anisotropiske
Anisotropiske is the adjective used in Norwegian and Danish to describe anisotropic properties—where a material’s or system’s characteristics depend on direction. In science, anisotropy contrasts with isotropy, in which properties are the same in all directions. Anisotropy arises from structural features such as crystal lattices, fiber orientations, or layered compositions, and it can be intrinsic (crystal symmetry) or extrinsic (texturing, fabrication).
Many physical properties are tensorial and direction-dependent. For linear responses, a second-order tensor describes how a
Common examples include: graphite has high in-plane conductivity but low out-of-plane; wood’s strength and stiffness depend
Recognizing anisotropy is essential for modeling and design. Engineers account for it in structures and electronics,