This year, experts are looking to renewed buoyancy in the US economy, while the European economies look pretty sluggish. |
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Pet life jackets do not come with buoyancy ratings, as do human life jackets. |
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Cold water is denser than hot water, he explains, so it provides more buoyancy. |
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Sauropods were long believed to be semi-aquatic swamp wallowers, relying on the buoyancy of water to support their massive bodies. |
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If only all nature, all humanity were bathed in a rosy glowing radiancy and life for the future seemed naught but buoyancy and light. |
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Water's buoyancy makes a swimmer feel weightless and reduces stress on joints in the spine, hips and knees. |
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Kitted out with helmets, wetsuits, buoyancy aids and paddles, our team piles into two inflatable rafts, drifting gently downriver. |
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He was wearing a padded coat and I think that was giving him some buoyancy and keeping him afloat. |
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Different swimming strokes target different parts of the body, while the buoyancy of the water cushions muscles and joints. |
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They are made of high buoyancy foam and will float with guns and ammunition inside. |
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A critical specialization in the locomotor spectrum for aquatic animals is buoyancy. |
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Fitzgerald, a fine lyric poet, neglected today, was able to accommodate his gifts to the buoyancy and basic serenity of the Odyssey. |
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The snorkel, flippers, and goggles are definitely material objects, as are the air tank, the regulator, and the buoyancy control device. |
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I longed to tell her that dreams can lose their buoyancy, like a gas balloon weighted with too much ballast, sandbagged by too many years. |
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These seeds were similar in size and buoyancy characteristics to the seeds of cobble beach plants. |
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When a submarine submerges, however, the water plane disappears and the metacenter comes down to the center of buoyancy. |
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This introductory course in hydrostatics of ships covers buoyancy, weights, metacenters and stability at small and large angles of heel and trim. |
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But it also said the family's boat had modifications on its hull that reduced its buoyancy. |
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Then he reached inside and took out the inflated wine bladders he'd stuffed in for extra buoyancy. |
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Its remarkable buoyancy, and the Whaler's legendary unsinkability, was simply a coincidence. |
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My lungs then re-expand, my wetsuit buoyancy returns and I float to the surface. |
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On the other hand, these wider vesicles float more readily due to their greater buoyancy. |
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Weight reduction is not as important in swimming because the body mass is subject to buoyancy by being immersed in water. |
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The array tube is filled with mineral oil to create neutral buoyancy, allowing the array to float behind the underwater towing vehicle. |
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This procedure confers on the armadillo enough additional buoyancy to enable it to float. |
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First, water provides sharks with substantial buoyancy, whereas air does not confer the same benefit to aircraft. |
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Defying all laws of buoyancy, he continued walking into the water until the surface was a good five feet above him. |
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Built into each wheel unit was a flotation tank with sufficient buoyancy to float the unit. |
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The Arena suit, in all honesty, has a great blend of buoyancy and feel for the water due to the specialist material. |
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My buoyancy is such that at 15m I could float to the surface without effort. |
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If lifting the ball up stops the water from running, try to bend the float arm down to get the right buoyancy. |
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Gas vesicles are gas-filled intracellular structures that provide buoyancy in many unicellular aquatic organisms. |
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Typically, Clione swim nearly continuously to maintain a stable position in the water column and avoid sinking due to negative buoyancy. |
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And because of its buoyancy, water is also used in rehabilitation programs. |
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Their bones are unusually thick, possibly an adaptation to make the animal heavier counteracting the buoyancy of the water. |
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Logic tells you that you cannot fall and that the buoyancy of the water will support you, but what you feel is the opposite. |
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Using the natural buoyancy of the water, the experimental dance is both effortless and enormously fluid. |
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Bridget rides them with defiant optimism, but both her bad breaks and her endearing buoyancy in dealing with them venture outside the real. |
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Discussions became political after next to no time so there was a bit of hope and buoyancy that National and Dr Brash will win this year. |
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But I certainly think it took through until the 1970s possibly to regain some of that buoyancy, and some of that optimism. |
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This did not dispel Calderwood's good humour and buoyancy in a season far from finished as he embraced Levein on the touchline before kick-off. |
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Her music reflects youthful buoyancy and her rich repertoire keeps the audience spellbound. |
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This summer WXPN named Calico an Album of the Week, and its cheery buoyancy has earned it airplay nationwide. |
