And despite all the good news about dental health, tooth decay remains one of the most common diseases of childhood. |
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Conversely, if a depolarizing process is much slower than the decay of the excited state, little depolarization will occur before emission. |
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Children from deprived areas are more likely to suffer tooth decay than those from better-off backgrounds. |
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The business park will help regenerate this area disadvantaged by years of industrial decay and dereliction. |
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For all its wacky irreverence, it is also a rather touching story of moral decay in an uncivilized world. |
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By winter, the colour would all be gone, replaced by black bark and the putrid brown of decay set against grey sky and grey water. |
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The dust, the dirt, the decay and the dilapidation have taken away the exuberance from the ordinary lives. |
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After boiling it again, he measured the decay of the resulting radon gas with a gold leaf electroscope. |
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The decay of neutrons into protons is essential for the existence of the element hydrogen, whose nucleus is a single proton. |
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A week later, it was a functioning hospital, an island of cleanliness and sanity in a sea of decay and dirt. |
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The very name Grimethorpe conjures up an picture of dirt, decay and desolation. |
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Although fluoride helps to strengthen the enamel, tooth decay from sugar still occurs. |
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Dental decay is when bacteria in the mouth break down the enamel of a tooth. |
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The bulb on the end of this cautery was heated and applied to tissue to treat a variety of dental ills, including tooth decay and gumboils. |
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The growing incidents of apparent decay of our moral fibre should be of concern to every right-thinking citizen of this young nation. |
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Their job is to kill the bird, sever its head and subject it to a drying process that ensures it does not decay or disintegrate. |
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Alpha decay occurs when an atomic nucleus disintegrates by emitting alpha particles. |
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It was that taken as a whole the night yielded an unmistakable sense of decay and disorder. |
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Luxury and lavish living were seen as the causes, moral decay and dissolution as the consequences. |
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Later, their decay uses up oxygen needed by fish and other aquatic dwellers. |
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The body stops maintaining bodily functions and begins to decay on the spot. |
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The varnish smoothes out the gaps and ridges on the surface of the teeth and prevents the build-up of plaque, which causes decay. |
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Water causes decay or rot of the wood and early failure of paint, and it accelerates the weathering of wood exposed outdoors. |
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Internal voids resulted from the more rapid decay of internal organs and musculature than the cuticle of the exoskeleton. |
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It commits the artist to a descent into time, into the processes of mutation, decay and dissolution. |
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Your dentist will remove any decay or old filling from the tooth with a drill. |
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She attributes this, at least in part, to a rural acceptance of natural processes of birth, reproduction, death and decay. |
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Working in Sierra Leone, she found horrific decay among the children whose teeth she examined. |
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After chains of beta decay, the decay product is a stable neutron-rich nucleus. |
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Unstable atoms that lie below the band of stability, and therefore have excess neutrons, are likely to decay by emission of beta particles. |
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The Juliana bases are constructed of a galvanized steel to resist rust and decay. |
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The spatial gradient would show distance decay relationship of shoppers with increasing distance from a shopping centre. |
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The number of total neighbors invites a comparison with the results for the larger neighborhood with the distance decay inactive. |
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The near home hypothesis and distance decay pattern appear to be of high relevance for the analysis of the journey made to commit crime. |
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When built at the turn of the last century this was in a smart district of the city, but decay has set in. |
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The general course of the decay curves was similar for polished and amalgamated zinc. |
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Regrettably this can still result in ancient remains being left to decay or even being destroyed. |
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The alpha particle is emitted by certain radioactive elements as they decay to a stable element. |
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Part of this energy is seen in the form of alpha radiation, which occurs in the process of alpha decay. |
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Similar damage is caused by the alpha recoil, which is a trace of the energy released during the alpha decay of uranium and thorium isotopes. |
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Helium, a light gas, is formed during radioactive alpha decay in rock minerals. |
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Sugar alcohols, including xylitol, mannitol, sorbitol, lactitol and maltitol, do not promote tooth decay or sudden spikes in blood sugar. |
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Plus, it looks amazing, a Gothic monstrosity the worse for wear after years of decay and gutting by fire. |
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The reek of moral decay is overpowering and has set in across the rainbow nation. |
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A reduction in tooth decay would reduce the risks of children dying during dental anaesthetics. |
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Only intercalating dyes exhibit decay kinetics simple enough to attempt a lifetime-based analytical procedure. |
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The seasonal decay of the wild man's realm in the fall, then, was a sign that the regenerative powers of those spirits had weakened. |
