kinetics

[ki-net-iks, kahy-] /kɪˈnɛt ɪks, kaɪ-/
noun, (used with a singular verb) Physics.
1.
the branch of mechanics that deals with the actions of forces in producing or changing the motion of masses.
Origin
1860-65; see kinetic, -ics
Examples from the web for kinetics
  • Those engineers may be compared with the mainstream economists, who don't understand the real kinetics of macroeconomic phenomena.
  • In the study of kinetics, relative centers of gravity stimulate the development of anatomical structures.
British Dictionary definitions for kinetics

kinetics

/kɪˈnɛtɪks; kaɪ-/
noun (functioning as sing)
1.
another name for dynamics (sense 2)
2.
the branch of mechanics, including both dynamics and kinematics, concerned with the study of bodies in motion
3.
the branch of dynamics that excludes the study of bodies at rest
4.
the branch of chemistry concerned with the rates of chemical reactions
Word Origin and History for kinetics
n.

1864, from kinetic; see -ics.

kinetics in Medicine

kinetics ki·net·ics (kə-nět'ĭks, kī-)
n.

  1. The branch of mechanics concerned with the effects of forces on the motion of a body or system of bodies, especially of forces that do not originate within the system itself. Also called dynamics.

  2. The branch of chemistry concerned with the rates of change in the concentration of reactants in a chemical reaction.

kinetics in Science
kinetics
  (kə-nět'ĭks)   
See dynamics.
Encyclopedia Article for kinetics

branch of classical mechanics that concerns the effect of forces and torques on the motion of bodies having mass. Authors using the term kinetics apply the nearly synonymous name dynamics (q.v.) to the classical mechanics of moving bodies. This is in contrast to statics, which concerns bodies at rest, under equilibrium conditions. They include under dynamics both kinetics and kinematics (the description of motion in terms of position, velocity, and acceleration, apart from the influence of forces, torques, and masses). Authors not using the term kinetics divide classical mechanics into kinematics and dynamics, including statics as a special case of dynamics in which the sum of the forces and the sum of the torques are both zero.

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