Then similar wisdom was applied to the strong nuclear force to yield quantum chromodynamics, or QCD, and this theory was also renormalizable. |
|
This overestimation affects the average behavior of the system, and depending on the model can even yield qualitatively wrong results. |
|
This low yield grade for cattle with high quality grades is most likely a result of early weaning and Wagyu genetics. |
|
However, it has increased the grain yield potential and thereby the ratio of grain mass to total above-ground biomass or harvest index. |
|
Few data are currently available as to the yield of investigating mildly abnormal liver biochemistry in such a group. |
|
He got a yield of six tonnes from the Cabernet and Shiraz variety of wine grapes he cultivated on two acres. |
|
Bizarre or not, uncritical attachment to old shibboleths inexorably yield contradiction. |
|
In reality, the output from the sensors on the combine are not grain yield and moisture content but only millivolts. |
|
With the other hand, she tapped a yellow sign made in the shape of a yield to traffic sign. |
|
Milk yield of milch cattle has been severely affected because of scarcity of fodder. |
|
The demonstration plot obtained better yield and better quality compared with the traditionary yield. |
|
During years of normal rainfall, supplemental irrigation appears to offer no advantages from the standpoint of yield or quality. |
|
Four ounces yield 90 g of carbs that are easy to eat and won't fill you up, so you'll be ready to eat again within three hours. |
|
Schists and serpentines yield the demantoid and topazolite varieties of andradite. |
|
As has already been stated oxidation yields the aldhyde methanal, but further oxidation of this will yield the carboxylic acid methanoic acid. |
|
This is a record as the average yield in the State is around four tonnes per hectare. |
|
Some crops are more tolerant of salt, and can maintain their yield well under saline conditions. |
|
It may, however, yield a more sequent conclusion if one minor change in the text be made. |
|
The Sewell seam coal was an ideal coal for coking, because it had a very high fixed carbon yield required for the iron-making process. |
|
The potato leafhopper is active during the summer months, and can cause severe yield and quality losses in alfalfa. |
|
|
Biopsy of colonic ulcer edges may yield intramural trophozoites but carries with it the risk of perforation. |
|
This particular arrangement of nucleons is unstable and so tritium readily undergoes radioactive decay to yield a helium atom. |
|
Both yield direct inferences about the process of evolution by natural selection. |
|
This study is an attempt to determine whether standard concepts of fluid mechanics can yield a self-consistent model of this process. |
|
The segmented market hypothesis explains the yield curve's shape in terms of relative supply and demand for securities at different maturities. |
|
Coring also will make crop insurance yield measurement more accurate since it tends to level the surface of the grain in the bin. |
|
Junk bonds or high yield bonds are securities issued by companies that aren't in the best of health. |
|
The fruit season can be from June through March with the highest yield from August to December. |
|
The results yield information about the structure of coal, as well as the kinetics and mechanism of supercritical thermolytic reactions. |
|
The bank discount rate normalizes by the face value of the security and understates the true yield earned by investors. |
|
I'm beginning to think such iconic lines are in marble precisely so they won't be bent or made to yield to a scribbler's whim. |
|
Owners of classic cars are being urged not to yield to the temptation of the government's scrappage scheme and have them needlessly crushed. |
|
Ancient farmers discovered that plant yield could be increased on a plot of land by spreading animal manure throughout. |
|
The new technology involves the use of new scientific methods in producing grasses with superior yield and quality characteristics. |
|
These genes can be manipulated and used to predict meat quality, tenderness, fat contact, milk yield and disease resistance. |
|
The seed dry weight and yield for each variety were also significantly higher in bacterized seedlings than in nonbacterized ones. |
|
The outer surface of two parts yield numerous mamillate protrusions, which are larger and sparser on the calyx than those on the stalk. |
|
Canopy management techniques are used to maintain yield and wine quality in such situations. |
|
Also, studies have shown that water stress early in corn has much less of an impact on yield than water stress during tasseling. |
|
Chuck Schumer rose to ask whether the Senate majority leader might yield for a question. |
|
|
Different deposits yield significantly different chemical compositions ranging from light crudes to heavy viscous tar sands. |
|
Experience also shows that our present rulers and corporate magnates will not yield without a fight. |
|
The result will be a thorough, intelligent market research study that is likely to yield tangible results. |