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Wall paintings in particular, once so abundant, have succumbed to decay, destruction, or covering over with whitewash. |
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The paints are factory tested and do not suffer calcimining, powdering, or decay. |
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She causes, some say, desolation, evil, and decay, yet she also creates palaces of art and culture, gardens of rank luxuriance. |
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That is roughly half the annual dose from inhaled radon and its decay products in a typical single family home in the United States. |
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Radon is present in the atmosphere because it is constantly being formed during the radioactive decay of uranium and radium. |
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This is a partial list of radionuclides that decay by positron emission and have been used in biomedical imaging studies. |
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They realized that the particles emitted by radioactive elements as they decay are in fact little bits of the atomic nuclei. |
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A radioactive source will emit these radiations at various frequencies, depending on its activity and its decay mode. |
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Creative ingenuity gone, the arts and industries would decay, sky-scrapers would crumble, plantations would be weedgrown, as they are in Haiti. |
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But now many of the weather-worn black and white signposts are threatened by neglect and decay. |
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Saliva neutralizes acids that can cause tooth decay, but its production is greatly reduced during sleep. |
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Additionally, carbon dioxide and organic acids may be added to the water from the soil, where they form by decay of organic matter. |
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Motions that change the quadrupole interaction while an echo is being formed contribute to echo decay. |
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Lowering the temperature appears to substantially shorten the quadrupole echo decay time of the prominent doublet component. |
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A walloping 90 percent of Americans have some form of gum disease and tooth decay. |
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The instructive trajectory of their political decay has now reached the terminal stage of free-market libertarianism. |
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Tooth decay, fillings and tartar build-up can also all contribute to discolouration. |
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This may be a consequence of abnormally rapid decay of lexemes in the phonological output lexicon. |
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In addition, the most common membranes used in reverse osmosis units are subject to decay and failure and must be replaced periodically. |
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The rapid decay of the autocorrelations further indicates that the regions of correlated spreading were not large. |
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The centrifugal force that keeps the main rotor blades solidly rigid at 90 degrees to the hub will decay rapidly. |
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The pores also let water out while allowing in chemicals that help block decay. |
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The symptoms of decay in the government were obvious before this influence was brought to bear. |
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If a tooth has been broken, or weakened by a lot of decay or a large filling, a crown can be fitted to strengthen it. |
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Each of these discovered a new aesthetic through the gradual decay of its high cultural forms. |
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First, it is a highly conserved component of eukaryotic mRNA decay machinery. |
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In contrast, oriented lines, contrast information, and vernier offsets show a slight decay for such time intervals. |
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A haze of spiderwebs hung from the ceiling above him, and the smack of wet decay met his nose. |
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Views into the three numbered motel rooms through lensed eyeholes presented a similar mix of persistence and decay, presence and abandonment. |
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To protect your child's teeth against decay and erosion, try to keep squashes, fizzy drinks, natural fruit juices, sweets and cakes to a minimum. |
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Radioactive atoms decay into stable atoms by a simple mathematical process. |
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No politician is talking about ideas or programs to liberate the people from the current economic retrogression and social decay. |
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Many ideas were set afloat, ranging from radioactive decay to nuclear reactions of various kinds. |
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He suggests that the excess tracks may be explained by the decay of short-lived fissioning nuclides, such as super-heavy nuclei. |
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He began his respected career in the mid-1980s, creating gritty urban landscapes that commented on the decay and decadence of modern life. |
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Nuclear isomers are excited states that eventually decay to the ground state, mostly by gamma radiation. |
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The autocorrelations did not decay to zero because there was very little retraction. |
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Serious decay can occur at the base of branches and they must be inspected annually for fungal and bacterial damage. |
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Typically, the anisotropy decays of nanosecond decay time fluorophores are used to study the order and dynamics of the acyl side chain regions. |
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I would think you'd need hard radiation to initiate the cascade, but that the decay product would be softer. |
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Steven's rustic trellises typically last three or four years before the poles decay, making replacement necessary. |
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These techniques, unlike carbon dating, mostly use the relative concentrations of parent and daughter products in radioactive decay chains. |
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A statistical model for decay and formation of heavy hadronic resonances is formulated. |
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Since the Early Miocene, thermal decay has led to the subsidence of Cavalli Seamount and other, volcanic, seamounts in the South Fiji Basin. |
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It is a colourless gas produced by the decay of organic matter such as raw sewage, oils, and saltwater. |
