The triboluminescent spectrum is basically similar to that of photoluminescence, which correlates with the disorders of F atoms. |
|
Other countries have auctioned the radio spectrum and vast inflows have accrued to national exchequers. |
|
Look for one that promises to shield you from a broad spectrum of ultraviolet rays. |
|
Non-selective herbicides such as glyphosate and glufosinate aid in broadening the spectrum of weeds controlled. |
|
Light at each end of the optical spectrum is dispersed by a different amount, since the refractive index of any medium depends on frequency. |
|
However at night, counterilluminators are found closer to the surface, where the spectrum of the downward radiance changes rapidly with depth. |
|
The colour of a pigment is dictated by the way it absorbs certain parts of the spectrum that make up visible light and reflects others. |
|
She gradually improved with conservative therapy using broad spectrum antibiotics and parenteral hyperalimentation. |
|
The report was compiled by a wide spectrum of scientists from both pro and anti lobby groups and was chaired by the government's chief scientist. |
|
Radio space slowly trickles out as the Federal Communications Commission frees more of the spectrum for real-world uses. |
|
She looked up, her eyes catching a light from somewhere and flashing a spectrum shimmer. |
|
With regard to internalizing spectrum behavioral problems, many of these children with a history of foster care placement demonstrate resilience. |
|
Pollan embarks on a philosophical and gustatory road-trip across the spectrum of modern eating. |
|
So, the spectrum of wealth that gradates from the poor inner cities to the rich suburbs will be more clearly defined. |
|
But this spectrum is at right angles to the first, generating a person-space with an infinity of different potential placements. |
|
Influenced by anxiety about the future, every faction across the political spectrum found something to feel menaced by. |
|
These holdings encompass virtually the whole spectrum of Akan gold regalia and related forms and include many unusual if not unique works. |
|
The political spectrum has become narrower with the ideological battleground moving to the right. |
|
Jutting mountains and low basins form a range of habitats suitable for a broad spectrum of terrestrial and freshwater species. |
|
When we can sensibly download and store audio files at full spectrum quality, then it will be perfect. |
|
|
The main goal is to maximize communication with kids with an autistic spectrum disorder. |
|
They are fast-acting, effective against a broad spectrum of organisms, and do not bioaccumulate. |
|
Go back to the bremsstrahlung spectrum and see how it fades gradually to zero for long wavelengths. |
|
It is a congenital abnormality which covers a spectrum ranging from a simple bifid renal pelvis to a complete ureteropelvic duplication. |
|
Two colours from widely separated parts of the spectrum may be combined to produce white light. |
|
From the other end of the political spectrum come the pusillanimous speech codes on our college campuses. |
|
The spectrum of deoxygenated HemAT, produced by reduction with dithionite, has peaks at 434 and 556 nm. |
|
What impressed me most was his refusal to be doctrinaire, his openness to sharp ideas no matter where on the political spectrum they came from. |
|
The Hayes is the first independent hospital in the UK for adults with an autistic spectrum disorder. |
|
This would be an extreme act at one end of the spectrum of economic desperation. |
|
Gale's most favored creations, using his vast spectrum of skills, are his concho belts. |
|
The 1994 rulemaking included definitions for antiseptic drugs, broad spectrum activity, and healthcare antiseptics. |
|
Many of the works on the political side of the spectrum relied on fragmentation, appropriation and postmodern distancing to make their points. |
|
Some patients are given a capsulated drug called psoralen combined with artificial ultraviolet spectrum sunlight. |
|
That is, vowels are created by the first few broad peaks on the amplitude envelope imposed on the overtone spectrum by vocal-tract resonances. |
|
The research team is now exploring the possibility of using eye contact sensor glasses to treat children with autistic spectrum disorder. |
|
The clinical spectrum of the disease can range from simple sadness to a major depressive or bipolar disorder. |
|
The exhibition showed a number of paintings, depicting a wide spectrum of society. |
|
They speculated that the gaps in the solar spectrum are the result of selective absorption by atoms in the Earth's atmosphere. |
|
Its brief, in a nutshell, is to showcase works of art to as broad a spectrum of people as possible. |
