Home > Terms > English, UK (UE) > Reticle
Reticle
A reticle is a net of fine lines or fibres in the eyepiece of a sighting device, such as a telescope, a telescopic sight, a microscope, or the screen of an oscilloscope. The word reticle comes from the Latin "reticulum," meaning "net." Today, engraved lines or embedded fibres may be replaced by a computer-generated image superimposed on a screen or eyepiece. There are many variations of reticles, of which crosshairs are the most common one.
This is auto-generated content. You can help to improve it.
0
0
Improve it
Other Languages:
Member comments
Terms in the News
Featured Terms
Industry/Domain: Pharmaceutical Category: Drugs
Bath salts
A powder substance also known as Ivory Wave, Vanilla Sky and Blue Magic, which is legally available in most countries, and can have hallucinogenic and ...
Contributor
Featured blossaries
Browers Terms By Category
- SSL certificates(48)
- Wireless telecommunications(3)
Wireless technologies(51) Terms
- Cables & wires(2)
- Fiber optic equipment(1)
Telecom equipment(3) Terms
- Mapping science(4042)
- Soil science(1654)
- Physical oceanography(1561)
- Geology(1407)
- Seismology(488)
- Remote sensing(446)
Earth science(10026) Terms
- Ballroom(285)
- Belly dance(108)
- Cheerleading(101)
- Choreography(79)
- Historical dance(53)
- African-American(50)
Dance(760) Terms
- General boating(783)
- Sailboat(137)
- Yacht(26)