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Over a period of time they become much more firmly fixed and resistant to decay and interference. |
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All beer heads decay exponentially with time, with most taking around three minutes to decay almost completely. |
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Keep the mulch two to three inches away from tree and shrub stems to prevent stem decay and pest problems. |
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There were all these children with tooth decay yet you see them sucking lollies. |
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On the contrary most people are told daily that fluoride prevents tooth decay and strengthens the bones. |
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I know two mothers with toddlers who nurse several times a night and have extensive tooth decay and cavities. |
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Oral diseases such as gum inflammation, cavities, tooth decay and other infections should be treated early. |
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The latter argued that economic independence caused disorder and decay in women. |
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As soon as they are rooted from the ground, they will begin to slowly decay and eventually wither into a brown mess of rot. |
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In addition to primeval heat, Earth's core also gets heat from radioactive decay of uranium, thorium, and potassium. |
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A piece of fruit will decay far less quickly if refrigerated, than if left out in the sun. |
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Some vegetables may decay before drying, so start with several in order to ensure that one will dry successfully. |
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To help prevent leaks, moisture seepage and decay problems, check your roof for weak areas. |
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The castle narrowly failed to win cash from BBC TV's Restoration competition in 2003, leading to fears that the building might decay completely. |
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The apartment block itself looms as large as any of the human characters with it's faded grandeur and slow decline into decay and rot. |
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But inevitably, a society acknowledging no transgenerational commitment to the future will decay and decline from within. |
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With radioactive waste, the material will eventually decay to non-radioactive materials, but this process may take thousands of years. |
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Bald cypress is exotic, and both woods are exceptionally decay resistant and are excellent building materials. |
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When an organism dies, oxidation reactions are responsible for the decay of the organic matter. |
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The feedback, clipping, and heavy crackle due to vinyl decay doesn't do much justice as far as preservation goes. |
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Certain of the test compounds have both prevented wood decay and killed native termite colonies. |
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Unlike wood, however, it is completely unaffected by damp, rot, decay, frost or insect attack. |
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The rate of decay in a given mass of the radionuclide is measured in units called becquerels, where 1 Bq equals one transformation per second. |
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It is well known that bacterial decay of organic matter in sediment liberates phosphate and bone is also a potential phosphate source. |
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A gust of wind blasts against his face, carrying with it the scent of rot and decay and the suggestion of whispers. |
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The study did not find an association between secondhand smoke exposure and decay in permanent teeth. |
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Health authorities tell us that fluoridation is a safe and a highly effective means of preventing dental decay in children. |
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Tooth-brushing at least twice daily with a small headed, medium hardness brush will also help reduce decay if a fluoride toothpaste is used. |
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The natural oil found in the screw pine will act as the anti-fungal agent and prevent decay of the material even if it is washed. |
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However, the decay on real xylophones and marimbas is so long that the counterpoint gets muddied. |
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Wood from slowly growing trees with narrow rings proved resistant to decay. |
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When it closed the canal was seen as a dirty, decaying relic of an industrial past, and it sank into decay and dereliction. |
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If the teeth are not cleaned properly they may be vulnerable to tooth decay causing cavities, or to gum disease. |
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Poor ventilation is a common feature that promotes mold growth and structural decay in buildings. |
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However, in recent times the walkway including the adjacent river has fallen into decay with overgrown weeds, graffiti, dumping. |
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And what the sweet bejesus do you want people to do in a waiting room surrounded by decay and misery instead of read books? |
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Gradually the abandoned buildings fell into decay or were adopted for other uses. |
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The early designers of urban-aid programs saw inner-city decay as more than just an economic matter. |
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A couple of glistening new campuses mask the shocking physical decay of dozens of city schools. |
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Boric acids or boric salts are products which traditionally used to protect buildings that perhaps have already suffered from some rot or decay. |
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This interaction is also about 10 times weaker than the electromagnetic and is responsible for the beta decay of particles and nuclei. |
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If one well is filled higher than the other, you tend to get a beta decay to even them out. |
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She asserted that a photo of marabou storks on a pile of rubbish was racist because it portrayed the decay of Johannesburg under black rule. |
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The goal of conservatism is to defend our civilization from decay and decadence, from a weakening of our principles. |
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In fact, stripping an atom entirely of electrons has speeded up beta decay by a factor of a billion. |