|
What was the point of magicking a lock to never yield when you could cast the chest off a cliff or destroy it with an axe? |
|
The resulting yield from the salvo caused the Battlecruiser to break apart, a tidal wave of flame running its entire length. |
|
Relatively simple processes, such as improving the yield of a machine tool, have short half-lives, often less than a year. |
|
Hence, a deep hole dug in these dumps today can yield three-hundred-year-old tailings that contain excellent mineral specimens. |
|
For future markets, conformation and a consistently high yield of saleable meat will be paramount. |
|
Yield your understanding to be taught of God, yield your heart to be purified and educated for God, yield your life a sacrifice to God. |
|
If cut for lumber, this single tree would yield 600, 120 board feet, the makings of 40 five-room houses. |
|
We cannot, however, expect that there will be any yield given to the French, Germans and Russians. |
|
After all, back in the seventies, the long bond yield was up in the mid teens. |
|
There were pockets of corruption, but our efforts to root it out are beginning to yield results. |
|
The yield may not be large but farmers manage to feed their family and make a living. |
|
In much the same way that steers yield far better meat than cows in beef cattle, young male roos make the best eating. |
|
The excavations produced no diagnostic artifacts but did yield lithic debris and a limited quantity of preserved floral remains. |
|
Grimm's play does yield some fun amid all the torture, bloodshed, and rodomontade. |
|
There are two general types of coffee plant, arabica and robusta, which yield two very different beans. |
|
There are two general types of coffee beans, arabica and robusta, which yield two very different beans. |
|
From the very beginning, he wanted a people who would welcome him into their hearts and yield to him as he shaped them into his likeness. |
|
|
An experienced and innovative apiculturist, he has recorded a high yield of 101 kg honey from a colony in a year. |
|
This does not mean that traffic from the right has automatic right of way when they are five metres away from the yield line at the circle. |
|
As a result, the yield potentials of such soils are usually higher under no-till or ridge tillage than under moldboard plowing. |
|
Carefully-chosen classic antiques and quality paintings should yield solid returns over time. |
|
Antinomians will not yield it lawful to a believer to pray for remission of sins. |
|
When direct taxes could yield an additional Rs 2,000 crore, indirect taxes remain revenue neutral. |
|
Tony Blair urged fellow EU leaders yesterday not to yield in future confrontations with anti-capitalists who disrupted their Gothenburg summit. |
|
Such activities yield very large returns, but they also accrue very large risks. |
|
Limes nearly always yield more juice than lemons because although they are smaller, they have thinner skins and finer papery segments within. |
|
Cutting hay late in the day forces plant cells to respire all night long, losing yield and quality. |
|
Some days yield nothing by way of new information and fresh leads, while others open avenues hitherto blocked. |
|
In a zero-sum budgetary game, welfare can hardly yield its share, while defense can do some. |
|
Each of the last six recessions in the US was preceded by an inversion in the yield curve. |
|
It is important to appreciate that equations cannot be used to predict the lower yield stress unless the resultant grain size is known. |
|
Since materials plastically deform as the yield stress is exceeded, a plastic zone will form near the crack tip. |
|
If the decrease occurs at a constant yield stress then the fracture stress and fracture mode will vary. |
|
In these alloys, yield stress have been shown to have only a weak dependence on grain size. |
|
Artificially low short-term rates and a steep yield curve had induced enormous leveraged speculation. |
|
The yield curve for U.S. Treasury securities implies a forecast for future federal funds rates. |
|
Why not take full advantage of a steep yield curve by leveraging mortgage securities. |
|
|
While the yield of a product is carefully monitored, the amount of waste generated has until recently been of less concern. |
|
The safety authority wanted all vehicles approaching a T-junction from a minor road to yield to right-turning traffic from a through road. |
|
We understood that overwhelming love drove them to yield up their babies in a hope that they may have a better future. |
|
We were going to wait and see whether they responded to the call to yield up the people responsible. |
|
Scholars do not yield their ground readily unless the evidence against their position is overwhelming. |
|
It has been shown that he needed to make further assumptions for his methods to yield the results that he claimed for them. |
|
It is an important investment and should yield results in the coming years. |
|
It's too bad that the return on your investment doesn't always yield the big gains you want. |
|