|
|
Mycobacterium fortuitum is known for producing a wide spectrum of clinical disease. |
|
He has used the spectrum of colours in the rainbow effectively to create an atmosphere of calm. |
|
The latter spectrum was measured after reduction of cyt-c with ascorbic acid, followed by oxidation using ferricyanide. |
|
Researchers from Philadelphia gave a single intravenous dose of secretin versus placebo in 61 children with autistic spectrum disorder. |
|
My son was diagnosed as having an autistic spectrum disorder at the age of 3 years and 3 months. |
|
The further out on the spectrum of this array, the longer a sequence of events is triggered. |
|
So these butterflies are making use of more than the visible portion of the spectrum in order to make itself conspicuous. |
|
The bandwidth of existing telecommunication networks is determined, in part, by the spots in the spectrum where attenuation in the fiber peaks. |
|
By using more than one lens when it scans surfaces, the imager divides the spectrum of visible light into four sections. |
|
On the other end of the spectrum is Tim, 47, a writer, who confessed to his now-wife that he used to see street hookers regularly. |
|
Of course, increased funding would allow more supporting geoscience and hence assure broader buy-in from a wider spectrum of disciplines. |
|
Difference spectra were calculated by subtraction of the spectrum of the DNA from the spectra of the peptide-DNA complexes. |
|
Their repertoire includes all colours of the classical spectrum as well as extending to jazz and country. |
|
In many similar cases, it has been possible to determine the actual transient absorption spectrum after correction for the stimulated emission. |
|
Thus, journalists' duties vary along a spectrum from the nonexempt to the exempt. |
|
Drinkers across the social spectrum are knocking it back like never before and the pressure to join in has never been stronger. |
|
A nosode is nothing but a homeopathically prepared remedy, which can sometimes act in a wide spectrum of diseases. |
|
People most at risk are those with an autistic spectrum disorder, a developmental problem, not a mental health problem. |
|
It shimmered through the multicoloured opal to bathe the area in a spectrum of colours. |
|
When he passed a thin beam of sunlight through a glass prism Newton noted the spectrum of colours that was formed. |
|
|
The work preparation programme is designed for people with autistic spectrum disorders who are looking for paid employment in London. |
|
According to Blondlot, a narrow stream of N-rays was refracted through the prism and produced a spectrum on a field. |
|
Such binge drinking disinhibits people and leads to a spectrum of anti-social behaviour ranging from yobbism and vandalism to serious violence. |
|
They play a range of great music that covers a wide spectrum and their spin makes it all the more worthwhile. |
|
Schools at both ends of the educational spectrum reported their best GCSE results ever yesterday. |
|
The wavelengths of light in the visible part of the spectrum greatly exceed nanoscale dimensions. |
|
The extremely narrow lines of the solar spectrum require filters with correspondingly high resolution. |
|
Politicians across the political spectrum are involved in an endless snipe hunt for waste, fraud and abuse in the federal budget. |
|
She made the journey across the social democratic spectrum and is now embedded in the Blairite project. |
|
The acute effects that may be induced by psychedelic drugs encompass a broad spectrum of alterations in cognitive functioning. |
|
Passing the light emitted by an element through a prism gives the atomic emission spectrum of the element. |
|
The continuation of such appalling conditions is cause for anger and consternation across a wide spectrum of animal lovers. |
|
The logo has a light titanium outside and a dynamic, playful, vibrant inside, animating through the whole spectrum of colour. |
|
A number of US Senators were said to be preparing bills to expand the radio spectrum for wireless Internet. |
|
Over 1,000 parents with children afflicted by autism spectrum disorder were surveyed for the study. |
|
The analytical expression for the atomic emission spectrum is obtained from the two-time dipole-moment correlation function of the atom. |
|
Not a cosy coterie of the chattering classes, but people who represent a broad spectrum of opinion. |
|
Thailand Exhibition 2002 will provide a forum for Thai companies to interact with a wide spectrum of Indian companies. |
|
A flat or smooth philtrum can present in persons with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders. |
|
Previous work has shown that recurrent selective sweeps lead to a strong skew in the frequency spectrum toward an excess of rare variants. |
