Steady-state diffusion of water along the two defined pathways depends on the concentration gradient and on the diffusivity of the substance. |
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Both were built in the early 1950s based on a method of enriching uranium by gaseous diffusion. |
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Alternatively, the thick mucus lining the airways could result in poor diffusion into the gaseous phase. |
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This was also the beginning of a diffusion of English ideas into Indian diet. |
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Through these, new subject matter and models were widely disseminated, with diffusion into book illumination and sculpture. |
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The diffusion of goods, ideas, and people works continuously to erode uneven development, but never succeeds in doing so. |
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The outside layer, or bloom, consists of wax plates and cutin, both of which resist water diffusion and hence water loss from the berry. |
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The circulation and diffusion of information provides a good example of the differences between German and Chinese organizational routines. |
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Such interpenetration and diffusion of ideas, images, and information is made possible by the Internet on a global scale. |
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Expansion diffusion is intensified at the source region, or cultural hearth, and has a snowball effect as it spreads from this region. |
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If, however, the priority is the diffusion of alternate ideas and debates, we should not overemphasize one vehicle over others. |
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The focus is on ideas, idea diffusion, brands, marketing, persuasion and web design. |
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Interconnectedness also contributes to the rapid diffusion of ideas and technology. |
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When an object reflects light with little diffusion it is said to have a glossy or optically smooth surface. |
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Colors in the agate are due to traces of iron and manganese oxides or to light diffusion in colloids. |
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The former model tends to use physical analogies like the diffusion of light or the growth of a plant. |
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This winding tale of cultural diffusion takes us back more than seventeen-hundred years to the Pallava dynasty. |
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His research interests are the economics of science and technical changes, and the theory of diffusion of new technologies. |
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A second patent followed after he began to study the diffusion of infrared light. |
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After this fact one need not be surprised at the diffusion of the far lighter and smaller sporules of cryptogamic plants. |
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Screen shots show the use of the curve, light diffusion and terracing to invite the player. |
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Examples include the distribution of counterions on DNA, micelles, polymer diffusion, and liquid mixtures. |
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Theoretically, conductivity should not be dependent on the path length of diffusion over which conductance is measured. |
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The cities he founded became the spring boards for the diffusion of Hellenistic culture. |
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Respiratory function tests generally show a persistent slight-to-moderate hypoxemia and a reduction of carbon monoxide diffusion. |
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These studies address the effect of the hydrophobic surfactant proteins on diffusion within lipid bilayers. |
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The diffusion of particles in a polymer solution has been investigated on numerous polymeric systems. |
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According to world culture theorists, the diffusion took place in three phases. |
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This remarkable cultural diffusion clearly illustrates just how far north Hispanic influences spread. |
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Involvement of any mechanical force that may be superposed on the diffusion to enhance the releasing process has not been elucidated to date. |
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Essentially, this is a glass-based system that allows the driver to dial in the amount of diffusion that he or she is comfortable with. |
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The bimolecular rate constants for these reactions are of several orders of magnitude less than diffusion controlled. |
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The three components of the tensors were averaged to report the overall rate of diffusion or tumbling. |
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Similar to previous diffusion studies, innovativeness plays a critical role in predicting consumer adoption of new media technologies. |
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It is quite possible that the diffusion of bioactive antibiotics would be hindered by the thickened pleura. |
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If our economy is to be about more than the diffusion of others inventions, we must ourselves innovate more and invent more. |
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There are quite a few instances of cultural diffusion affecting the history of the Khmer Empire. |
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Soft-focus or diffusion filters give a misty quality to images and can impart a romantic mood to scenics and flower close-ups. |
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Non-ionic surfactants act as accelerators of diffusion in the cuticular wax barrier. |
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The component whose diffusion is to be observed must be tagged with a fluorophore so that it can be imaged in the confocal microscope. |
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We showed that the autocorrelation profile not only contains information on diffusion timescales but also on relaxation timescales. |
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After the respective diffusion time, sporopollenin capsules were sedimented by centrifugation. |
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We have simulated the sedimentation of particles with very small diffusion coefficients. |
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There is some directed diffusion of Hispanics and Asians outward from these immigrant ports of entry. |
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He received the 1930 Nobel Prize in Physics for his research on the diffusion of light and discovery of the Raman effect. |
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Sampling of gases and vapors by active sampling on a solid adsorbent or passive sampling by diffusion is routinely done and well documented. |