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None of them reported that they had relaxed their credit criteria in the face of the buoyancy in the Irish economy. |
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After a long time, the revived projects are exceeding the value of projects shelved, showing overall buoyancy in the economy and investment. |
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Yet the relative buoyancy of the UK economy suggests that Scotland will be insulated from these wider chills. |
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The health of a country's economy should not be judged by the buoyancy of its stock market or its currency's strength. |
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The revenues for the future are showing a greater degree of buoyancy and I think we now have to focus on health, education and social welfare. |
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However, a surprising resilience and unexpected buoyancy has emerged during the past year. |
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The effect of this revision has been to transform Scotland's regular flirtation with recession into a steady relationship with economic buoyancy. |
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Mr Harrison said the order book reflected the continuing buoyancy of the region's economy. |
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Much of the Korean economy's buoyancy can be traced to the effects of banking reforms since Korea's 1997 financial crisis. |
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He encountered buoyancy problems during his ascent, so he headed directly to the surface without decompressing. |
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It is the rural sector that has given us growth and buoyancy over the last couple of years. |
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There has been a massive temporary boost to our competitiveness from a low dollar, which is the main reason for our current economic buoyancy. |
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It's a big river where you need a good strong wading staff, a buoyancy aid and chest high waders to reap the river's rich rewards. |
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He can ride a specially adapted bicycle and swim with buoyancy aids but plainly these achievements are of limited significance. |
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Wear an approved lifejacket or buoyancy aid appropriate for its intended use. |
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I've already mentioned the rough, craggy nature of these huge waters so don't forget your buoyancy aids. |
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I thought of trying to remove my rucksack and use it as some sort of buoyancy aid or step up but that too failed. |
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And for the more nervous or very lame canines, buoyancy aids are available along with a guide pole and adjustable collar. |
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The club has been able to buy a set of boats, paddles, buoyancy aids, spraydecks and helmets. |
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In addition to this, buoyancy aids will be available at no cost to parents and children under four at all times at every pool. |
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Gallipoli is a filmed tragedy, where the buoyancy, high spirits and beauty of youth are inevitably crushed by the forces of history. |
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The buoyancy force was calculated from the potential energy difference between the overriding continental plate and the subducting oceanic plate. |
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An overweighted diver will have to put extra air into a BC or drysuit to maintain neutral buoyancy. |
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If your buoyancy control is good and the current is minimal, the three-plus minutes can be spent in a relaxing hover. |
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A characteristic of the family Gobiidae is the absence of a swim bladder, which is used for buoyancy control. |
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The swim bladders of fish work much the same way as a scuba diver's buoyancy control device. |
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Her natural buoyancy eventually coaxed us into conversation, and saved the day. |
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Astronauts are dropped into the training pool wearing space suits, then loaded with weights and floats for buoyancy. |
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Safety has been foremost, with three buoyancy bags or floatation devices strategically placed to assure that the boat does not sink. |
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This paper briefly reviews the history of cloud physics, then discusses the gravimetric theory of cloud buoyancy. |
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Slowly and inexorably though, his effervescence and buoyancy turned to bitterness. |
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Her brash buoyancy and his effortless elegance lifted the audience into the stratosphere. |
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The Thorax Gray Drake Fly is designed to provide buoyancy and balance on the water especially in the smaller hook sizes. |
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If you sink, you don't need any more weight and can compensate for the negative buoyancy under water by adding air to your drysuit. |
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Buoyancy bags for instance are available from several boat manufacturers and yacht chandlers. |
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The air in the North Pacific subtropical gyre is heated at the equator and rises high into the atmosphere because of its buoyancy in cooler, surrounding air masses. |
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Although this position appears to enhance stability as determined from the arrow model, it also appears to be nearly coincident with the center of buoyancy. |
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We might also remark upon his buoyancy, an inward easiness of spirit. |
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Buoyancy aids should always be worn, and a cagoule will keep off the wind and water. |
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Here are the essential characteristics of my proposed new buoyancy aid. |
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Sudden peace, buoyancy, contentment, or alternatively sorrow or physical pain. |
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And despite the good scholarship the authors have managed to retain the buoyancy and upbeat air attendant on most comics. |