|
|
Otherwise, amoxicillin and ampicillin have almost the same spectrum of antimicrobial activity. |
|
In other work, I have used the inverted spectrum hypothesis as an argument against functionalism and representationism. |
|
In 1665 he split a sunbeam into a many-hued spectrum by passing it through a prism in a darkened room. |
|
So part of the electromagnetic spectrum could be opened up to anyone who uses smart devices. |
|
Then there is the whole spectrum of tandoori breads, including silky roomali rotis, naans and parathas. |
|
That is, an infrared spectrum is a plot of the intensity of light absorbed as a function of the frequency of vibration. |
|
There are some antiseptic-blue overtones to it, too, and a whole spectrum of greens where the berg descends into the depths out of sight. |
|
Their blossoms encompass nearly the entire color spectrum and blooming times range from early spring to fall, depending on the variety. |
|
Movement of the gas near the surface causes vigorous turbulence that produces a broad spectrum of random noises. |
|
Lichens colonize a broad spectrum of niches in the forest, including fallen boles, and mature trunks or branches of a variety of tree species. |
|
This spectrum clearly indicates efficient singlet-singlet energy transfer from carotenoid to phthalocyanine. |
|
The morning light reveals the whole spectrum of colors, which are intense, even psychedelic. |
|
Moving from ghazals to gypsy and waltz to Latin music, it hopes to bring the whole spectrum of strings and non-strings under one roof. |
|
The full spectrum of motorcycle history will be on display from the humble vintage cyclemotor through to the superbikes of today. |
|
The difference spectrum has an isosbestic point at 538 nm, maximum at 500 run and minimum at 586 nm. |
|
At one end of the spectrum is Piet Hein's Hex, where a player can take exactly one action. |
|
All the sub-streams are transmitted in the same frequency band, so spectrum is used very efficiently. |
|
As subgroups of autism spectrum disorders are characterized, a stronger connection may emerge. |
|
The full spectrum of southern UK fish is in evidence, from wrasse to ling and pollack. |
|
The book is a treasure trove of primary research on a wide spectrum of countries over a period covering two centuries. |
|
|
This latter hypothesis is very unlikely also because the emission spectrum of fluorene is almost completely insensitive to solvent polarity. |
|
It needed courage to raise such sensitive issues at a time when the political spectrum was so sharply polarised. |
|
We support this bill as amending one wrong and unjust law on a spectrum of wrong and unjust laws. |
|
Most of the free probe had dimerized via disulfide bond cross-linking, yielding a spectrum with five lines and alternating linewidths. |
|
Today, so we are led to believe, we can create our own fashion statements by buying across the spectrum from charity shops to couture houses. |
|
As America's Army extends itself across the spectrum of operations, higher percentages of available forces will be committed. |
|
But with almost nothing to choose between the parties, could the common-sense spectrum get any narrower? |
|
The interaction Hamiltonian is then diagonalized and the resulting stick spectrum is dressed with Gaussians to simulate homogeneous broadening. |
|
The colors cover the spectrum and there are solid as well as bicolor types. |
|
Classical mechanics could not accurately predict the spectrum of radiation emitted by a heated body. |
|
This causes a periodic Doppler shift of the spectrum of one or both members of the pair. |
|
It was a clear night, the stars shone brightly over the river, and the city lights were reflected in a spectrum of colored points in the water. |
|
Peak amplitude of subharmonic component was measured by continuously averaging the acoustic spectrum until a steady value was reached. |
|
They measured the emission spectrum and attributed the autofluorescence to flavins. |
|
So you had persons from both ends of the spectrum making it all the way to the White House. |
|
On the other end of the spectrum are cases in which a conviction is sustained, but in some ways almost by the skin of their teeth. |
|
The electromagnetic spectrum is composed of a range of radiation frequencies from radio waves to X-ray and gamma waves. |
|
The range covers the full spectrum from ultraportable to desktop replacement, hitting all price points along the way. |
|
Comparison of the action spectrum of an Avena coleoptile s phototropic bending and the absorption spectra of carotenoids. |
|
On the other hand, neither is it at the other end of the spectrum in which rights were trammeled in blatant disregard for the Charter. |