Cultures of fluid and biopsy tissue are the diagnostic methods most likely to yield positive results. |
|
The same data submitted to different clustering methods can yield different results. |
|
Although his methods could never yield accurate results, they did show that the sun was much further from the earth than was the moon. |
|
Since that land would not be totally barren or completely isolated, it would yield some product. |
|
North America is the largest producer of flaxseed and related products that yield millions of tons of fiber. |
|
It will also yield valuable manure, provided it is not mixed with inorganic waste like plastic. |
|
Already some sites yield little more than a mass of crystallised aluminium oxide. |
|
After two hours' rock hopping the forest starts to yield to scrub and eventually meadow as we emerge above the treeline. |
|
Generally, if you are grinding whole almonds, one cup would yield approximately one half-cup ground almonds. |
|
She refuses to yield to the advances of her husband's friend Luka and rejects his request to marry him. |
|
While the country's fertile highlands yield staple foods like yams and cereal grains, the semi-arid lowlands are largely rocky. |
|
The yield strengths of wrought magnesium alloys normally vary as a function of the direction of metal flow. |
|
|
Consider, for example, dairy cows with first and second lactation milk yield records. |
|
Six whites and one yolk yield 24 g of protein and 6 g of fat, much of it healthy. |
|
Other proteins in wallaby milk may yield treatments to prod bone regrowth in osteoporosis patients. |
|
Multiple collisions involving red giants and other stars might yield the random orbits her team has observed. |
|
The data were adjusted for previous lactation milk yield and days in milk at last test day. |
|
So, the 100m final did not yield gold for Britain, or the world record holder, or the American champion. |
|
As many as two-thirds of the shoots produced in a winter wheat crop may fail to survive to form ears and yield grain. |
|
Rose attar is the costliest since a hundred kilograms of roses yield only two grams of attar. |
|
Combine this with a decent dividend yield and you should be on to a winner. |
|
As for watermelons, pick the ones minus dents or scratches and a light thump should yield a dull hollow sound. |
|
According to Mr Meghen, it is too early to say what sums will be realised from the plant sell off, but it's likely to yield millions of euro. |
|
To suggest we are on the edge of defeat is to yield to unreasonable pessimism. |
|
Above us a rataplan of thunder sounded in a swollen sky that still stubbornly refused to yield its rain. |
|
Here one does not have a clue as to whether any further investment will yield a safety benefit. |
|
An earlier version of this article incorrectly reported that justifying online text would yield excessive hyphenation. |
|
And what is more, there is declining yield from successive generations of hybrid cattle. |
|
Accordingly, it does not yield knowledge, if knowledge involves understanding and not just well-founded conviction. |
|
In addition, the raffia palms, of which there are various species in the African tropics and a few in S. America, yield oil. |
|
The ten-year yield to maturity slipped to 14.31 per cent on a weighted average basis. |
|
Made from a blend of virgin wool, acrylic and polyester, this jersey will surely yield a perfect fit. |
|
|
How many other questions would yield more wrong answers on the Web than right ones? |
|
Cottonseeds treated with this would yield 20 quintals per acre, a quantity farmers do not dream of even with the best of the BT-Cotton seeds. |
|
In the last three years, the average yield went up from five quintals a hectare to 12 quintals. |
|
When most individuals in the group differ in size, stable dominance relationships generally yield transitive hierarchies consistent with size. |
|
The average yield of fruit from a full grown seedling jamun tree is about 80-100 kg and from a grafted one 60-70 kg per year. |
|
The drought-hardy jamun tree attains enormous height, and a well-grown tree could yield 80 to 100 kg of fruit. |
|
Additionally, it is now known that the effective quantum yield of MLCs can be increased by RET to high quantum yield acceptors. |
|
Because American oak is so much less porous than European, staves of American oak can simply be sawn from each quarter, so as to maximize the yield of each log. |
|
Approximately two shot glasses of ethanol could yield enough hydrogen to generate 350 watt-hours of electricity, enough to power half a dozen 60-watt lightbulbs for an hour. |
|
As input to the steady state design and kinetic simulation models for the activated sludge system, the correct value for the heterotroph anoxic yield is essential. |
|
If cattle are removed at jointing, there will be very little yield loss. |
|
This combination of a highly adsorbent aromatic base structure, together with a low yield of liquid product on generation typically results in only gas being expelled. |
|
It takes about 70,000 crocus blossoms or 210,000 stigmas to yield just a pound of saffron. |
|