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The sense of urban decay is much more evident and the chaos of the street is not balanced but overwhelming. |
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People talk a lot about cultural decay and declining values and the blame is usually placed on evil liberals. |
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In early tests, nearly all electrons emitted during the tritium's beta decay were absorbed. |
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The principles of alpha decay are used in radioactive dating, in which half-lives play an important part. |
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This is one order of magnitude slower than the decay of K in the bacteriorhodopsin photocycle. |
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However, once again, the declining field strength is best explained by an exponential decay of the field due to a decaying electric current. |
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After linear baseline subtraction, to account for the gradual decay of the synchrotron beam intensity, two kinds of treatments were performed. |
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Another tree species on Saint Lucia is bois canon, or cecropia, whose large, palm-like leaves decay very slowly when they fall to the ground. |
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Historic buildings and ancient monuments across North Yorkshire continue to be threatened by neglect and decay, a report has revealed. |
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Think of composting and worms immediately come to mind, not to mention such unsettling concepts as decay and rot. |
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In collisions at high energies, charmonium particles come from the decay of b-flavoured hadrons and prompt production. |
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Tooth decay is caused by the bacteria in dental plaque breaking down sugar in the foods and drinks that you eat and drink. |
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The coolant water should be chlorinated to approximately 125 parts per million of chlorine to protect the asparagus from decay organisms. |
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The DLSM spatial maps of the fluctuation decay rates of the imaged cells confirm this finding. |
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Victor now turns his mind to the mysterious processes of decay and degeneration in animal tissue. |
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The icing on the decay is a swoony style, which prioritizes effect over meaning, and offers sensual pleasure at best. |
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The aroma was similar to a death room, with the smell of decay, rot, and disinfectant. |
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For Poe the physical decay of the house was symptomatic of the decline of the Usher family. |
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They'd cast it in a rough mix of ferrous and non-ferrous metals, so that the rust and patinas of decay would be reproduced quickly. |
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In recent years the fabric of the building began to show signs of decay and in 1997 work began in earnest to rectify the damage. |
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An impacted tooth must be removed as soon as the first symptoms are diagnosed rather than wait till it causes decay in the next tooth. |
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But how do you put a price on what we sell, which is more impalpable, insidious, sad and empty than the decay that you read here? |
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The first sign of decay may be a sensation of pain when eating something sweet, very cold or very hot. |
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The oozy goo of reproduction and decay impinges darkly on the tidy geometrical regularity of a bogus suburban milieu. |
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He explores in his art the dynamics of decay without ignoring the comedic ironies of living. |
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Their preference was for something old, but they were put off by the inconvenient layouts of the buildings and the decay in them. |
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But signs of decay were increasingly apparent and the extravagance of the Edwardian period had all the hallmarks of an Indian summer. |
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The directors shot the film on location in and around New York City, and you can almost smell the decadence and decay. |
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Pearls which have been known to be 200 years old have turned black because of the decay of the conchiolin. |
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Fig. 4 compares the decay of the excited state for the native trimer and the solubilized monomer. |
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For decades mercury has been in the amalgam used by dentists to fill holes caused by decay in teeth. |
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This particular arrangement of nucleons is unstable and so tritium readily undergoes radioactive decay to yield a helium atom. |
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The history of rise and decay repeated itself after the Osmanli Turks appeared on the scene. |
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The surface plasmons then decay into photons, which are emitted from the surface. |
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The articulated colonies of Crisia fragment into their constituent internodes after decay of the elastic joints. |
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We have to put this in context and not think that we are looking at the absolute moral decay of mankind. |
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Emphasis should be on good soil drainage because free water on the surface may cause decay at the crown or at the bases of the leaf stalks. |
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Other detectors depend on the electrons from a decay to ionize other atoms and produce an electric current proportional to the decay energy. |
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Overnight, the tendency of naturalistic rationalism to decay into postmodern irrationalism became a national joke. |
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Gentry had discovered that granites contain microscopic coloration halos produced by the radioactive decay of primordial polonium. |
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But the register shows that a total of 133 listed buildings and scheduled monuments in the region are still at risk of decay. |
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Radioactive elements have different isotopes that decay at different rates. |
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The code breaks into numbers, which decay further into a blizzard of zeros and ones. |
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The sign of the constant of proportion, c, in the equation above, will determine whether the process is one of growth or of decay. |