|
|
Two very different models lie at the opposite extremes of a spectrum of rate variation among lineages. |
|
Another form of dwarfism that was formerly included in the spectrum of achondroplasia is dystrophic dwarfism. |
|
Members of both sides of the political spectrum in the overflow audience rose to applaud. |
|
I fully expect that the future of the netroots will include the full spectrum of progressive America. |
|
The meeting includes a discussion on positive aspects of an autistic spectrum disorder. |
|
When a nuclear device is detonated, it emits a broad spectrum of electromagnetic waves that radiate outward from the detonating bomb. |
|
It could be argued that the inverted spectrum hypothesis is incoherent for deep metaphysical and empirical reasons. |
|
A much broader spectrum of historians reject such simplistic monocausal explanations. |
|
There will also be a spectrum of appropriate respect depending on the nature of the decision of the lower court which is challenged. |
|
These influences are evident on this decidedly mellow album, which embraces a spectrum of rootsy, acoustic sounds. |
|
People from what would be considered opposite ends of the social spectrum mingle openly. |
|
A critical specialization in the locomotor spectrum for aquatic animals is buoyancy. |
|
The summary graph, on page 35, reproduced here, does indeed show Scotland at the low end of the spectrum of business tax revenues. |
|
Cited instances of anti-Americanism include an extremely wide spectrum of disapproval, from petty claims to sensible criticisms. |
|
It ranges across the industrial and domestic spectrum from factories and offices to the the farm or the home. |
|
A 100 kHz analogue to digital converter was used to record the power spectrum data. |
|
Counterproliferation includes a spectrum of military capabilities, from missile defense to disarming attacks. |
|
The spectrum has ranged from aggressive public demonstrations to intimate personal explorations. |
|
Down toward this latter end of the spectrum are folks who are more than ordinarily apt to confuse the wish and the deed, the belief and the fact. |
|
The changes in the excitation spectrum can be related to the degree of invasiveness of the carcinoma. |
|
|
I put it up there out of respect for his place in blogging and in the interests of having both sides of the political spectrum represented. |
|
A late 19th century movement, impressionism is on the opposite side of the spectrum to Expressionism. |
|
Fireflies may not mate normally near incandescent light because it mimics the spectrum they create when they light up. |
|
Process-oriented people are at completely opposite ends of the spectrum from action-oriented people. |
|
Women with bacterial vaginosis have a broad spectrum of clinical presentations. |
|
For practical purposes the solar spectrum is divided into regions with characteristic properties. |
|
When this spectrum is magnified, black lines can be seen superimposed on the colours. |
|
Diagnosed rates of autism spectrum disorders have grown tremendously over the last few decades. |
|
The BIRDING COMMUNITY encompasses a broad spectrum of backyard birders, opportunist oglers, weekend watchers, and hardcore twitchers. |
|
Manhood's spirit must bend and gnarl the spectrum of its own nature from end to end until they coincide in the recurrence of harmonious utility. |
|
It is not just at the larger end of the deal spectrum where firms appear to be struggling to find good deals. |
|
The inside surfaces of the cathode are coated with a compound of the element from which the atomic emission spectrum is to be excited. |
|
The product is linked to a basket of 24 blue-chip stocks across a broad spectrum of companies and industry sectors. |
|
Clear minerals reflect all the colours of the spectrum and symbolize purity, clarity and wholeness. |
|
More than 500,000 people in the UK are on the autistic spectrum and four times as many boys are affected as girls. |
|
Video content piped into homes through the Internet does not face the spectrum constraints of broadcast television. |
|
When a source gives off light, that light can be dispersed into a rainbow spectrum by a prism or diffraction grating. |
|
He had a clear knowledge and expertise in the management of people with autistic spectrum disorder. |
|
The melodies could sometimes be stronger, but King's lyrics and delivery convey an arresting spectrum of ambivalent emotions. |
|
Instead, they were restricted to an almost indiscernibly narrow band packed tightly into the broad spectrum of space-time. |
|
|
Combining the data sets produced a single spectrum spanning visible and infrared wavelengths. |
|
