modulus
nounA quantity that expresses the degree to which a substance possesses a property, such as elasticity.
nounThe square root of the product of a complex number and its complex conjugate.
nounA natural number used as a specified divisor in modular arithmetic.
nounThe number by which a logarithm in one system must be multiplied to obtain the corresponding logarithm in another system.
nounIn mathematics, a real positive number that serves as measure or parameter of a function or effect. Represented by M. or
In physics, the measure of an effect under conditions whose measure is unity. Thus, a physical modulus is not a number, but a physical quantity.
noun[capitalized] In conchology, a genus of gastropods, referred to the Littorinidæ or periwinkles, or made type of the family Modulidæ. The shell is depressed and trochiform, with a deeply cut columellar tooth and many-whorled operculum.
nounthen the modulus of transformation is
nounA quantity or coefficient, or constant, which expresses the measure of some specified force, property, or quality, as of elasticity, strength, efficiency, etc.; a parameter.
