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The Collaborative International Dictionary
ultracentrifuge

centrifuge \centrifuge\ n. an apparatus having containers for liquids arrayed around a central pivot and rotated at a high speed, thus generating centrifugal force on the liquid, and separating substances (such as particles of solid or globules of an immiscible liquid) mixed together in suspension within the liquid. Suspensions which would settle only very slowly or not at all under gravity can be made to separate quickly in such a device.

Note: The containers for holding the liquid in a centrifuge are held in a metal frame called the head or trunnion. The solid material collected at teh bottom of the liquid container is called the pellet. A centrifuge designed to run at very high speeds and thus generate very high centrifugal force is called an ultracentrifuge.

Syn: extractor, separator.

Wiktionary
ultracentrifuge

n. A high-speed centrifuge, especially one free from convection that is used to separate colloidal particles. vb. To submit a material to ultracentrifugation

WordNet
ultracentrifuge
  1. n. a high speed centrifuge used to determine the relative molecular masses of large molecules in high polymers and proteins

  2. v. subject to the action of an ultracentrigue

Wikipedia
Ultracentrifuge

The ultracentrifuge is a centrifuge optimized for spinning a rotor at very high speeds, capable of generating acceleration as high as (approx. ). There are two kinds of ultracentrifuges, the preparative and the analytical ultracentrifuge. Both classes of instruments find important uses in molecular biology, biochemistry, and polymer science.

Usage examples of "ultracentrifuge".

Lars recognized the ultracentrifuge blocked in against the bulkhead, saw the tiers of incubators, the agitators and water-baths, the cartons of pipettes and reagents still unopened, but secured tightly for blastoff.

Over the weekend his barrage of ultracentrifuges at the laboratory ought to yield enough material to reach some final conclusions.

No electron microscopes, no ultracentrifuges, no microsurgery equipment—nothing but early twentieth-century stuff: optical microscopes and Bunsen burners, the kinds of things you buy kids for Christmas.