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At his Balzacian best, he radiated warmth, buoyancy, optimism and hope. |
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At any rate, the experience of the boom-bust cycles was that rapid money-supply growth was accompanied by buoyancy in both asset prices and spending. |
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You are a Cheever, my father would tell his children with a buoyancy in his voice which suggested both seriousness and mockery. |
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The bulk of the buoyancy in spending reflects rising incomes and employment growth, and is thus impossible to cool without dampening the economy overall. |
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This reflected improved economic buoyancy, particularly in property and retail and higher spending across a range of areas from financial to general classified advertising. |
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This buoyancy supports most of the deadweight of floating cargoes, so that typically only a minor portion of the deadweight is carried by the vessel. |
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The debate over whether kitsch constitutes a genuine art form becomes moot if the artifact in question reaches a certain critical mass of sheer buoyancy. |
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Even if you don't like to swim, walking in the shallow end can provide aerobic benefits, and the buoyancy of the water will take the stress off your joints. |
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This is despite the fact that no account has been taken of the potentially depressing impact on economic activity and revenue buoyancy of their tax raising proposals. |
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But as the more perceptive economic commentators have noted, the rosy economic statistics and apparent buoyancy of the Australian economy rest on a house of cards. |
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Raziel, on the other hand, begins the game in the spectral realm, a plane where lost souls gather, objects can't be moved and water has no buoyancy. |
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They opted instead for buoyancy aids, which allow them more arm movement. |
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When the ballonets are filled with air, the dense air contained within different balloons but the same envelope as the helium has an effect on the buoyancy. |
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I like the flexibility an aqualung offers to get slightly lower camera angles, though I have to be very careful with my buoyancy control to avoid stirring up silt. |
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Realise I forgot to pack my buoyancy aid so have to scrounge one. |
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Because of their buoyancy, halite beds may deform or rise and drag surrounding rocks, producing salt domes or act as fill or lubrication in geological faults. |
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However, in films of murres underwater, relative upstroke speed and thrust appear to be greater during vertical descent against high buoyancy than during horizontal swimming. |
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Where a month ago there was optimism and buoyancy, there is hopelessness. |
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Thus is Philip Gura caught in neutral buoyancy between belief and hope. |
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Our British headquarters is amazed at the buoyancy of the Irish market. |
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However, with borrowing and debt levels at record highs, buoyancy in these areas could still crumble rapidly if the general view of the economy changes for the worse. |
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First, the market's recent buoyancy is stirring investor greed. |
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The higher buoyancy will allow the magma to pond at shallower depths. |
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They are barely in control of themselves, taking turns to float up before dumping all buoyancy and crashing back into the wreck in a cloud of silt and debris. |
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During vertical movements, animals can take advantage of gravity or positive buoyancy to permit unpowered downward or upward locomotion for a longer period. |
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The country in general has witnessed dramatic price rises in recent years, attributed to inflation, economic buoyancy, and now the euro changeover. |
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This is difficult to do since the center of your body mass is about 6 inches above your navel, but your center of buoyancy is between your armpits. |
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This distance is called the metacentric height, which takes negative values when the center of mass is above the center of buoyancy, as is common among fishes. |
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A major factor determining the magnitude of rolling moments following a disturbance is the vertical distance between the centers of mass and buoyancy. |
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It's an advanced skill and shouldn't be tried by anyone without precise buoyancy because of the risk of holding your breath while blowing the bubble. |
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Problems arise occasionally, but contemporary masks, fins, snorkels, regulators and buoyancy compensators are far better than they were even a few years ago. |
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My advice is to wear a buoyancy aid and take a wading staff. |
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The basic idea is that magma will rise through the crust as a single mass through buoyancy. |
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To say that the lithosphere floats on top of the asthenosphere suggests a degree of easy buoyancy that isn't quite right. |
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Meantime, the loonie's buoyancy this year reflects growing interest in Canuckistan from offshore admirers. |
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It's the nature of founderings that ships have buoyancy and are afloat one second, then lose buoyancy and sink the next. |
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The tanks were also used to raise sunken wrecks by placing them under the wreck and creating buoyancy by pumping them full of air. |
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It is used in scuba diving weight belts to counteract the diver's buoyancy. |
