Compression may refer to:
In physical science:
- Physical compression, the result of the subjection of a material to compressive stress (the opposite of tension)
- Compression member, a class of structural elements, of which a column is the most common specific example
- Compressibility, the reciprocal of the bulk modulus (typically for solids)
- Gas compression, raising the pressure and reducing the volume of gases
- Compression ratio, a number that predicts the performance of any internal-combustion engine
- Compressibility, a measure of volume change resulting from pressure (typically for fluids)
- Compression (geology), a system of forces that tend to decrease the volume of or shorten rocks
In information science:
In other sciences and technologies:
- Compression, in zoology and paleontology, refers to when an animal, or part of an animal, is shorter or narrower compared with other animals in the same group; e.g. the body of a lizard may be compressed (flattened) so it can better fit into crevices under rocks
- Compression (functional analysis), in mathematics
- Compression bandage, designed to reduce the flow of blood
See also
|