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There is, however, an unexplained discrepancy between the magnitudes of the diffusion coefficients obtained from the two techniques. |
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Again, on long timescales and large length scales, the dynamics is just diffusion with drift. |
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Second, there seems to be no significant anisotropy in the sarcoplasmic diffusion of proteins. |
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Thus the main diffusion hindrance for these molecules should be the tortuosity of the diffusion path. |
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Due to smaller contact metal diffusion through fewer dislocations, it also reduces degradation caused by high currents. |
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It is possible to generate a surface geometry mathematically that will provide the exact degree of sound diffusion required. |
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The change of the lability of the system as the diffusion layer thickness is modified is analyzed in detail. |
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Long focal length lenses require less diffusion than short ones to achieve the same visual effect. |
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Perhaps the most commonly recognized folk dance, the tarantella, for example, is Neapolitan, with little diffusion elsewhere in the peninsula. |
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When cyanobacterial cells are immersed in buffers of high osmotic strength, phycobilisome diffusion is strongly inhibited. |
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One means of differentiating the various possibilities would be to examine the anisotropy of DHPC diffusion. |
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Such a location is compatible with the ready diffusion of ethylene in both aqueous and lipid environments. |
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On the contrary, if the water potential of the soil is lower than that of the roots, water can be lost to the rhizosphere by diffusion. |
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The epidermis is devoid of blood vessels but is nourished by diffusion from capillaries in the underlying dermis. |
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What are the implications of the global diffusion of nuclear and long-range delivery vehicle technology? |
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Techniques for reticulating the target into an array of 19-m islands by ion-beam milling were then developed to minimize the thermal diffusion. |
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Stephanie Medley-Rath defines this process as cultural diffusion and explains why she just might serve fried cicadas at her next dinner party. |
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Ions and molecules move through these induced gaps of the SC by diffusion and electromotive or electro-osmotic transport. |
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This is compatible with a genuine antagonistic action of the drugs during their gradual diffusion and washout. |
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The diffusion coefficients determined are then averaged over the macrostructure of the surrounding excited volume. |
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These deviations generally increased with increasing offset and diffusion constant. |
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Based on diffusion theory, they calculated the magnetic particles in the glass to be about 1000 atoms across. |
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The social interaction mediated through the visual channel in social media can be an effective mechanism for cultural diffusion. |
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It is well-known that the diffusion coefficient of small molecules depends on the viscosity and cytoarchitecture of the intracellular milieu. |
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Global stationary diffusion due to wave-particle interactions does not take place at the magnetopause. |
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Condensed and hydrolysable tannins were measured in fresh leaves by the radial diffusion method with tannic acid as standard. |
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This involves ionic diffusion processes in the crystal structure of the solids, leading to phase change and recrystallisation. |
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A candle diffuser is a diffuser that utilizes a tea light or other candle to gently heat the essential oil to promote diffusion into a room. |
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The autocorrelation functions yielded the distributions of the diffusion coefficients of the scatterers and the corresponding hydrodynamic radii. |
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This property due to the symmetry of the molecule is exploited to study the diffusion of oxygen in plasmic membrane. |
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Our results indicate that different types of social network connections can have opposing impacts on diffusion. |
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This was a reaction to the growing diffusion of wigs which attracted attention, and were considered immodest or brazen in both communities. |
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The advantage of the facilitated diffusion mechanism is that it effectively amplifies the signal from the Dorsal proteins. |
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These proteins allow diffusion of ions and even large molecules of the size of several hundred daltons. |
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The sugar is extracted from the slices by means of diffusion with hot water. |
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In steady state, the metal cation flux is constant across the diffusion layer and the anion and spectator ion fluxes vanish. |
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But while it created room for the diffusion of authority it did not have a place for individualism. |
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The leading theories of adhesion include the diffusion, electrostatic, surface energetics, and mechanical theories. |
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The endodermis surrounding the vascular cylinder of the corm effectively blocked outward diffusion of the solutes. |
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Adaptation, a concept of increasing interest to cultural geographers, plays an important role in shaping patterns of cultural diffusion. |
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In this lesson, you will analyze cultural change as a result of cultural diffusion in various regions. |
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Ecologists have used simple diffusion, correlated random walk, and Markov chain models to describe dispersal data for various insects. |
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It is too large to be accounted for by vehicle diffusion, considering proton transport by acid carriers. |
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Error diffusion can create artifacts in the image as rendered by the display device. |
