scintillation

[ sin-tl-ey-shuh n ]
/ ˌsɪn tlˈeɪ ʃən /

noun

the act of scintillating; sparkling.
a spark or flash.
Astronomy. the twinkling or tremulous effect of the light of the stars.
Meteorology. any small-scale twinkling or shimmering of objects that are viewed through the atmosphere, caused by an interception of the observer's line of view by inhomogeneities in the atmospheric refractive index.
Physics.
  1. a flash of light from the ionization of a phosphor struck by an energetic photon or particle.
  2. random fluctuation of the amplitude, phase, or polarization of an electromagnetic wave.
(on a radar display) a slight, rapid shifting of a spot of light or the image of an object about its mean position.

Origin of scintillation

First recorded in 1615–25, scintillation is from the Latin word scintillātiōn- (stem of scintillātiō). See scintillate, -ion

Example sentences from the Web for scintillation

British Dictionary definitions for scintillation

scintillation
/ (ˌsɪntɪˈleɪʃən) /

noun

the act of scintillating
a spark or flash
the twinkling of stars or radio sources, caused by rapid changes in the density of the earth's atmosphere, the interplanetary medium, or the interstellar medium, producing uneven refraction of starlight
physics a flash of light produced when a material scintillates

Medical definitions for scintillation

scintillation
[ sĭn′tl-āshən ]

n.

A spark; a flash.
A flash of light produced in a phosphor by absorption of an ionizing particle or photon.