But the smaller man had his hands firmly locked on the yokozuna's mawashi, and refused to yield even as he was literally bending him back on himself like an overdrawn bow. |
|
But the technology, while powerful, is cumbersome and takes anywhere from 12 hours to four days to yield a result. |
|
They could well have calculated that winging Chen was the best way of unleashing a sympathy vote for the Green cause that would yield them an avalanche of cash in lost wagers. |
|
Holly, winterberry, cotoneaster and many other food-bearers yield nutritious fare that's more appealing to a wider variety of birds than commercial food. |
|
The fact is that the most common aluminum structural alloy, 6061-T6, has a minimum yield strength of 35 kips per square inch, which is almost equal to that of A36 steel. |
|
I have little doubt that the elections will be only a game of musical chairs that will yield a government of the parties already collaborating with the occupiers. |
|
Two all-night vigils by the TV fail to yield the new Nic Cage advert. |
|
|
The mechanism must be as foolproof as the Laffer curve, which tells you that as you reduce tax rates, the tax yield increases and approaches a maximum. |
|
All manner of other financial assets, especially the more exotic ones, have reached new highs in price and lows in absolute or relative yield in recent weeks. |
|
There are more direct and quicker methods that yield similar results. |
|
There's absolutely no reason to yield up either and we will not. |
|
On the one hand, lower interest rates at all maturities along the yield curve would increase the present value of future cash flows, increasing the incentive to invest. |
|
His six yuzu trees yield 200 pounds of the coveted citrus per year. |
|
After lasing, there was no statistically significant reduction in overall yield stress, ultimate stress, or elastic modulus when comparing the lased and the nonlased tissue. |
|
It is possible for a corporation to issue a zero-coupon bond, whose current yield is zero and whose yield to maturity is solely a function of the built-in price appreciation. |
|
To yield meaningful tests of significance, sample weights were applied to the data and then rescaled to equal the actual number of cases in the sample. |
|
Russia shows no sign of being willing to yield power and influence to the Americans in Eurasia. |
|
It will take a great deal of effort, and not a little imagination, to sustain the peace process and make it yield positive results until a durable reconciliation is reached. |
|
Presumably a fresher poll conducted entirely post-deal will yield somewhat better numbers. |
|
Sediments from this locality yield a mixed freshwater and saline fauna. |
|
For Americans of a certain age, these words, even in our cynical time, yield a shiver of nostalgia, but also of purpose. |
|
It is not the mean river flow that determines the yield from a dam on a river, but the duration and magnitude of sequences of below average flows. |
|
Polyethylene pellets, saturated with melted paraffin, then mixed with wet gypsum and compressed in sheet form, also yield production quality drywall. |
|
But if you are photographing a dark mineral such as azurite, the camera will lighten the exposure in an attempt to yield a medium value, making the image overexposed. |
|
Such riders should be able to get a colt to yield without gimmicks because there is always danger of getting a horse behind the bit through their use. |
|
And does anyone expect every corner of the world that does get noticed to yield pleasure and stimulation? |
|
As anybody who picked up a bevy of blue chips during the equity bear market will know, a relatively high yield is a proven indicator of value in financial markets. |
|
|
The accrued amounts can sometimes be so large that the resale of the property in the year the debt is due will not yield enough to cover the balloon payment or balance due. |
|
However, in a climate of rising interest rates, bonds tend to be regarded as less enticing investments as the difference between the bank rate and bond yield narrows. |
|
Instead you yield to him, just like the matador yields to the bull, and you use his strength and the principle of balance to bring about his downfall. |
|
To use TV as a medium of education will yield rich dividends. |
|
A brewed mixture made with any ingredients other than tea leaves will yield a tisane, known in America as herbal tea, which is technically not tea at all. |
|
The results yield computer chips 9,000 times faster than a run-of-the-mill computer, using only the power of a tablet pc. |
|
A tantrum that does not yield the desired result has catastrophic consequences. |
|
For images that would otherwise be printed with a coarse screen ruling, mezzotinting can yield greater detail and a sharper image, while adding beauty and reducing file size. |
|
If a film is sensitive to mechanical stress, the microdensitometer can also be used to yield mechanical stress distribution that has been applied to the film. |
|
But will the problems involved in solid hydrogen storage be any more tractable and yield to any better solution than the problems with gaseous or liquid storage? |