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The calculated diffusion coefficient was found to be of the same order of magnitude as the diffusion coefficient of air in water. |
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One of the classical problems in the theory of ultracentrifugal sedimentation is the treatment of diffusion in sizedistribution analysis. |
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Because cartilage derives its nutrition by diffusion from the perichondrium, necrosis and consequent structural deformity occurs. |
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The human placenta, characterized by the processes of passive transport and facilitated diffusion, contains numerous active transport proteins. |
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Some parts are painted white to assist with light diffusion, but the essential texture and character of the material is still legible. |
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Diffusion of water across a semipermeable membrane such as the cell's plasma membrane is known as diffusion. |
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The MU radar can measure the diffusion coefficients in the mesopause region by observing meteor echoes. |
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The diffusion of Hispanics outward from these core areas, in terms of total numbers, is far less rapid than recent press accounts imply. |
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Osmosis and diffusion is called passive transport because it takes no energy to move from a high concentration to a low concentration. |
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The diffusion of artificial insemination in the pork industry has been slower than that of the dairy industry, but its use continues to become more widespread. |
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The widespread diffusion of texts exploded not only among nobles and merchants but also among artisans, shopkeepers, workers, and even, on occasion, peasants and millers. |
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By this I mean that it might never have actually crystallized from a molten magma but rather recrystallized from some other rock form through a diffusion process. |
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If the surface film of water is saturated with oxygen there will be no further diffusion until oxygen diffuses from the surface film into the overall body of water. |
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Of particular interest in these studies has been the ability to map singlet oxygen diffusion across an interfacial boundary into a different phase-separated domain. |
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Because there's such a high concentration of electrons in the n-type region, the diffusion currents are extremely strong, and electrons flow at an enormous rate. |
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The Sabatier edge effects, which appear as white lines between areas of distinctly different densities, were proven to be the result of diffusion halation. |
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Second, for the kinetic behavior, we have assumed that the diffusion in the plane of the surface is much faster than the motion perpendicular to it. |
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The diffusion of information sources, social media chief among them, simply makes that harder to do. |
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At this critical moment, this diffusion of attention is potentially crippling. |
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Thom Browne, known for his tricolor stripes and short-suits, will soon launch a diffusion collection called Thom Grey. |
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This condition can also be due to restricted diffusion of oxygen into internal tissues or high rates of cellular metabolism, as in actively dividing cells of meristems. |
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This capacity is due to the presence of stomates on both leaf surfaces, permeability of tissues for CO 2 diffusion and an intense Rubisco activity. |
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Measurements of the rotational diffusion coefficient of proteins within muscle cells were also employed to obtain information about the physical properties of sarcoplasm. |
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Joining titanium-carbide cermets to high-temperature alloys has been accomplished by vacuum diffusion, and gives a weld stronger than thee cermet. |
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The entire kitchen sink has been thrown in, and for this and other reasons departments of English have generally become cesspools of diffusion, disaffection, and resentment. |
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This allows us to observe water diffusion that occurs beyond the structural changes, often entailing water influx and outflux, at the outset of the MD calculation. |
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What this actually points to is a marked, though still limited, diffusion of prosperity and a radically changing social and occupational structure. |
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They shunned the Impressionists' hazy unemphatic diffusion of colour. |
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Documented functions of HBs include storage and transport of oxygen, nitric oxide detoxification, and facilitating oxygen diffusion in symbiotic tissues. |
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Our data suggest that this difference in tertiary structure alone will segregate these membrane proteins into two different diffusion classes as well. |
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The gravimetric technique is less sensitive than the radioactive technique, but it has an advantage in avoiding the corrections for tracer diffusion. |
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Large diffusion coefficients or small growth rates reduce species overlap. |
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In most cases the model assumes that the activated molecule is diffusible, and the washout occurs whenever the rate of diffusion exceeds rate of formation of the molecule. |
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Broadly, productive economic activities and notions of long-term investment became sidelined in favour of immediate consumption and resource diffusion. |
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But notice that the success of the joke depended on the tension that preceded it, and the secretary may have minded the tension more than she appreciated its diffusion. |
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This paper documents some aspects of this trend, and proposes policy diffusion as a set of mechanisms that explain the clustering in time and space of liberal policies. |
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The halation to which he referred is a further diffusion of light that can occur around highlights, as well as around other areas of brightness in a projected camera image. |
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Another is the reflections off the water's surface, the refraction, and what I would call subsurface scattering of light, or the diffusion of light. |
