0 present participle of slosh
1 (of a liquid) to move around noisily in the bottom of a container, or to cause liquid to move around in this way by making rough movements:
Both steady and periodic free-surface sloshing phenomena were found to take place.
During periodic sloshing, the air core sustained shape transformations, assuming an elliptical crosssection a t the end, and then collapsed forming a pair of vortices.
A newly developed numerical model calculating the distribution and damping of radiofrequency fields by sloshing ions is presented.
Dye injection in the centre during periodic sloshing in the tank-disk experiment, showed that the core was undergoing a dramatic transformation in time.
Having established an approximate but accurate tool for predicting sloshing frequencies it is of interest to seek ways of extending the technique to more than one obstacle.
In the last case, the search for a proper scenario of their production includes analysis of antenna- plasma coupling and the efficiency of power deposition to sloshing ions.
There is a good deal too much righteous indignation sloshing around our political system.
That much money is sloshing around the world now thanks to the growth of deregulated financial markets and freer trade.