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"polarization effect" is correct and can be used in written English.
It typically refers to the way in which opinions on an issue become more disproportionate and entrenched as more information is released. For example, "The new study on climate change is having a dramatic polarization effect, with some researchers becoming more convinced of its detrimental effects while others remain adamant that climate change is a hoax."
Exact(60)
The corrugated outer surface acted as micro-turbulence promoters mitigating the temperature polarization effect and enhanced the external effective surface area for condensation.
This polarization effect can be used to design a TE or TM pass polarizer.
The first so-called polarization effect was discovered by the Danish physician Erasmus Bartholin in 1669.
A closely related paper by Ross, Lepper, and Robert Vallone, from 1985, found that the polarization effect was particularly powerful among strong partisans.
Other research has shown a polarization effect: bring a bunch of climate change doubters into a room together, and they will leave the room even more skeptical than before, more confident and more extreme in the their views.
The polarization effect means that they will just keep getting quirkier and more idiosyncratic.
The symmetric plural scattering swamped the predicted polarization effect.
Theorists checked on whether or not other effects might mask the predicted polarization effect.
With the same external bias, the polarization effect in the c-LED and the reduced polarization effect in the m-LED could be compared.
The polarization effect leads to inclined quantum wells, from which the emission wavelength is red-shifted.
Indeed, some previous studies on NWs do show an obvious polarization effect [15 20].
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com