a. [ L. centrum center + fugere to flee. ]
Centrifugal force (Mech.),
☞ When a body moves in a circle with uniform velocity, a force must act on the body to keep it in the circle without change of velocity. The direction of this force is towards the center of the circle. If this force is applied by means of a string to the body, the string will be in a state of tension. To a person holding the other end of the string, this tension will appear to be directed toward the body as if the body had a tendency to move away from the center of the circle which it is describing. Hence this latter force is often called centrifugal force. The force which really acts on the body being directed towards the center of the circle is called centripetal force, and in some popular treatises the centripetal and centrifugal forces are described as opposing and balancing each other. But they are merely the different aspects of the same stress. Clerk Maxwell. [ 1913 Webster ]
Centrifugal impression (Physiol.),
Centrifugal machine,
Centrifugal pump,
n. A centrifugal machine. [ 1913 Webster ]
. A filter, as for sugar, in which a cylinder with a porous or foraminous periphery is rapidly rotated so as to drive off liquid by centrifugal action. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ]
v. t. to drive out; to subject to the action of a centrifuge.
n. the process of separating substances by the use of a centrifuge. [ WordNet 1.5 ]
v. t.
n. an apparatus having containers for liquids arrayed around a central pivot and rotated at a high speed, thus generating
n. The property or quality of being centrifugal. R. W. Emerson. [ 1913 Webster ]
v. t. to separate (particles in a suspension) from a liquid by centrifugation.