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Quintessence is dynamic, unlike the cosmological constant, and its average energy density and pressure slowly decay with time. |
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A series of political crises in the course of this period mark the decay of the old bourgeois-democratic framework. |
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What about brushing one's teeth, as opposed to letting natural tooth decay take its course? |
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We see our past achievements as the end results of a clean forward thrust, and our present difficulties as signs of decline and decay. |
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The two curvilinear models were exponential growth or decay curves and piecewise linear regression models. |
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This allows the pathogen to grow and infect the seed resulting in what we commonly refer to as seed decay or damping off. |
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Ratios of naturally occurring radioactive minerals to their decay daughters can be used in determining the age of geological materials. |
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The radon gas will then also decay into radioactive solid particles, called radon daughters or radon progenitors. |
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The bits no-one wanted, or which were too big and heavy to cart away would lay there to sink into the vegetation and decay slowly over the years. |
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They urge linking with education departments on decay prevention in schools. |
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England was on her knees, so weakened and in such a state of decadence and decay that any moral resistance would have been virtually impossible. |
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They are deflected by magnetic fields between us and the source, or they interact with other particles, or they decay in flight. |
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Glittery recovery of the city's downtown has not made up for high costs, political problems, and continued decay in outlying neighborhoods. |
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The obvious place to look was at scars in rocks which had been etched by the radioactive decay process. |
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The home is still empty today, and has suffered considerable interior damage, including structural decay resulting from water leaks in the building. |
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The resulting elements then decay into still heavier elements. |
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Dental caries or sugar-bacterial tooth decay is largely preventable. |
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It is easy for tiny amounts of food to get trapped in the tiny dents or fissures, and if you do not brush them thoroughly, bacteria can build up and start to decay the tooth. |
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There are two types of radioactive decay, alpha decay and beta decay. |
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This decay must betoken the doom of modern civilisation as it did that of Rome and Greece, unless some new moral or physical factors arise to defeat it. |
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The dark energy might decay after a while to a negative value, creating an inward acceleration that leads to a big crunch before things get so dull. |
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Liberals loved it because it made men with guns look like Neanderthals, and conservatives leaped at the chance to tut-tut predictably about the social decay of America. |
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When the town turns up as the location for a television show it is almost invariably portrayed as a sink of industrial decay and urban alienation. |
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From this deliberate fabrication the myth of Fluoride preventing tooth decay was born and has been adopted by the Dental Profession as the unalterable truth. |
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When left in an unventilated area, or worse yet in the back of a hot car or trunk, wet boots dry out too slowly, accelerating decay of the leather. |
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Among the white rot decay fungi, T. versicolor was not very aggressive against any of the softwoods, but produced some weight loss in pine and Metasequoia. |
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The reason physicists haven't yet observed sparticles might be because they are so much heavier than their normal sister particles, so they decay far too quickly. |
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So the normally stable proton can decay into a neutron, a positron, and a neutrino if continuously fed enough energy through constant, extreme acceleration. |
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In most cases, the elements radioactively decay so rapidly that scientists have very little opportunity to observe them and study their properties. |
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After the organism dies and becomes a fossil, carbon-14 continues to decay without being replaced. To measure the amount of radiocarbon left in a fossil. |
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Systemic fluoride is one of the most effective tools in the prevention of dental decay and has been shown to reduce caries in young children by 40 to 50 percent. |
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There's quite a lot of literature that goes back even to the '40s on the association of the consumption of dairy products with low experience of tooth decay or dental caries. |
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The older-growth heartwood is very resistant to decay, but the lumber from young trees that are harvested too soon has a lower level of decay resistance. |
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The lightest particles containing a strange quark cannot decay by the strong interaction, and must instead decay via the much slower weak interaction. |
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Apparently all the melted snow water had drenched the wooden beams supporting the mines, causing them to decay and fall apart, taking the ceilings with them. |
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Masses of leaves may begin to decay and smother the plant beneath them. |
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For years Blackburn's Church Street Pavilions have been allowed to crumble and decay so that the Grade ll listed buildings have become nothing more than an eyesore. |
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Institutional inertia, social customs, and psychological habit ensure that systems can maintain their outer shapes long after they have begun to decay internally. |
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A late complication of neglected dental decay is a dental abscess. |
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The report highlights a number of problems, including the degeneration and decay of timber in the upper sections where the tree has been previously topped and pruned. |
