Kayser

Kayser may refer to:

  • Kayser (surname)
  • Kayser (unit) in spectroscopy, equal to reciprocal centimeter
  • Kayser, a thrash metal band from Helsingborg, Sweden
  • Kayser, a unit of wavenumber in the CGS system, named after Heinrich Kayser
  • Kayser Airstrip, small airport in Suriname
  • Kayser's Beach, a village in South Africa
  • Kayser-Fleischer ring, a dark ring that appears to encircle the iris of the eye
  • Kayser-Roth, a manufacturer of hosiery and intimate apparel
  • Kayser-Threde, a company in Munich, Germany, developing high-technology solutions for astronautics, science and industry
  • George R. Kayser House in Arizona, United States
  • Kayser Sung, Asian journalist
  • See also

  • Kaiser
  • Kaysersberg
  • Kayser (surname)

    Kayser is a surname derived from the German imperial title Kaiser (English: emperor). The title Kaiser is in turn derived from the Latin title Caesar, which again is a derivation from the personal name of a branch of the gens (clan) Julia, to which belonged Gaius Julius Caesar, the forebear of the first Roman imperial family. The further etymology is unclear. Other names with the same origin are Kaiser and Keiser; Keyser is more common as a Dutch spelling, and Qaisar is an Arabic version.

  • Adolph H. Kayser (1851–1925), Mayor of Madison, Wisconsin, United States
  • Allan Kayser (born 1963), American actor
  • Alois Kayser (1877–1944), German missionary
  • Benjamin Kayser (born 1984), French rugby player
  • Bernhard Kayser (1869–1954), German ophthalmologist.
  • Carl Gangolf Kayser (1837–1895), Austrian architect
  • Charles Willy Kayser (1881–1942), German film actor
  • Emanuel Kayser (1845–1927), German geologist
  • Éric Kayser (born 1964), French baker and food writer
  • Fredrik Kayser (1918–2009), Norwegian resistance member during World War II
  • Wavenumber

    In the physical sciences, the wavenumber (also wave number) is the spatial frequency of a wave, either in cycles per unit distance or radians per unit distance. It can be envisaged as the number of waves that exist over a specified distance (analogous to frequency being the number of cycles or radians per unit time).

    In multidimensional systems, the wavenumber is the magnitude of the wave vector. The space of wave vectors is called reciprocal space. Wave numbers and wave vectors play an essential role in optics and the physics of wave scattering, such as X-ray diffraction, neutron diffraction, and elementary particle physics.

    For quantum mechanical waves, wavenumber multiplied by Planck's constant is the canonical momentum.

    Wavenumber can be used to specify quantities other than spatial frequency. In optical spectroscopy, it is often used as a unit of temporal frequency assuming a certain speed of light. In this context, it is the number of cycles—not radians—per unit length, and the reference distance should be assumed to be cm. In the same domain, wavenumber can also be used as a unit of energy; 1 cm−1 of energy is the amount of energy in a single photon with a wavelength of 1 cm, the conversion being done using Planck's relation. For example, 1 cm−1 implies 1.23984×10−4 eV and 8065.54 cm−1 implies 1 eV.

    Podcasts:

    Matching books:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Latest News for: kayser

    Edit

    National forecast time! Meteorologist D.J. Kayser has the latest on the severe weather from the...

    Bitchute 18 Apr 2025
    Go to the source via the article link to view the video or click the video icon ....
    • 1
    ×