resonanceinduced
Resonanceinduced, often written as resonance-induced, is an interdisciplinary descriptor used to indicate that a particular effect or outcome arises from resonance. In this usage, resonance refers to the condition in which a system responds most strongly to a periodic influence at or near a characteristic frequency, energy level difference, or symmetry-allowed transition. The phrase is applied across physics, chemistry, and materials science to flag resonance as the causal mechanism.
In physics and engineering, resonance-induced responses include large-amplitude oscillations when an external drive matches a natural
In chemistry and spectroscopy, resonance effects refer to electron delocalization in molecules (resonance structures) that stabilize
In optics and nanophotonics, resonance-induced phenomena include plasmonic resonances, metamaterial resonances, and cavity modes that produce
Because resonance-induced is context-dependent, its precise interpretation relies on the domain-specific definition of resonance and the