Many people from across the spectrum sacrificed for the goal of self-determination and the independence of Namibia. |
|
No matter what side of the political spectrum that you sit on, this is an unholy mess. |
|
A few brave and honest voices across the political spectrum spoke up, struggling to be heard through a fog of disinterest. |
|
Intellectually, Alex understands that the relationship was wrong, but his emotions oscillate back and forth through a full spectrum of feeling. |
|
Most medical lasers emit light which are either ultraviolet, infrared or in the visible spectrum of light. |
|
A wide spectrum of characoid, gymnotoid and siluroid families, cichlids, and poeciliids are especially well represented. |
|
At one end of the spectrum are MR disorders with gross brain malformations. |
|
From these outsiders a collection of work emerged that produced the spectrum of recognisably Art Brut types. |
|
Bessey encountered a spectrum of incomprehension, scorn, puzzlement and good will. |
|
The fluorescence spectrum of rose bengal is redshifted as the polarity of the solvent decreases. |
|
Lights that we cannot see like radio waves, microwaves and x-rays fall on either end of the visible spectrum of light. |
|
From fuchsia to deep purple, algae green, midnight blue and even contrasts the entire spectrum is on display. |
|
Second, it was established that cyan and green emitters can be modified so as to produce an intermediate spectrum of fluorescence. |
|
Which gives you a pretty broad spectrum of A-list clothing whatever your age, wherever you shop. |
|
Airlie Beach has a wide spectrum of accommodation, from motels to resort hotels, and prices are somewhat lower. |
|
The aim of our study was to establish such an action spectrum by using different polychromatic UV-B light sources. |
|
Directed or telic group behaviour doesn't allow the full spectrum of social language because it's constrained. |
|
To concentrate on the ultraviolet part of the spectrum, we calculated the proportion of the ultraviolet in each plumage spectrum measured. |
|
Further employment of the infra-red spectrum may be found in aerial combat with the infra-red homing missile. |
|
|
The Bohr theory was a marvellous success in explaining the spectrum of the hydrogen atom. |
|
Now that they terrorise, murder, and, frankly, slaughter innocent children, we are at the most depraved end of the spectrum of all. |
|
Broadcasters received fixed-term, renewable licenses that gave them exclusive use of a slice of the spectrum for free. |
|
Also, the fact that the infrared is not so easily observed as the visible part of the spectrum also ensures the prominence of the Balmer series. |
|
Companies are capable of committing offences across a wide spectrum both by statute and at common law. |
|
Allan Tung brought his rich background in music and theater to create a wide spectrum of beautiful ballets. |
|
Over 200 Sunni figures from across the political spectrum came to the meeting from various governorates to voice Sunni demands. |
|
Modern Portuguese is characterized by an abundance of sibilant and palatal consonants and a broad spectrum of vowel sounds. |
|
A point in an absorption spectrum at which two or more components have the same molar magnetic susceptibility is termed an isosbestic point. |
|
The political dynamic of the peace process itself has a proportionally inverse impact on the wide spectrum of unionist sectarianism. |
|
Each spectrum was analyzed as a linear combination of basis fluorescence spectra using a singular value decomposition algorithm. |
|
The action spectrum of photosynthesis in green plants has principle peaks in the blue and red regions. |
|
To a dichromatic deuteranope, the short-wave end of the spectrum appears blue. |
|
Since it is derived from sugar beets, it contains a rich spectrum of nutrients. |
|
We looked at the healthcare industry and the ophthalmic spectrum as areas of very favorable market potential. |
|
The wireless technology can transmit digital data over a wide spectrum of frequency bands with very low power. |
|
As the temperature rises, the maximum intensity of the radiated light moves into the red, then extends through the spectrum to the ultraviolet. |
|
The total amount of sunlight energy over all of the spectrum is important in heating vines and soils. |
|
Although the solar simulator provides a higher spectral irradiance throughout the UV, its spectrum differs from natural sunlight. |
|
Instead of regular light bulbs, which shed a dull yellow glow across the room, Mr Newton decided to splash out on daylight spectrum lighting. |
|
|
Disney's imagineers have scoured the color spectrum and discovered the shades least noticeable to the human eye. |
|
From classic '80s rock to original heartfelt ballads, Tongue Tied A Cappella covers a broad spectrum of previously unattempted a cappella sounds. |