|
The disease causes a reduction in yield and is transmitted through infected cuttings, shears and other implements, as well as infected soil and water. |
|
Seed treated with systemic insecticides have shown yield increases. |
|
Stabilizing selection may yield bidirectional effects because an average individual in a population may sometimes be above and sometimes below an optimum for a character. |
|
Contrastive features that would yield information about potential crosslinguistic influences in the Spanish spelling of Spanish-English bilinguals were not included. |
|
Mr Nicholl, 48, yesterday urged his daughter's wide circle of friends to come forward with any information that could yield vital clues about the 19-year-old shopworker. |
|
One tonne of dried waste can yield around 400 litres of bioethanol. |
|
An 11 gauge vacuum assisted biopsy device is now available which, because it provides more tissue, increases the diagnostic yield when biopsying microcalcification. |
|
Thyle, which was distant from Orkney by a voyage of five days and nights, was fruitful and abundant in the lasting yield of its crops. |
|
The main objective of the Rockwell International research was to develop a technique that would yield high-quality laser diodes. |
|
In the case of the Myrviken shale the oil yield is zero, even with HYTORT hydrogenation, but metals leachability is high. |
|
|
The better size and condition of lobsters caught by this method yield prices three to four times higher than animals netted by trawling. |
|
The present demographic transition stage of India along with its higher population base will yield rich demographic dividend in future decades. |
|
The constant maturity yield values are derived from the yield curve at fixed maturities. |
|
Progressive growers are obtaining wheat yield upto 80 maunds per acre whereas average yield is 30 maund per acre the Minister added. |
|
Once early farmers perfected their agricultural techniques like irrigation, their crops would yield surpluses that needed storage. |
|
Navy sought a replacement with either a larger yield or equivalent destructive power. |
|
With a crop yield four times higher than oats, they became an integral part of crofting. |
|
Such storage opportunities are typically increased in catchments of larger size, thus leading to a lower yield and sediment delivery ratio. |
|
Member countries have to be willing to yield national sovereignty to a supernational monetary authority. |
|
What this means is a Fast Fourier Transform can decompose A-scans to yield a separate acoustic image for each sinusoid. |
|
Even though the currency is the same in each case, the yield required by the market is higher for some countries' debt than for others. |
|
Effects of Dalbergia sissoo extracts, rhizobium and nitrogen on germination, growth and yield of Vigna radiata. |
|
This, they argued, would allow for the Christopher Hill peace process to proceed and yield a peace agreement. |
|
A gas field discovery at Sixshooter Dome in central Montana, that last year added 3 Bcf to reserves, could ultimately yield 9 to 12 Bcf. |
|
Directors expect the project will yield a minimum of 300,000 tons annually once production is fully capacitated. |
|
Under similar analysis, export tariffs, import quotas, and export quotas all yield nearly identical results. |
|
This can yield stiff and lifeless performances in slower more expressive cues. |
|
Tensile strength and relaxed compression yield stress decreased at a similar rate with increase in temperature. |
|
Register of statistic information's about yield strength, material strength and tensility, Part 4-period 1983-1988, USTARCH SAV, Slovakia. |
|
The sustained yield gap between dollar and domestic currency assets would also provide the impetus to new borrowers. |
|
|
Mr. Noda met with Mr. Ozawa twice but the talks failed to yield a meeting of the minds. |
|
He explains demand for goods as based on their ability to yield a flow of income. |
|
Experts believe it may also yield clues as to the boundary of the ancient Anglo Saxon kingdoms of Mercia and Northumbria. |
|
Among the kangaroo words that yield the most joviality and joy are those that conceal multiple joeys. |
|
But during its lifetime, a single macaw left in the wild might yield more than 16 times as much in tourist income. |
|
This could be done with a high yield nuclear weapon, or deploy a solar sail on the surface of such a body. |
|
Morgan becomes attractive at 50 if the yield curve steepens and the Fed stress tests are uneventful. |
|
These lands are regulated for sustained yield of warbler nesting habitat and timber production. |
|
The use of aerial photography does not yield easily identifiable settlements, partly due to the dispersed nature of many of these settlements. |
|
Eventually the excavation would yield 1,045 burials, although no settlement has yet been found. |
|
A short curing time is said to yield a chemical bond, producing a firmly integrated composite part, according to the company. |
|
This was important because the yield of seeds harvested to seeds planted at that time was around four or five. |
