers that ran Lud—but it cast a pretty light over the crowd and seemed to be non-toxic.

But so was a giant bear patrolling an empty forest, a Morlock thug trying to unravel the secrets of dipolar computers, or a train that lived only to hear and solve new riddles.

A little dipolar pretty with which to pass the long decades and centuries?

The spikes were dipolar antennas and their emission, filtered out from the background noise of the planet, could be isolated as noise in the shortest ultraradio wavelengths.