Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Rheology" ¶ 24
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Plasticity and is
* Plasticity ( physics ), in physics and engineering, plasticity is the propensity of a material to undergo permanent deformation under load
Plasticity is vital for coking as it represents its ability to gradually form specific plasticity phases during the coking process, measured by coal dilatation tests.
Plasticity in a crystal of pure metal is primarily caused by two modes of deformation in the crystal lattice, slip and twinning.
* Plasticity or plastic deformation is the opposite of elastic deformation and is defined as unrecoverable strain.
* Brain Basics Synaptic Plasticity Synaptic transmission is plastic
Plasticity in female choice is favored for adapting to changes in ecological and social environments.
Plasticity surface friction is also very low in comparison to the plastic deformation energy and can be neglected.
Plasticity of the brain is when rewiring occurs because of brain damage, finding different neural pathways and not relying on the damaged structures.
Plasticity spreads throughout the solid and at the limit load, the plastic zone becomes very large and the displacements become unbounded and the component is said to have collapsed.
* Plasticity: when a single genotype gives rise to a spectrum of phenotypes, the phenotype is said to have ' plasticity '.
Plasticity is the major explanation for the phenomenon.

Plasticity and observed
Plasticity was observed in the superior temporal gyrus ( STG ) by Petitto et al.

Plasticity and under
Plasticity under a spherical Nanoindenter in ( 111 ) Copper.

Plasticity and may
Plasticity may refer to:

Plasticity and .
Plasticity and memory formation in the amygdala are generated by activation of the neurons in the region.
They are: Repair and Plasticity ; Systems and Cognitive Neuroscience ; Channels, Synapses, and Circuits ; Neurogenetics ; Neural Environment ; and Neurodegeneration.
* R. Hill, The Mathematical Theory of Plasticity, Oxford University Press ( 1998 ).
* L. M. Kachanov, Fundamentals of the Theory of Plasticity, Dover Books.
* A. S. Khan and S. Huang, Continuum Theory of Plasticity, Wiley ( 1995 ).
* International Journal of Plasticity, Elsevier Science.
Scientific Realism and the Plasticity of Mind.
Plasticity can be categorized as short-term, lasting a few seconds or less, or long-term, which lasts from minutes to hours.
* R. Hill, " The Mathematical Theory of Plasticity ", Oxford University, 1950.
* J. Lubliner, " Plasticity Theory ", Macmillan Publishing Company, 1990.
" Neural Plasticity ", 12 ( 2-3 ), 183-196.

is and behaviour
The threadbare notion that belief, unlike behaviour, is not subject to objective analysis, has placed intuitive metaphysics squarely against the sociology of knowledge, since it is precisely the job of the sociology of knowledge to treat beliefs as social facts no less viable than social behaviour.
Little is known of the territorial behaviour of caecilians but some frogs and salamanders defend home ranges.
In frogs, male territorial behaviour is often observed at breeding locations and calling is both an announcement of ownership of part of this resource and an advertisement call to potential mates.
In the modern IUPAC nomenclature, the alkali metals comprise the group 1 elements, excluding hydrogen ( H ), which is nominally a group 1 element but not normally considered to be an alkali metal as it rarely exhibits behaviour comparable to that of the alkali metals.
Central to his behaviour in the later novels is the underlying assumption that particular crimes are only committed by particular types of people.
Amino acids have zero mobility in electrophoresis at their isoelectric point, although this behaviour is more usually exploited for peptides and proteins than single amino acids.
This behaviour under CPT is the same as the statement that the particle and its antiparticle lie in the same irreducible representation of the Poincaré group.
There is some evidence of gregarious behaviour in other tyrannosaurids as well.
However, as the preservation of behaviour in the fossil record is exceedingly rare, these ideas cannot readily be tested.
Summoned on 27 August 1695 before the Kirk Session for his " undecent carriage " ( indecent behaviour ) in church, he " did not comper, having gone away to be seas: this business is continued till his return ".
As an example of different chemical behaviour, ozone ( O < sub > 3 </ sub >) is a much stronger oxidizing agent than dioxygen ( O < sub > 2 </ sub >).
A systematic 2003 review of controlled clinical trials related to the Alexander Technique found two reputable studies suggesting the Alexander Technique is effective in reducing the disability of patients suffering from Parkinson ’ s disease and improving pain behaviour and disability in patients with back pain, and concluded that the evidence supporting the effectiveness of the Alexander Technique is encouraging but not convincing.
Aesthetic ethics refers to the idea that human conduct and behaviour ought to be governed by that which is beautiful and attractive.
John Dewey has pointed out that the unity of aesthetics and ethics is in fact reflected in our understanding of behaviour being " fair "-the word having a double meaning of attractive and morally acceptable.
Thombs ( 1999 ) states according to behavioural sciences alcoholism is described as a “ maladaptive behaviour ”.
Thinking in abstractions is considered to be one of the key traits in modern human behaviour, which is believed to have developed between 50, 000 and 100, 000 years ago, probably before the modern human exodus from Africa.
* Specimen geometry is uncontrolled, yet controls projection behaviour, hence little control over the magnification.
It is sometimes described as having a torrent-like behaviour, because it can easily go from almost dry to near-flood in a few days.
The specification is vague as to required behaviour in scatternets.

0.400 seconds.