|
Best understands the mutual organization and is aware that different operating philosophies will yield different performance. |
|
Also known as chokeberries, aronia berries have been found to yield very high ORAC values. |
|
Crows and towhees begin to hang out, knowing that the freshly turned earth will yield a meal once I'm gone. |
|
The seller, Broome Realty Associates, has held the properties for over 20 years and most of the apartments yield low, rent stabilized rents. |
|
In particular, tarragon and star anise yield essential oils that are almost exclusively the isomers of 4-methoxyphenylpropene. |
|
When a high yield value is desired in a plastisol, a thixotrope or antisag agent may be added. |
|
The kernels yield an oil, anacardic oil, used in the preparation of varnishes, typewriter rolls, paints and water-proofing paper. |
|
But more recently the yield curve has steepened by far less than similar episodes of rising growth in the past would suggest. |
|
|
File yield curve steepened slightly since last month, with long rates edging up and short rates edging down. |
|
There's still a debate raging over whether the yield curve has steepened too much or not. |
|
I defined the support of a word square to be the size of a randomly-drawn list of n-letter words that would, on the average, yield one square. |
|
The line also includes carbide trigon bars, which yield better surface finishes, deeper cutting lengths, and longer extension ratios. |
|
The current session seems to offer yield a favorable entry spot to sell, as predicted by TLAB's current stochastics indicator. |
|
The yield stress of a material is usually defined as the maximum stress, below which no flow will occur. |
|
Both initial yield stress and initial flow coefficient increased with increasing oil content. |
|
Several research teams prepared samples of quasicrystalline materials perfect enough to yield extremely sharp X-ray images. |
|
However, he clarified that anthills may not be rich sources of gold dust, but could yield few telltale signs. |
|
Meetings of campfire folk and glitchy electronica can sometimes yield yawnsome coffee table fodder. |
|
Japanese bunching onions yield a steady supply of stems you can use like scallions. |
|
However, similar attempts with infective agents and agents with aerobiological decay rates proved to yield grossly inaccurate results. |
|
Just one pepper wevil larva among 100 peppers could be a harbinger of serious yield losses later in the season. |
|
Since the concept can never yield full quidditative knowledge of God then Aquinas must insist that we are joined to God quasi ignoto. |
|
The additive was designed to yield performance values not attainable through mixtures of southern and western bentonites. |
|
During dry years the project could yield 150,000 acre-feet that would be pumped out of the aquifer and piped to the aqueduct. |
|
And still, the bad-tempered second half did not yield a goal. |
|
Furthermore, the potential for sales through bankassurance agreements has yet to yield any real volume. |
|
Although acutely conscious of living in a 'wilderness,' they stoutheartedly refused to yield an inch to pioneer prejudices or frontier values. |
|
And lo! those waters, steeled By breezeless air to smoothest polish, yield A vivid repetition of the stars. |
|
|
This may yield artifactually elevated values and mislead the inexperienced clinician. |
|
Setting aside all other considerations, I will endeavour to know the truth, and yield to that. |
|
Stored red cells do not yield rapid increases in tissue oxygen consumption nearly as well as has been assumed. |
|
These researchers went in search of red sprites, a recently discovered phenomenon that has yet to yield to scientific explanation. |
|
To begin with, creative lawmaking by unrepresentative tribunals seems undemocratic and almost certain to yield unpedigreed outcomes. |
|
In the 13th century about twenty percent of a farmer's yield went to the king, church and landowners. |
|
Immersion lithography has dramatically elevated the patterning yield risk from overlay errors. |
|
It measures the risk of winterkill, that is, yield losses caused by low temperatures during the winter season. |
|
Genotype increases in coleoptile length improves stand establishment, vigour and grain yield of deep sown wheat. |
|
Drought stress causes yield reductions and sometimes total crop failures in rainfed rice areas of Asia, Africa, and Latin America. |
|
Genotypic increases in coleoptiles length improves stand establishment vigor and grain yield of deep sown wheat. |
|
This mixing must continue long enough to yield a net specific energy expended upon the mix of at least 5000 joules per kilogram of the mix. |
|
With almost twice the yield as chemical pulping, mechanical pulps is often cheaper. |
|
The intensity of abnormal manifestations for suspended sediment yield depends on natural azonal factors. |
|
Seed bacterization with fluorescent Pseudomonas for enhanced plant growth, yield and disease control. |
|
Adding axes of motion to a shaper can yield helical toolpaths, as also done in helical planing. |
