Effect
The term effect ( from the Latin effectus for " effect " or "success" to: " cause " " effizieren " Efficere = " cause " - from: facere = "to make" ) may refer to:
- One caused by a specific cause and effect, see causality
- In physics a number of phenomena: Doppler effect, Gunn effect, Hall effect, Joule- Thomson effect, Lense- Thirring effect, Magnus effect, Zeeman effect and many more
- A visual (optical ) effect in optics, see optical effect
- In the image and movie editing a way to edit images through special visual effects, see visual effect
- An audible ( audible ) effect in acoustics, see also effects unit ( music)
- The retrieval of creatures that were considered extinct, see Lazarus Effect
- In art, the re-commissioning (or resuscitation ) of silicon detectors, see Lazarus effect ( physics )
- Derogatory a superficial impression or success, which often is used to display behavior, see grandstanding
- Easily interchangeable ( fungible ) securities, see effects
Stage:
- Special effects, mechanical techniques which produce certain effects in theater or film
- Pyrotechnic effect, fireworks technology to display explosions, etc., see pyrotechnics
- Effect ( Arts ), often pejoratively used ( mere effect ), handy defined by Theodor W. Adorno as an effect without a cause: as an impression which is to act directly on the recipient without his appearance motivated or justified would
See also:
- Disambiguation