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As in her canvases, the white serves to isolate and intensify the colored shapes, but here it also permits an increased diffusion of light throughout the chapel. |
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The difference could be attributed to errors on cell counts, natural variability, gas diffusion through tissue of intact pears, and other factors. |
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The bimolecular quenching rate constants are less than that of diffusion controlled and decrease as the one-electron reduction potential of the donor radical increases. |
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Urea, sodium and bicarbonate are abundant in the mucin layer, owing to diffusion from the blood stream, and secretion from mucus and parietal cells. |
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To address the functional consequences of this asymmetry, we simulate diffusion and transport of synaptically released glutamate in these two brain areas. |
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The resulting negs print wonderfully in my diffusion enlarger. |
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The high temperature treatment effaces the strains, coalesces the sulphide films in the ferrite which embrittle the steel and produces homogenity by rapid diffusion. |
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Amino acids and di-peptides cross the cell membrane by active transport and facilitated diffusion, which are mechanisms that require metabolic energy. |
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Some are pores that allow molecules of certain types to flow across the membrane at a controlled rate through a process called facilitated diffusion. |
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A convection current can be conceived as a current generator caused by charges moved by other than electrical forces such as gravity, wind or eddy diffusion. |
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Other teams are striving to control their fuel cell's operations by using solely passive processes, such as evaporation, diffusion, and capillary action. |
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For instance, the detection of the slow ejection kinetics may be impeded by the photobleaching effect and the possible diffusion of the probe through the permeable capsids. |
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To counteract this focusing, the conventional approach is to break up the circular geometry with facets or convex surfaces to provide a degree of sound diffusion. |
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The same holds for the application of a transmembrane potential that is limited to the generation of a diffusion potential by the usage of ion-specific ionophores. |
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The geometric means of the zone sizes obtained by disc diffusion for all the antimicrobials were reflective of the susceptibility pattern of the study isolates. |
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Uranium for the first atomic bomb and for nuclear reactors was enriched in the 235 isotope, as compared to the more abundant 238 isotope, by gaseous diffusion. |
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The input electrons can change their incident direction, bechance the lateral diffusion and extend the range of excited fluorescent powder for aluminum layer's and powder layer's scatter. |
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Patients receiving injections into the neck muscles for torticollis may therefore develop dysphagia because of diffusion of the toxin into the oropharynx. |
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These results point out the difference between the passive diffusion and facilitated spread mechanisms characterizing the nuclear and nonnuclear areas, respectively. |
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The new collection of decretals had an immediate diffusion and between 1250 and 1350 many copies were produced in the universities of northern Italy and France. |
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The electric and magnetic fields the probe measured built up a more detailed picture of the magnetopause, including the flow of electrons in the diffusion region. |
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Only the articulation and diffusion of dangerous ideas was still limited. |
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Diffusion and facilitated diffusion are two examples of passive transport. Passive transport is transport through a cell membrane that does not require energy. |
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Unassisted movement is due to diffusion and is called passive transport. |
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There are several causes of cultural change, including changes in the societal conditions, cultural diffusion, innovation, and the imposition of cultural change. |
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It is proposed that the creative economy works through a process of cultural diffusion, for which a conceptual understanding of cultural diffusion is outlined. |
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The use of selectively permeable membranes to retain macromolecules, but allow the free diffusion of low molecular weight solutes, is one of the oldest biochemical techniques. |
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Historically, the diffusion of the industrial revolution also occurred in an unequal maimer. |
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The smallest tubes, tracheoles, penetrate cells and serve as sites of diffusion for water, oxygen, and carbon dioxide. |
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Gas may be conducted through the respiratory system by means of active ventilation or passive diffusion. |
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The subcutaneous vessels in the membrane very close to the surface allow for the diffusion of oxygen and carbon dioxide. |
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Hyperosmotic urine can be understood in light of the law of diffusion and osmolarity. |
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Almost all snake venom contains hyaluronidase, an enzyme that ensures rapid diffusion of the venom. |
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The required diffusion coefficients, however, appear to be larger than are observed in the real ocean. |
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The first term on the right hand side of the induction equation is a diffusion term. |
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This includes low momentum diffusion, high momentum convection, and rapid variation of pressure and velocity in space and time. |
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Ningbo Exciton New Material Technology is the most typical one and has realized mass-production of reflection membrane and diffusion film. |
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He states that certain anatomical details suggest a shared Oriental origin, followed by a westward diffusion. |
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One important source of language change is contact and resulting diffusion of linguistic traits between languages. |
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He believes that speakers of Baltic languages may have played an important role in the diffusion of the Corded Ware culture. |