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This included sufficient buoyancy in the ships' sidewalls that they would float even with the tank deck flooded. |
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Submarines use diving planes and also change the amount of water and air in ballast tanks to change buoyancy for submerging and surfacing. |
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To submerge hydrostatically, a ship must have negative buoyancy, either by increasing its own weight or decreasing its displacement of water. |
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This change in density incompletely compensates for hull compression, so buoyancy decreases as depth increases. |
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It was once assumed that species actively regulate their buoyancy via intracellular lipids to counter sinking. |
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To date, the only buoyancy mechanism successfully demonstrated in marine diatoms is the buoyancy regulation through an ionic pump. |
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The addition of a concrete coating is also useful to compensate for the pipeline's negative buoyancy when it carries lower density substances. |
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Many bony fish have an internal organ called a swim bladder that adjusts their buoyancy through manipulation of gases. |
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One strategy is to fully construct the offshore facility onshore, and tow the installation to site floating on its own buoyancy. |
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The second was a spring pushing the detonator away from the explosive charge into the buoyancy chamber unless compressed by hydrostatic pressure. |
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The ship also featured a set of 21 vertical watertight compartments for extra buoyancy. |
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The boxes were machined from aluminium stock and filled with Kapok sacks for added buoyancy. |
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Its primary structure comprised a large modular buoyancy tank, the internal structure of which being divided into 24 watertight compartments. |
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In aeronautics, a balloon is an unpowered aerostat, which remains aloft or floats due to its buoyancy. |
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The manifestation of this varying lateral density is mantle convection from buoyancy forces. |
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Isostatic movements may help such exhumation by balancing out the buoyancy of the evolving orogen. |
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The motion of the fluid is sustained by convection, motion driven by buoyancy. |
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During early winter, the atmosphere cools the surface and strong wind and negative buoyancy forcing mixes temperature to a deep layer. |
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With its body fat providing buoyancy, the bear swims in a dog paddle fashion using its large forepaws for propulsion. |
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By using this unique air bladder to adjust their buoyancy, or ability to float, rattails can root around the seafloor in search of food. |
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The archetypal mingler, it never looks out of place and adds buoyancy to heavy planting schemes. |
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This is more obvious in vertical upflow by reason of smaller density of ice particles whose buoyancy can further promote the slurry motion. |
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Consistent across panelist testimony is flexibility and buoyancy in response to unprecedented market challenges. |
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The rise of a diapir is self-limiting because its buoyancy decreases as it rises. |
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It is in essence a horst underlain by the Weardale Granite which provides sufficient buoyancy to maintain this piece of the upper crust as an area of raised relief. |
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Their bones are solid instead of hollow which reduces their buoyancy. |
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It is believed that chronically entangled animals may in fact sink upon death, due to loss of buoyancy from depleted blubber reserves, and therefore escape detection. |
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The subducting slab undergoes backward sinking due to the negative buoyancy forces causing a retrogradation of the trench hinge along the surface. |
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The driving force for rollback is the negative buoyancy of the slab with respect to the underlying mantle modified by the geometry of the slab itself. |
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This 'saccular lung' is used for hydrostatic purposes to adjust buoyancy in some aquatic snakes and its function remains unknown in terrestrial species. |
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This sinking is induced by either a loss of buoyancy control, the synthesis of mucilage that sticks diatoms cells together, or the production of heavy resting spores. |
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This is filled with air sacs and fat that aid in buoyancy and biosonar. |
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It is uncertain how ctenophores control their buoyancy, but experiments have shown that some species rely on osmotic pressure to adapt to water of different densities. |
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Among specific topics are buoyancy and stability, basic elastostatics, nearly ideal flow, action and reaction, gravity waves, and subsonic flight. |
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The spermaceti organs may also help adjust the whale's buoyancy. |
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Since much of the flying is done at a low level, ejector seats are useless and pilots instead carry buoyancy aids and an emergency air bottle for ditching at sea. |
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The saleroom activity proved that the West Midlands property market is showing signs of regaining its buoyancy with many lots exceeding guide prices. |
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Here, customers will be offered a selection of wakeboards, water skis, towables, buoyancy aids and wetsuits, boat accessories and a host of other watersport items. |
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This book examines forty eponymous laws of science, from Archimedes' Law of Buoyancy to Hubble's Law of Cosmic Expansion and the great minds behind them. |
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