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HgM - Martensite album

HgM - Martensite album

  • Performer: HgM
  • Genre: Electronic
  • Title: Martensite
  • Released: 2014
  • Style: Noise, Drone
  • MP3 version size: 1338 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1592 mb
  • Other: AHX RA FLAC VOX TTA AU MPC
  • Rating: 4.5
  • Votes: 806

Description

Listen free to HGM – Martensite (Intergranular Corrosion, Ammonium Peroxydisulfate and more). Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue online at Last.

Get all the lyrics to songs by Martensite and join the Genius community of music scholars to learn the meaning behind the lyrics.

Martensite is named after the German metallurgist Adolf Martens (1850–1914). The term most commonly refers to a very hard form of steel crystalline structure, but can also refer to any crystal structure that is formed by diffusionless transformation. Martensite includes a class of hard minerals that occur as lath- or plate-shaped crystal grains

M)alato") from Italy starts an experiment to record certain reactions and processes. The result shows always a very alienating and totally different listening experience. In his recent contribution to our label he collects several works he has recorded over the last years.

Now on bandcamp as well. Martensite, by HgM. 1 track album. com/voluntary-w. ite. Whenever there is an interesting process in metallic reactions prone to produce sound in the more obvious or rather totally unobvious way, noise enthusiast HgM ("(H)organismo.

HgM - Slag Inclusion. Повторите попытку позже.

Movies about Martensite and Bainite. The article on the Thermodynamics of Martensite by J. W. Christian has been reproduced with permission from the publishers.

Martensite is a metastable structure in metals and non-metals, which arises without diffusion and athermal by cooperative shear movement from the initial structure.

The martensite article needs some overhaul in my opinion, there are poorly worded sections in addition to slight errors. The section "Martensitic Transformation: Mysterious Properties Explained" probably needs the most work. If I get a chance today, I'll rewrite this section. My textbook offers a completely different definition of martensite: "When a new phase in any (sic) material is produced by a displacive transformation it is always referred to as 'martensite'. Displacive transformations are often called 'martensitic' transformations as a result. ( Ashby, Michael F. (1992).

Tracklist

A1 Intergranular Corrosion 6:24
A2 Ammonium Peroxydisulfate 9:34
B1 K3[Fe(CN)6] 12:33
B2 Electrolytic Etching 3:21
C1 Marginal Incision 4:21
C2 Intermetallic Compound 5:43
C3 Slag Inclusion 5:22
D1 Gas Porosity Level 6 6:59
D2 Radial Segregation 6:35

Credits

  • Photography By – Sandra Rothfuß

Notes

21 x 21cm art cover in PE Bag with metal object. Limited to 42 copies.

Video