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The issue is best illustrated in the debate surrounding the demic diffusion versus cultural diffusion during the European Neolithic. |
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The high recombination effect caused slower diffusion of injected electrons in the photoanode. |
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Examples of this are materials that are optimized to give high charge carrier mobilities and high exciton diffusion coefficients. |
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Francis set an important precedent by opening his library to scholars from around the world in order to facilitate the diffusion of knowledge. |
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This diffusion of atoms accounts for the constant surface tension in liquids. |
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During the Renaissance, the creation of printing allowed a wider diffusion of encyclopedias and every scholar could have his or her own copy. |
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The PP dissolution in n-pentane and n-heptane was interpreted in terms of chain disentanglement and solvent diffusion. |
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The effect of the two VBFs on balance was studied through classical postural parameters and a subset of stabilogram diffusion coefficients. |
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A hepatitis screen was negative, and the findings on an amoebic gel diffusion test and stool microscopy were normal. |
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In order to promote the diffusion of water into the oil phase, UP is previously neutralized with an amine. |
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The MYJ scheme determines eddy diffusion coefficients from prognostically calculated turbulent kinetic energy. |
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When the diffusion coefficient is spatially variable, the usual approach of determining the convergence factor is no longer straightforward. |
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The identity statuses are achievement, moratorium, foreclosure, and diffusion. |
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This model simulates lifetime exposure in the mother, transplacental diffusion during pregnancy, and transfer via breastfeeding after delivery. |
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The Helicobacter pylori VacA toxin is a urea permease that promotes urea diffusion across epithelia. |
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Extraction of condensed tannins from cervid feed and feces and quantification using a radial diffusion assay. |
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Dysmyelination revealed through MRI as increased radial diffusion of water. |
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A method for measuring internal diffusion and equilibrium partition coefficients of volatile organic compounds for building materials. |
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For the latter portions of the process, boundary and lattice diffusion from the boundary become important. |
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In our study there was no early rise of tissue diffusion or pseudodiffusion values. |
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All these patients really should have serial pulmonary function tests with diffusion capacity studies. |
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Jellyfish do not need a respiratory system since their skin is thin enough that the body is oxygenated by diffusion. |
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Having a relativistic equation that approaches the classical diffusion limit is desirable. |
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In both the tangential and radial directions in the wood, chip impregnation is a process of reactive diffusion. |
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In any case, the name implies pallor, an absence of light, the diffusion of contours into shadowy indistinction. |
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Isogeneic comparison of primary and metastatic lung cancer identifies CX3CR1 as a molecular determinant of site-specific metastatic diffusion. |
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Lamas MC, Torres Sanchez RM Isoelectric point of soils determined by the diffusion potential method. |
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In vivo anomalous diffusion and weak ergodicity breaking of lipid granules. |
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The second challenge consists in developing an adaptive multiscale numerical method for diffusion in inhomogeneous media. |
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These species present diffusion challenges due to their size and restriction to move freely into the micropores of resin beads. |
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Antibacterial activity of PHI ligands and their metal complexes was examined against three bacterial strains using agar disc diffusion method. |
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Cultural conflict over a brand's meaning have also been shown to influence the diffusion of an innovation. |
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Determination of the diffusion coefficient of tissue, cuticle, cutin and wax of apple. |
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Diffusing particles experience a drift motion in addition to random diffusion, when an external driving force is applied. |
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Halation, properly speaking, is the reflection and diffusion, within the film, from the lighter areas to the adjacent darker ones. |
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For celestial navigation the Portuguese used the Ephemerides, which experienced a remarkable diffusion in the 15th century. |
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Their development, diffusion and long range changes are determined by the great river systems. |
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To prove hypocoercivity in that case, the key point is to show the existence of a convenient Riemannian foliation associated to the diffusion. |
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The important parameters measured include the lung volumes and total lung capacity and the diffusion co-efficient. |
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He also conducted the first rough experiments on the diffusion of gases, a phenomenon that was first pointed out by John Dalton. |
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They hypothesized that the diffusion of rejuvenators into aged bitumen at asphalt recycling could be described in steps as follows. |
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Additionally, cultural ideas may transfer from one society to another, through diffusion or acculturation. |
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In the film, Jones is heard advising one of his students that to understand the concept of diffusion he must read the works of Childe. |
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For the materials with similar partition coefficients, such as particle board and plywood, diffusion coefficient can influence SSD to some extent. |