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Corn crown and root decay can weaken stalks and complicate harvest. |
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Soybean debris in fields with high levels of brown spot infection should be incorporated into the soil with tillage to increase the rate of decay of these plant tissues. |
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Layers of moss and decay give a funereal quality to this weighty hall. |
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One result of increased durability is that obsolescence rather than decay will be the major reason old structures and old products are torn down and thrown away. |
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Providing new facilities becomes a higher priority than maintaining the same facilities in older neighbourhoods, which also leads to decay in areas near the city centre. |
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It comes less than two weeks after the worst blackout in US history, a social disaster that had its roots in the decay of the electrical transmission grid. |
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This colossal structure of iron and glass, despite the gradual decay and depletion it suffered over the 82 years of its existence, had not lost its ability to amaze. |
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Unlike Britain, Rome succumbed not to the rise of a new empire, but to internal decay and a death of a thousand cuts from various barbarian groups. |
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Increased consumption has the potential to increase the number of traffic accidents, increase crime and contribute to the moral decay of the community, she said. |
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It is all part of the decline and decay of our modern culture. |
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Both the attempted coup in Fiji and the ousting of the government in the Solomons have exposed the advanced state of decay in the state structures of these countries. |
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Traditional societies in underdeveloped countries are no more immune to creeping moral decay than their more sophisticated cousins in rich, developed nations. |
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The professor and his group study the decay of charmed mesons. |
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John Paul cannot be expected to police every pulpit in Christendom, of course, but the decay in catechesis and Church discipline that has occurred on his watch is undeniable. |
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The real culprits in dental decay are sugar in your diet and dental plaque, which turns out to be a highly active film on your teeth hotching with bacteria. |
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It was this symbiosis between large herbivores and micro-organisms that sustained biological decay as well as adequate disturbance on a periodic basis. |
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In petrifaction the organic cell walls may decay and be replaced by another phase of minerals, usually with a similar chemical composition to the first phase. |
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Social problems have festered, as reflected in the 45 million Americans without health insurance, the decay of the public schools and the growth of hunger and homelessness. |
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To visualize these multiple decay components, the inset in Fig.12 A shows a logarithmic plot of the anisotropy decay and the corresponding fit curve. |
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The decay of American liberalism as a credible instrument of social reform can be traced all the way back to the first decades of the twentieth century. |
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The milk or juice can pool in her mouth and cause tooth decay and plaque. |
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According to the most simple model, each species is accounted for by a mono-exponential decay function that is convoluted with the respective instrument response function. |
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At very high temperatures, part of the Lu decay to Hf bypasses the conventional slow route, and goes into an isomeric state which has a half-life of only 3.68 hours. |
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The depictions of corporeal decay delineate the destiny of the physical body and portray the mysterious transitional state between this and the other worlds. |
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The aura of poverty, corruption, and urban decay is overpowering. |
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Although fortepianos have higher decay rates than their 20th Century cousins, Bilson manipulates that decay with such skill you can feel the tail of silence quiver. |
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Stronger than flax, fiber from white dead-nettle was also spun into fishing nets by North American Indians, through a process of decay rather than retting. |
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Nuclear densimeters are a set of devices that measure the decay of a radioactive source and they correlate this decay to the density and water content of soils. |
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As the decay nears the dental pulp you may suffer from toothache. |
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Hardy also pays attention to the decay and disfigurement in the woods. |
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Some of these excitons emit light when they decay to the ground state. |
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The rest are doomed to decay or suffer humanly induced destruction. |
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Those who object to this should take a look at the children undergoing dental extractions for decay at an age when they are far too young to advocate fluoride in water. |
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Appropriately titled 8Versions, the exhibition explores nudity, nature, double exposure, infrared lighting, beauty and decay in both silver gelatine and digital mediums. |
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This distance decay pattern may apply both to users who attempt to access websites through search engines, as well as to those who surf directly to some targeted websites. |
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A number of investigations have found a distance decay function, in which the number of offenses declines with increasing distance from the residence of the offender. |
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Multi-story hotel towers stand stripped of any ornamentation, and seem almost Soviet in their austere and honest decay. |
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As a means of preventing tooth decay in those cities that do fluoridate, the practice certainly looks like a success. |
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Often, when acousticians look at a room, the audio spectrum is divided into five critical bands, with the goal of making the decay time consistent across this spectrum. |
