0 past simple and past participle of destabilize
1 to make a government, area, or political group lose power or control, or to make a political or economic situation less strong or safe, by causing changes and problems:
On the other hand, the ion-cyclotron instability is also destabilized when the ion drift speed exceeds a certain threshold.
It is plausible that such a complex boundary is destabilized and comes to chaotic orbits connecting attractor ruins.
By 1804, though, no external force had destabilized the ruling regime; any real challenge would have to come from within the polity.
Such states can be intentionally destabilized by concerted outside intervention.
Some would probably go to see the whale, but others would stay put, and then the system would not be destabilized.
The ion-acoustic wave is found to be locally destabilized in the large velocity shear region.
The (m, n) = (5, 2) mode is strongly destabilized in the nonlinear phase for all cases.
The internal (m, n) = (5, 2) mode is strongly destabilized in the nonlinear phase.