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A rate model that considers axial dispersion, external mass transfer, intra-particle diffusion and non-linear isotherms, is called a general multi-component rate model. |
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Without diffusion, the volume of the bubbles would increase as they approach the axis of rotation because of lower pressures near the axis of rotation. |
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The concentration gradient is determined by the current density, the active anodic area size and the solvated metallization ions' diffusion velocity. |
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After sterilizing through solubilisation and diffusion, a different ratio of heavy metals content within the vegetal tissue can be found in the coveting liquid in the cans. |
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This led to the diffusion of patent systems to other countries. |
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Passive diffusion of sediment into closed ammonite chambers is unlikely due to sediment plugging of the ammonite siphuncle and lack of fluid through flow. |
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Finally, a zeroth order approximation of the diffusion rates necessary to sustain corrosion suggests that the reaction should not be diffusion controlled even in solid wood. |
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Also, larger areas such as South Asia, Europe, and Southeast Asia have sometimes been considered language areas, because of widespread diffusion of specific areal features. |
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Agar diffusion tests made on mediums supplemented with different fat sources showed that all strains don't have lecithinase activity, neither lipolytic activity. |
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This hypothesis has had a large diffusion due to historian Mircea Eliade. |
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The idea of questioning Groves about the relative merits of calutrons compared to gaseous diffusion compared to centrifuges I am sure never occurred to McKellar. |
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Therapeutically guided detoxification stimulates diffusion of toxins outside the cells and tissues, and facilitatates all eliminatory pathways of the body. |
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Second, the Chen-Cox model applies the normal jump diffusion model, which is composed of a Brownian motion diffusion process and a normal jump diffusion process. |
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The document provides revised doripenem, imipenem, and meropenem disk diffusion and MIC interpretive criteria with dosage regimens on which the breakpoints are based. |
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Nevertheless, the animal can still supply enough oxygen to its tissues and it can increase its respiratory rate and oxygen diffusion when running. |
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A more recent theory, with broad support among archaeologists, is that Celtic culture and language arrived in Ireland as a result of cultural diffusion. |
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The ability for these texts to spread from one monastery or school in adjoining regions created a rapid diffusion of medical texts throughout western Europe. |
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Led by the very young Philip Abelson, the lab developed the liquid thermal diffusion process for separating fissionable from nonfissionable uranium. |
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There are several processes for plant extraction like hydro distillation, steam distillation, hydro diffusion, enfleurage, maceration, liquid carbon dioxide extraction, etc. |
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Scans with diffusion MRI suggested that the synesthete brains boast extra connections between a region involved in word and color processing and one linked to consciousness. |
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The thickness of the superconductor is smaller than the spin diffusion length and the magnetization of the ferromagnetic leads are aligned either parallel or antiparallel. |
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After World War II, the shortage in energy and the diffusion of the Soviets' results provoked new interest in Western Europe and the United States. |
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Unlike previous methods of steel production, the Huntsman process was the first to fully melt the steel, allowing the full diffusion of carbon throughout the liquid. |
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It also houses modernized and upgraded facilities in the former diffusion plant to store uranic materials prior to their long-term reuse within the nuclear fuel cycle. |
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This is a diffusion process in which wrought iron is packed in crucibles or a hearth with charcoal, then heated to promote diffusion of carbon into the iron to produce steel. |
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Uterine leiomyoma is a common benign neoplasia that may have clinical manifestations due to diffusion and growth of tumor requiring surgical intervention. |
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The pore elimination occurs faster for a trial with many pores of uniform size and higher porosity where the boundary diffusion distance is smaller. |
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Using a DC pulse as the electric current, spark plasma, spark impact pressure, joule heating, and an electrical field diffusion effect would be created. |
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We conceptualize the types of effects a pilot project can have in terms of biophysical and actor-network responses, knowledge development and diffusion. |
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These include fracture by heat, solvation, diffusion or pressure. |
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Sintering occurs by diffusion of atoms through the microstructure. |
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The kinetic models, pseudo first and second order kinetics, intraparticle diffusion, and Elovich were applied in order to investigate the mechanisms of eggshell sorption. |
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For solids, on the other hand, diffusion of atoms to the surface might not be sufficient and the surface tension can vary with an increase in surface area. |
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Algae produce sugars that are absorbed by the fungus by diffusion into special fungal hyphae called appressoria or haustoria in contact with the wall of the algal cells. |
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When the grain boundary tries to move past the inclusion diffusion of atoms from one grain to the other will be hindered by the insoluble particle. |
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The subsequent displacement into the lower mantle is caused by slab pull forces, or the destabilization of the slab from warming and broadening due to thermal diffusion. |
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This difference between the models suggests ways of gauging the importance of information diffusion as an explanation of the growth in vanity plate sales. |
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