|
Riesling is one of the most malleable and versatile grapes, producing wine that runs the spectrum from bone dry to lusciously sweet. |
|
On the fruit spectrum there are raspberries and cherries, and the flavors are open, not masked by harsh tannins. |
|
The etiologic spectrum of pathogens was broad, including opportunistic as well as bacterial agents. |
|
Casey's voice is distinctive and his style combines folk and soul similar to the Reef and Gomez spectrum of songwriting. |
|
With a prism ordinary white light can be split into a spectrum that resembles a rainbow. |
|
Apparently the spectrum that Wi-Fi uses has not been delicensed yet for use in this country. |
|
We became aware of the places between populated areas, aware of the spectrum of space. |
|
Sailor Maria Coleman is widely travelled and has come across the full spectrum of conditions. |
|
All of us work along a spectrum with emotions at one end and the intellect at the other. |
|
Population subdivision affects the frequency spectrum similarly to balancing selection but should affect all the genes similarly. |
|
The space radiation environment encompasses a broad spectrum of radiation ranging from infra-red to galactic cosmic radiation. |
|
Wavelengths at the blue end of the spectrum are scattered and absorbed more than those at the red end of the spectrum, so the sunlight appears to turn yellow, and then red. |
|
Antec recommends that the broad spectrum biocidal disinfectant cleanser Virkon S, specially developed for equine use, should be used in a total disinfection regime. |
|
Given the illuminant spectrum and the spectral sensitivity functions for the camera, we can calculate the estimates of the weights at each pixel from six sensor outputs. |
|
We explore the use of these methods as a consultation tool for the evaluation of a spectrum of case materials in the areas of transplantation pathology and neuropathology. |
|
It is unsurprising to find this outcome being challenged by developing states which argued that part of the spectrum should be reserved for future use. |
|
The residual spectrum shows a strong, relativistically broadened iron line, which must originate from matter in the immediate vicinity of the Black Holes. |
|
Itraconazole is a newer triazole medication with a broad antifungal spectrum that includes dermatophytes, many nondermatophytic molds and Candida species. |
|
|
This approach to drapery was at odds with the spectrum of mainstream contemporary sculpture as practiced by both its most and least innovative exponents. |
|
In the middle of the spectrum were naturalists and physicians who supported the unity of the human species, though almost all assumed racial hierarchy. |
|
This is indeed the desire of many more Zambians outside the public service spectrum who have also been complaining about poor salaries and the high tax regimes. |
|
Almost three years on, the carpers and cavillers are still complaining about the huge sums extracted from the telcos in the European 3G spectrum auctions. |
|
This second transition appears more profound than the first in that the distance traveled was greater and the full spectrum of semiaquatic locomotor morphologies was crossed. |
|
The frequency range of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye is a very small region in the entire range of photon energies we have observed in nature. |
|
It is for this reason that Ms Chileshe advocates that the essentiality of indigenous knowledge systems be given a slot in the broad spectrum of modern environmental education. |
|
The electromagnetic spectrum has no theoretical limit at either end. |
|
Reviews seemed to range a short spectrum between turnip and not-a-complete-turnip. |
|
The three alternatives were chosen because they span a spectrum running from an acquisition, or business-focused structure, to an operationally focused structure. |
|
But right across the business spectrum there is a new willingness to abandon corporatist ways and embrace more competitive and enterprising approaches. |
|
Accordingly, instead of mass media's big bulge of consensus and convention and conformity in the middle, the spectrum gets filled with all kinds of hinky stuff. |
|
Autognosis covers a spectrum of responses to colleagues, patients, other mental health professionals of various disciplines, as well as responses to the bureaucracy. |
|
Her music is at the opposite end of the spectrum from the music her mother made. |
|
At two years of age, her son was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. |
|
Despite their atmospheric importance, the line intensities of water in the near-infrared and visible regions of the spectrum are actually very weak. |