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Francium was discovered in 1939 by the French physicist Marguerite Perey while she was analyzing the products formed during the radioactive decay of actinium. |
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It is important to approach AIDS holistically considering the intense moral decay among young people today coupled with rapid increase in juvenile delinquency. |
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A rank smell of decay and woodrot drifted from inside the helmet. |
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In turn, these decay into other subatomic particles, like kaons and pions. |
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The illustrations of human decay from the first through eighth stages emphasize the consequences of the vicious cycle of human life and death deriving from karmic effect. |
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People who have problems such as infection, cysts or tumours, tooth decay, or gum disease around a wisdom tooth should think about having it removed. |
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If you trust me I will instil in you the correct moral values so needed in this age of sexual libertarianism and moral decay, and also aid your withered self esteem. |
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Their decay proceeded without a ready supply of oxygen, producing hydrocarbons like methane instead of oxygen-bearing molecules. |
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Witnesses say there were at least six bodies piled together inside this one tiled room where the air is poisonous with decay. |
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Man I hate hospitals, if they're not depressing, they smell like anti-bacteria solvent, the gross part of alcohol, trying to cover up the reek of death and decay. |
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It is also a history of change and decay, of accepting some components of an incoming civilisation and rejecting others and refashioning them in a new and familiar guise. |
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Not only can boosting the mineral content of teeth through remineralization prevent tooth decay, but if employed early on, it can actually reverse decay, say some dentists. |
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Chief culprit in dental decay is the bacterium Streptococcus mutans, which anchors itself to the tooth and produces lactic acid as a metabolic byproduct. |
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Wolfgang Pauli suggested in 1930 that beta decay must involve a third particle that would be neutral, have negligible rest mass and a spin of one-half. |
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The observation of the following two decay processes leads to the conclusion that there is a separate lepton number for muons which must also be conserved. |
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While animal cell membranes decay too rapidly to be pyritised, the cellulose or lignin cell walls of plants are more resistant and may be preserved in this way. |
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When the bonds that link citizens with their governors are stretched over ever greater distances and are ever more rule-bound and intolerant, they decay and snap. |
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Elements of high atomic mass are relatively less stable than objects of lower atomic mass, and are more likely to undergo the process of alpha decay. |
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Instead of personal gain-seeking being viewed as the mainspring of progress, it was perceived to sow the seeds for economic polarization, and hence social discord and decay. |
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With American education falling into decay, and each generation leaving school more hopeless than the last, it's good to know New York State isn't bilking its teachers. |
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Unlike other carbon-dating methods that monitor scintillations produced by radioactive decay, the TAMS method counts the actual number of carbon isotope atoms in a sample. |
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Every year aging cars, left to decay in scrapyards or fields or suburban driveways, create more than 15 million tons of waste across the United States and Europe. |
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It's easy to forget the former blight and decay of this part of Southwark. |
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Cellobiohydrolase activity varied greatly during the whole period of decay and disappeared at the advanced stages of decay. |
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The daughter nuclides will then normally decay through beta or alpha, respectively, to end up in the same place. |
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Phenol-formaldehyde bonded particleboards were dimensionally stabler than urea bonded particleboards in the decay chamber. |
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As such, most of the dipteran species collected are generally associated with decay and fungus, although two tabanid species were collected. |
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However, similar attempts with infective agents and agents with aerobiological decay rates proved to yield grossly inaccurate results. |
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Unlike acidic coffee, Matcha green tea is alkalinizing and contains anti-bacterial properties that freshen breath and help prevent tooth decay. |
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This allowed them to measure the photons in connection with the new element's alpha decay. |
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Studies have shown that a sugar alcohol known as Xylitol has chemical properties that prevent tooth decay. |
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Many different kinds of decay microorganisms participate in ammonification. |
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Shigo found a correlation between the scars and decay resulting from yellow-bellied sapsucker damage and the occurrence of ring shake. |
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The formaldehyde surrounding the shark, Hirst says, is the process of death and decay. |
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An earlier error occurred when Enrico Fermi submitted his breakthrough paper on the weak interaction theory of beta decay. |
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The frequency and decay time of the dominant mode are determined by the geometry of the photon sphere. |
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Both actors won excellent notices, but the play, an allegory of Britain's decay, did not attract the public and closed after four weeks. |
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Some of these crystals contain forms of uranium and thorium that radioactively decay to other elements. |
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Scientists of the day were well aware that the natural decay of radium releases energy at a slow rate over thousands of years. |
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Worryingly, around one third of five-year-olds and almost one half of eight-year-olds were found to have decay in their milk teeth. |
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