|
The illustrated manuscripts of the seventeenth century yield a number of vital colophons and marginal notes. |
|
The invention of the Burton process for thermal cracking doubled the yield of gasoline, which helped alleviate the shortages. |
|
Cutting down on wasted seed was important because the yield of seeds harvested to seeds planted at that time was around four or five. |
|
Biometrical studies of yield in segregating population of Korean Lespedeza. |
|
|
In the later stages, no amount of new investment in that product will yield a normal rate of return. |
|
This technique is more experimental than practical, but may yield results in time. |
|
In the year 2007, the global yield was 25 million tons from 35 million hectares cultivated in more than 50 countries. |
|
It assumes a flat yield curve and a riskless interest rate that follows a random walk over time, as described earlier. |
|
Nanson combined the newly described instant runoff voting with the Borda count to yield a new Condorcet method called Nanson's method. |
|
It may be added, as a final recommendation of rape culture, that this plant is valuable for its yield of honey. |
|
Like in Latin, all neuter names yield the same form in both the nominative and the accusative case in Ancient Greek. |
|
If the subject appears first, there is an SVO order, but it can also yield orders such as OVS and others. |
|
The cuttings are usually cultivars, selected both for yield and quality of fruit. |
|
Also, the yield of the peanut crop itself is increased in rotations, through reduced diseases, pests and weeds. |
|
The organophosphorus nematicide femaniphos, when used, did not affect crop growth and yield parameter variables measured at harvest. |
|
In the United States, the state of Texas led in total production as of 2004, while the state of California had the highest yield per acre. |
|
Based on conditions as of August 2016, the expected yield would be the highest ever for the United States. |
|
Over the last fifty years, dairy farming has become more intensive to increase the yield of milk produced by each cow. |
|
A strategic decision was taken to scale down the Dutch military presence and in effect yield the area to EIC influence. |
|
Irrigation is helpful in advancing the sowing data of the summer crops which guarantees an early yield in the period of food shortage. |
|
In the thirty years to 2007, the average milk yield of a dairy cow in the United States nearly doubled. |
|
Experts believe it may also yield clues as to the boundary of the Anglo Saxon kingdoms of Mercia and Northumbria. |
|
In 1706, the French were defeated in Ramillies and Turin and were forced to yield northern Italy to the Austrian Habsburgs. |
|
It is indeed the peculiarity of a cavalry force quickly to win and as quickly to yield a victory. |
|
|
The Nemi ships and other shipwreck sites occasionally yield objects of unique artistic value. |
|
The macroscopic yield strength of cancellous bone has been investigated using high resolution computer models. |
|
A 2015 report by Citibank concluded that transitioning to a low carbon economy would yield positive return on investments. |
|
Merely offering an internship program through on-campus postings will not likely yield a large pool of applicants. |
|
Cotton production was rising and relied on the use of slaves to yield high profits. |
|
Some exact yield estimates, such as that of the Tsar Bomba and the tests by India and Pakistan in 1998, are somewhat contested among specialists. |
|
The prices paid in the different markets for loanable funds comprise the yield curve. |
|
Cultivars vary in their yield and the ultimate size of the tree, even when grown on the same rootstock. |
|
A major section of the Natural History, Books XX to XXIX, discusses matters related to medicine, especially plants that yield useful drugs. |
|
The bindingness hypothesis, see supra note 72, may also yield a necessary condition on a legal institution. |
|
For a transmitted radar signal, the polarization can be controlled to yield different effects. |
|
TsCl was dissolved in Py to yield sulfonium salt and after a certain period the solution was treated with DMF for 30 min. |
|
Overoptimizing the source code of a computer program may yield insignificant performance gains while making it difficult to read and maintain. |
|
They were obliged to sign treaties and yield hostages as a token of good faith. |
|
Baltic amber is distinguished by its yield of succinic acid, hence the name succinite. |
|
The arrangement would yield a magnetic moment of five Bohr magnetons, which is the same as an atom of manganese. |
|
This makes the total yield less than it would be if the fish were allowed to grow to an appropriate size. |
|
The Mandelbrot set serves as a prime example of how simple mathematical operations can yield astonishingly complex geometric forms. |
|
Traditionally, oil shale energy content, calorific value, is measured by so-called bomb calorimeter and oil yield in so-called Fischer retort. |
|
The global bathymetry is sometimes combined with topography data to yield a Global Relief Model. |
|