|
Longworth showed a similar fluorescence spectrum for adrenocorticotropin. |
|
X rays induce double-strand breaks both via direct absorption and radicals produced by radiolysis, which also cause a whole spectrum of other damages. |
|
The total spectrum of solar radiation comprises ultraviolet radiations, visible light, and infra-red radiations, in order of increasing electromagnetic wavelengths. |
|
If he eventually wrests control of the orphans' committee, Bertrand promises to fight for more cash compensation for a wider spectrum of victims of religious abuse. |
|
|
If you back off and look at this field as a whole, what you see is that the nonlocal effects of consciousness operate across an immense spectrum of nature. |
|
Magnificent Greek Doric temples abounded in the latter and a full spectrum of Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian style was allowed to flourish on the Aegian coast. |
|
Today's President brand, managed by Lactalis USA, encompasses a wide spectrum of specialty cheeses, including Brie, Camembert, Edam, Gouda, feta, asiago and fontina varieties. |
|
Electrons at the probe tip are excited and interact with the vibrational atoms of the sample to produce a spectrum identifying the chemical composition of the material. |
|
Across the spectrum of gifts and toys, most retailers have retreated to a pink-and-blue world, aiming products at the sexes as if they really did come from different planets. |
|
The treatment spectrum ranges from regular backaches to slipped discs. |
|
The broad spectrum serine protease plasmin is formed following cleavage of the zymogen precursor plasminogen by host activators tissue plasminogen activator and urokinase. |
|
A billboard in Como, Italy, illustrates the spectrum of a pulse of light as it leaves a crystal where the speed of a light wave depends on its intensity. |
|
In the case of the model compound of tyrosine NAYA, a small bathochromic shift of 2 nm in the emission spectrum from dioxane to water was observed. |
|
The result indicates that the observed EPR spectrum consists of a quadruplet, already assigned to Asoa, and an extra singlet superimposed on the third component of the quadruplet. |
|
Many organic molecules and polymers have been observed to lase in the visible spectrum from the red to the blue, but success has been elusive at the deep blue wavelengths. |
|
The most significant of these involves digitizing the individual sounds of acoustic instruments and using the data to create a new spectrum of sounds. |
|
In addition, we tested goodness of fit of the observed frequency spectrum to that expected under the neutrality and panmixis with constant population size. |
|
But thousands of wireless devices, such as cordless phones, garage door openers and current Wi-Fi devices, operate in the unlicensed spectrum bands. |
|
The radio frequency electromagnetic spectrum is more important to the Department of the Navy today than it has ever been in the more than 100-year history of radio. |
|
One can learn all sorts of interesting things about the cosmological history of our universe from the angular spectrum of the cosmic background radiation. |
|
We see abortion as inextricable from the full spectrum of medical care a woman might need in her lifetime. |
|
Precambrian metamorphism and migmatization and the wide spectrum of mainly Alpine mica ages provide clear evidence for such a polyphase geological history. |
|
On the Political spectrum scale, that intentionally skews towards moderatism, I scored 9 out of 10 in fiscal freedom and 7 out of 10 in social freedom. |
|
There he began shifting not so much toward the right end of the political spectrum as the nutty one. |
|
|
Bordeaux Mixture provides a broad spectrum of protective disease control by preventing or inhibiting the disease before the fungi or bacteria enter the plant. |
|
Moreover, this spectrum is strikingly similar to the terminal spectrum measured after photoionization of the isolated PYP chromophore in solution. |
|
This analysis method helps find the composition of a physical sample by generating a mass spectrum that represents the masses of the sample's components. |
|
The action spectrum for the overall photoresponse of plants, however, extends below 400 nm and beyond 700 nm, and there is a significant minimum in the green region. |
|
Synthesis of the full spectrum of flavour precursors may resume if the callus is allowed to redifferentiate or regain a capacity for phototrophic metabolism. |
|
Psychologically, he exists somewhere on the spectrum between Norma Desmond and Alex DeLarge. |
|
The destroyer will be a highly potent, multi-role platform capable of operations across the spectrum of tasks from peace support to high-intensity warfare. |
