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Page "Emulsion" ¶ 12
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Storing and at
Storing a dispersion at high temperatures enables to simulate real life conditions for a product ( e. g. tube of sunscreen cream in a car in the summer ), but also to accelerate destabilisation processes up to 200 times.
Storing a dispersion at high temperatures enables to simulate real life conditions for a product ( e. g. tube of sunscreen cream in a car in the summer ), but also to accelerate destabilisation processes up to 200 times.
* Storing the copy near the original is unwise, since many disasters such as fire, flood, theft, and electrical surges are likely to cause damage to the backup at the same time.
; Storing the return address: When a subroutine is called, the location ( address ) of the instruction at which it can later resume needs to be saved somewhere.

Storing and conditions
Storing them in inactive forms in the cytoplasm prevents them from damaging the plant under normal conditions.

Storing and for
* Storing and searching for data on chemical entities ( see chemical databases ).
Storing rat poison above the grill was negligent because it involved the risk that the chef might inadvertently mistake it for a spice and use it as an ingredient in a recipe.
* Storing sparse data, such as a formatting information for a spreadsheet or for some matrix calculations
Storing only the LaTeX source and rendering it as an image every time the page is requested would be trading time for space ; more time used, but less space.
Storing objects in a space-partitioning data structure makes it easy and fast to perform certain kinds of geometry queries — for example, determining whether two objects are close to each other in collision detection, or determining whether a ray intersects an object in ray tracing.
* Handbook for Handling Storing and Dispensing E85 National Rewnewable Energy Laboratory, April 2006, US Department of Energy
Storing the wines in steel and wood barrels for months and sometimes years allow gases to be released from the juice and escape back into the air through air-locks.
# Throughout Storing, for instance, and relied upon by De Pauw, pp. 202 – 204.

Storing and .
Storing audit trails remotely, where they can only be appended to, can keep intruders from covering their tracks.
Storing such views saves the expensive computing of them each time they are needed.
Storing such external views saves expensive computing of them each time they are needed.
Storing a given set of content is usually idempotent, as the final value stored remains the same after each execution.
Storing energy allows humans to balance the supply and demand of energy.
Storing session data on the client is generally the preferred solution: then the load balancer is free to pick any backend server to handle a request.
Storing data in the memory requires selecting a given address and applying a higher voltage to the transistors.
Storing seeds also guards against catastrophic events like natural disasters, outbreaks of disease, or war.
20th century historian, Herbert Storing, identifies Clinton as " Cato ", the pseudonymous author of the Anti-Federalist essays which appeared in New York newspapers during the ratification debates.
Storing quipus horizontally on boards covered with a neutral pH paper ( paper that is neither acid or alkaline ) to prevent potential acid transfer is a preservation technique that extends the life of a collection.
Storing data in a secure manner is very important to all businesses, but especially to e-businesses where most of the data is stored in an electronic manner.
Storing intimate media on a computer mechanism helps to preserve the accuracy of the memory and lengthens its life as well.
* A Small System Storing Spanish Collocations ( Igor A. Bolshakov & Sabino Miranda-Jiménez )
Storing outdoors: Firewood should be stacked with the bark facing upwards.
Storing and subsequent retrievals cost additional instructions and additional data cache cycles.

emulsion and at
* Head ( beer ), a frothy emulsion of liquid and carbon dioxide at the top of beer
The general term of latex paint is usually used in the USA, while the term emulsion paint is used for the same products in the UK and the term latex paint is not used at all.
In addition, the plastic sleeves can develop kinks or creases in the surface, which will scratch away at the emulsion during handling.
The vast majority of Muybridge's work at this time was done in a special sunlit outdoor studio, due to the bulky cameras and slow photographic emulsion speeds then available.
It is essential to beat the mayonnaise using a whisk while adding the olive oil a little ( e. g. a teaspoon ) at a time, then it is possible to add the oil more quickly while briskly whisking to incorporate the oil into the emulsion.
" A water-in-oil emulsion derived from vegetable / animal fats, with a fat content of at least 80 % but less than 90 %, that remain solid at a temperature of 20 ° C and are suitable as spread.
The idea of using an emulsified monomer in an aqueous suspension or emulsion was first conceived at Bayer, before World War I, in an attempt to prepare synthetic rubber.
In emulsion polymerization, starve-fed refers to a method of monomer addition where the monomer is introduced gradually into the reaction vessel at a rate that allows the majority of monomer to be consumed by the reaction before more is added.
The first type used a system of partially reflecting surfaces to divide the light coming through the lens into three parts, each part passing through a different color filter and forming a separate image, so that the three images could be photographed at the same time on three plates ( flexible film had not yet replaced glass plates as the support for the emulsion ) or different areas of one plate.
The second type, known variously as a multiple back, repeating back or drop back camera, still exposed the images one at a time but used a sliding holder for the filters and plates which allowed each filter and the corresponding unexposed area of emulsion to be quickly shifted into place.
In 1936, the German Agfa followed with their own integral tripack film, Agfacolor Neu, which was generally similar to Kodachrome but had one important advantage: Agfa had found a way to incorporate the dye couplers into the emulsion layers during manufacture, allowing all three layers to be developed at the same time and greatly simplifying the processing.
The AutoProcessor was very cheap and did not require a darkroom ; the results were somewhat variable, the resolution was not as good as conventional film due to the matrix of tiny red, green and blue filters required to make the monochrome emulsion work in colour, and the sensitivity was low, even for slide film ; in tungsten light, Polachrome CS is rated at ISO 40.
It combined an in vitro paired-tag library with emulsion PCR, an automated microscope, and ligation-based sequencing chemistry to sequence an E. coli genome at an accuracy of > 99. 9999 % and a cost approximately 1 / 10 that of Sanger sequencing.
Condensed polymer walls form instantaneously at the interface of the emulsion droplets.
When the reaction is performed at the interface of an emulsion, the acid chloride reacts with the various functional groups of the protein, leading to the formation of a membrane.
In 1969, he and his group discovered the mass of the so-called fireballs, a phenomenon induced by naturally occurring high-energy collisions, and which was detected by means of special lead-chamber nuclear emulsion plates invented by him, and placed at the Chacaltaya peak of the Bolivian Andes.
Whilst this wax is held at a constant temperature, the emulsiona mixture of the various oils and, if used, fats, is then heated separately, at around 85 ° C.
A quarter or eighth strength liquid fertilizer such as fish emulsion or worm-cast liquid may be used once a month at the warmest period for potted specimens.

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