|
He is proof that autism is a spectrum disorder of huge diversity and that the individual idiosyncrasies of each child reveal the utter uselessness of the label. |
|
But not so in opera, where legato in a favourite aria can still an audience and then climactically bring it to its feet over the full spectrum of human emotions. |
|
Other examples of the non-ionizing part of the electromagnetic spectrum include AM and FM radio waves, microwaves, and infrared waves from heat lamps. |
|
Because microwaves have wavelengths longer than even invisible infrared radiation, they are observed in the radio region of the spectrum with radio telescopes. |
|
And it is a frequently surprising collection of records, all of which incorporate African rhythms, instruments and lyrics, into a broad spectrum of chill-out influences. |
|
The gold-coloured fibre is spun into a breath-taking range of textured yarn and woven into a spectrum of colourful floor coverings, wall hangings and artifacts. |
|
Phosphorylation spectra are not disturbed by photolysis signals because photolysis is complete before recording of the first spectrum used in the subtraction. |
|
The criticism is real and valid, but the sins exist on a spectrum between the technically critical and the theatrically hilarious. |
|
Today, the 22-year-old admits that she is inspired by iconoclasts such as Balenciaga, Vivienne Westwood and Junya Watanabe, but enjoys a whole spectrum of designers. |
|
Prismatic refraction shows us the spectrum flashing out of a sort of nothing, which suggests a possible return into a single all-containing invisible source. |
|
The lung is constantly exposed to a broad spectrum of environmental toxins, including microbiologic pathogens and their products, particulate matter, and ozone. |
|
In mesopolyploid clades, re‐diploidization is associated with genome rearrangements and descending dysploidies that sometimes generate a broad spectrum of diploid‐like chromosome numbers. |
|
Dozens of courses are planned, covering the spectrum from intricate design elements for professionals to pleasure courses for the backyard hobbyist. |
|
|
Coffee house patrons from all ends of the political spectrum rebelled and eleven days later the coffee houses were reopened and their numbers continued to increase. |
|
While many of the aforementioned courses deal with concepts of classification and hierarchy to some extent, none covers the full spectrum of systems and structures. |
|
In fact, there's an almost maximalist spectrum of sound, and the album is all the more impressive for creating and maintaining such a specific mood over 16 songs. |
|
There were also Juicy Couture-style tracksuits in a spectrum of pinks, as well as in-your-face silver leggings. |
|
The electromagnetic spectrum describes all matter as wave frequencies. |
|
The Bohr model of the hydrogen atom explained the atomic emission spectrum of hydrogen, which is the simplest emission spectrum among all the elements. |
|
It has to widen its spectrum catering to fabrics for all seasons. |
|
Yet network managers don't seem to mind, and many politicians across the narrow liberal-to-conservative spectrum never seem to tire of cozying up to him on the air. |
|
On the opposite end of the spectrum are two other standout works, which depict Mary as a loving, nurturing mother. |
|
A mass spectrum of gramicidin in methanol shows three sets of peaks, corresponding to the different gramicidin species that are present in the sample. |
|
Today, it's very rare for the bass player to think he's only operating in the bass area of the sound spectrum and supporting the melody with harmonic changes. |
|
Probe pulses at center wavelengths across the visible spectrum were obtained by placing interference filters with a 10 nm bandpass in the probe beam before the sample. |
|
The men were elegant in dark tailcoats and white tie, the women dazzling in rich jewels and dresses, the colours of which seemed to span the entire spectrum of the rainbow. |
|
Indeed, those at the higher end of the psychopathic spectrum are often stars in the professional world. |
|
A high impedance probe for the spectrum analyzer is essential. |
|
The increase in recognition of autism spectrum disorders in Western countries continues to confound and confuse. |
|
This novel incorporates the full spectrum of what it means to be human, stripping away society to reveal the basic elements, impulses and desires of humanity. |
|
Retinal xanthophyll is a carotenoid, chemically related to vitamin A, whose absorption spectrum peaks at about 460 nm and ranges from 480 nm down to 390 nm. |
|
The spectrum yields a classic fractal object called a Julia set. |
|
The spectrum of voices is a credit to his journalistic rigor. |
|